The Definitive FDR
   Roosevelt: The Lion and the Fox (1882–1940) and Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom (1940–1945)
   James MacGregor Burns
   CONTENTS
   Roosevelt: The Lion and the Fox (1882–1940)
   PREFACE
   PART ONE
   THE EDUCATION OF A POLITICIAN
   I A Beautiful Frame
   The Seed and the Soil
   Groton: Education for What?
   Harvard: The Gold Coast
   II Albany: The Young Lion
   Uncle Ted and Cousin Eleanor
   The Race for the Senate
   The College Kid and the Tammany Beast
   Farmer-Labor Representative
   III Washington: The Politician as Bureaucrat
   A Roosevelt on the Job
   Tammany Wins Again
   War Leader
   IV Crusade for the League
   Challenge and Response
   1920—The Solemn Referendum
   The Rising Politician
   PART TWO
   THE RISE TO POWER
   V Interlude: The Politician as Businessman
   Ordeal
   Dear Al and Dear Frank
   Summons to Action
   VI Apprenticeship in Albany
   The Politics of the Empire State
   The Anatomy of Stalemate
   The Power of Party
   VII Nomination by a Hairbreadth
   The Political Uses of Corruption
   Battle at the Grass Roots
   The Magic Two-Thirds
   VIII The Curious Campaign
   The Fox and the Elephant
   The Stage Is Set
   Roosevelt on the Eve
   PART THREE
   RENDEZVOUS WITH DESTINY
   IX A Leader in the White House
   “A Day of Consecration”
   “Action, and Action Now”
   “A Leadership of Frankness and Vigor”
   America First
   X President of All the People?
   An Artist in Government
   The Broker State at Work
   The Politics of Broker Leadership
   Rupture on the Right
   XI The Grapes of Wrath
   The Little Foxes
   Labor: New Millions and New Leaders
   Left! Right! Left!
   XII Thunder on the Right
   Thunderbolts from the Bench
   Roosevelt as a Conservative
   Roosevelt and the Radicals
   XIII Foreign Policy by Makeshift
   Good Neighbors and Good Fences
   Storm Clouds and Storm Cellars
   The Law of the Jungle
   The Politician as Foreign Policy Maker
   XIV 1936: The Grand Coalition
   The Politics of the Deed
   “I Accept the Commission”
   “We Have Only Just Begun to Fight”
   Roosevelt as a Political Tactician
   PART FOUR
   THE LION AT BAY
   XV Court Packing: The Miscalculated Risk
   Bombshell
   Guerrilla Warfare
   Breaches in the Grand Coalition
   Not with a Bang but a Whimper
   XVI The Roosevelt Recession
   Cloudburst
   Palace Struggle for a Program
   Roosevelt as an Economist
   XVII Deadlock on the Potomac
   Squalls on Capitol Hill
   The Broken Spell
   Too Little, Too Late
   XVIII Fissures in the Party
   The Donkey and the Stick
   The Struggle for Power
   Roosevelt as a Party Leader
   XIX Diplomacy: Pinpricks and Protest
   Munich: No Risks, No Commitments
   The Storm Breaks
   Roosevelt as a Political Leader
   PART FIVE
   THROUGH THE TRAPS
   XX The Soundless Struggle
   The Sphinx
   The Hurricane of Events
   “We Want Roosevelt!”
   XXI An Old Campaigner, a New Campaign
   The Hoarse and Strident Voice
   Lion versus Sea Lion
   The Two-Week Blitz
   The Future in Balance
   Epilogue The Culmination
   Roosevelt as War Lord
   Roosevelt as Peace Leader
   Democracy’s Aristocrat
   Warrior’s Home-Coming
   A NOTE ON THE STUDY OF POLITICAL LEADERSHIP
   IMAGE GALLERY
   ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
   GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY
   CHAPTER BIBLIOGRAPHIES WITH BASIC BOOK LIST
   INDEX
   Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom (1940–1945)
   PREFACE
   PROLOGUE Fall 1940
   HYDE PARK
   LONDON
   BERLIN
   TOKYO
   WASHINGTON
   PART ONE THE MISCALCULATED WAR
   The Struggle to Intervene
   THE NEW COALITION AT HOME
   LEND-LEASE: THE GREAT DEBATE
   “SPEED—AND SPEED NOW”
   ROOSEVELT’S WHITE HOUSE
   The Crucibles of Grand Strategy
   HITLER: THE RAPTURE OF DECISION
   CHURCHILL: THE GIRDLE OF DEFEAT
   KONOYE: THE VIEW TOWARD CHUNGKING
   ROOSEVELT: THE CRISIS OF STRATEGY
   STALIN: THE TWIST OF REAL POLITIK
   Cold War in the Atlantic
   ATLANTIC FIRST
   RUSSIA SECOND
   GOVERNMENT AS USUAL
   RENDEZVOUS AT ARGENTIA
   Showdown in the Pacific
   THE WINDS AND WAVES OF STRIFE
   THE CALL TO BATTLE STATIONS
   A TIME FOR WAR
   RENDEZVOUS AT PEARL
   PART TWO DEFEAT
   “The Massed Forces of Humanity”
   A CHRISTMAS VISITOR
   SENIOR PARTNERS, AND JUNIOR
   THE SINEWS OF TOTAL VICTORY
   The Endless Battlefields
   DEFEAT IN THE PACIFIC
   THIS GENERATION OF AMERICANS
   THE WAR AGAINST THE WHITES
   The Cauldron of War
   REPRISE: RUSSIA SECOND
   ASIA THIRD
   THE LONG ARMS OF WAR
   THE ALCHEMISTS OF SCIENCE
   The State of the Nation
   THE ECONOMICS OF CHAOS
   THE PEOPLE AT WAR
   THE POLITICS OF NONPOLITICS
   The Flickering Torch
   THRUS ACROSS THE ATLANTIC
   WALK WITH THE DEVIL
   ROOSEVELT: A TURNING POINT?
   PART THREE STRATEGY
   Casablanca
   THE GAMING BOARD OF STRATEGY
   TOWARD THE UNDERBELLY
   THE FIRST KILL
   The Administration of Crisis
   EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
   THE TECHNOLOGY OF VIOLENCE
   ROOSEVELT AS CHIEF EXECUTIVE
   The Strategy of Freedom
   “A WORLD FORGED ANEW”
   THE BROKEN PLEDGE
   THE KING’S FIRST MINISTER
   ROOSEVELT AS PROPAGANDIST
   Coalition: Crisis and Renewal
   THE MILLS OF THE GODS
   CAIRO: THE GENERALISSIMO
   TEHERAN: THE MARSHALL
   PART FOUR BATTLE
   The Lords of the Hill
   A SECOND BILL OF RIGHTS
   THE REVOLT OF THE BARONS
   THE SUCTION PUMP
   The Dominion of Mars
   SECRECY AND “SEDITION”
   THE MOBILIZED SOCIETY
   THE CULTURE OF WAR
   The Fateful Lightning
   CRUSADE IN FRANCE
   PACIFIC THUNDERBOLTS
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   ROOSEVELT AS COMMANDER IN CHIEF
   The Grand Referendum
   AS A GOOD SOLDIER
   A NEW PARTY
   A GRAND DESIGN
   THE STRANGEST CAMPAIGN
   FOR YOU ARE THE MAN FOR US
   The Ordeal of Strategy
   EUROPE: THE DEEPENING FISSURES
   CHINA: THE EDGE OF THE ABYSS
   ROOSEVELT AS GRAND STRATEGIST
   CHRISTMAS 1944
   PART FIVE THE LAST HUNDRED DAYS
   The Supreme Test
   “THE ONLY WAY TO HAVE A FRIEND …”
   THE KING OF THE BEARS
   ASIA: THE SECOND SECOND FRONT
   With Strong and Active Faith
   EUROPE: THE PRICE OF INNOCENCE
   ASIA: NEVER, NEVER, NEVER
   “THE WORK, MY FRIENDS, IS PEACE”
   EPILOGUE Home-coming
   FREEDOM’S ONCE-BORN
   DEMOCRACY’S ARISTOCRAT
   VOYAGER’S RETURN
   ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
   GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY
   CHAPTER BIBLIOGRAPHIES WITH BASIC BOOK LIST
   INDEX
   About the Author
   Roosevelt
   The Lion and the Fox (1882–1940)
   CONTENTS
   PREFACE
   PART ONE
   THE EDUCATION OF A POLITICIAN
   I A Beautiful Frame
   The Seed and the Soil
   Groton: Education for What?
   Harvard: The Gold Coast
   II Albany: The Young Lion
   Uncle Ted and Cousin Eleanor
   The Race for the Senate
   The College Kid and the Tammany Beast
   Farmer-Labor Representative
   III Washington: The Politician as Bureaucrat
   A Roosevelt on the Job
   Tammany Wins Again
   War Leader
   IV Crusade for the League
   Challenge and Response
   1920—The Solemn Referendum
   The Rising Politician
   PART TWO
   THE RISE TO POWER
   V Interlude: The Politician as Businessman
   Ordeal
   Dear Al and Dear Frank
   Summons to Action
   VI Apprenticeship in Albany
   The Politics of the Empire State
   The Anatomy of Stalemate
   The Power of Party
   VII Nomination by a Hairbreadth
   The Political Uses of Corruption
   Battle at the Grass Roots
   The Magic Two-Thirds
   VIII The Curious Campaign
   The Fox and the Elephant
   The Stage Is Set
   Roosevelt on the Eve
   PART THREE
   RENDEZVOUS WITH DESTINY
   IX A Leader in the White House
   “A Day of Consecration”
   “Action, and Action Now”
   “A Leadership of Frankness and Vigor”
   America First
   X President of All the People?
   An Artist in Government
   The Broker State at Work
   The Politics of Broker Leadership
   Rupture on the Right
   XI The Grapes of Wrath
   The Little Foxes
   Labor: New Millions and New Leaders
   Left! Right! Left!
   XII Thunder on the Right
   Thunderbolts from the Bench
   Roosevelt as a Conservative
   Roosevelt and the Radicals
   XIII Foreign Policy by Makeshift
   Good Neighbors and Good Fences
   Storm Clouds and Storm Cellars
   The Law of the Jungle
   The Politician as Foreign Policy Maker
   XIV 1936: The Grand Coalition
   The Politics of the Deed
   “I Accept the Commission”
   “We Have Only Just Begun to Fight”
   Roosevelt as a Political Tactician
   PART FOUR
   THE LION AT BAY
   XV Court Packing: The Miscalculated Risk
   Bombshell
   Guerrilla Warfare
   Breaches in the Grand Coalition
   Not with a Bang but a Whimper
   XVI The Roosevelt Recession
   Cloudburst
   Palace Struggle for a Program
   Roosevelt as an Economist
   XVII Deadlock on the Potomac
   Squalls on Capitol Hill
   The Broken Spell
   Too Little, Too Late
   XVIII Fissures in the Party
   The Donkey and the Stick
   The Struggle for Power
   Roosevelt as a Party Leader
   XIX Diplomacy: Pinpricks and Protest
   Munich: No Risks, No Commitments
   The Storm Breaks
   Roosevelt as a Political Leader
   PART FIVE
   THROUGH THE TRAPS
   XX The Soundless Struggle
   The Sphinx
   The Hurricane of Events
   “We Want Roosevelt!”
   XXI An Old Campaigner, a New Campaign
   The Hoarse and Strident Voice
   Lion versus Sea Lion
   The Two-Week Blitz
   The Future in Balance
   Epilogue The Culmination
   Roosevelt as War Lord
   Roosevelt as Peace Leader
   Democracy’s Aristocrat
   Warrior’s Home-Coming
   A NOTE ON THE STUDY OF POLITICAL LEADERSHIP
   IMAGE GALLERY
   ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
   GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY
   CHAPTER BIBLIOGRAPHIES WITH BASIC BOOK LIST
   INDEX
   ILLUSTRATIONS
   (Cartoons depicting the Roosevelt era, interspersed throughout the book, are not listed here. All of the photographs are from the archives of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library at Hyde Park, N. Y.)
   ‘THE MOLD OF A HYDE PARK GENTLEMAN’
   Franklin D. Roosevelt and his father, 1883 Mother and son, 1893
   Young Franklin with his grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins, Newburgh, N.Y., July 13, 1890
   ‘A SECURE WORLD’
   Three-year-old Franklin and his dog preparing for a ride at Hyde Park
   Fourth-string football player at Groton, 1899
   A YOUNG LAWYER AND HIS COUSINS
   Cousin Eleanor (fifth cousin once removed) in 1906, one year after their marriage
   Cousin Jean Delano, sailing at Campobello, around 1910
   FAMILY AFFAIRS
   Franklin Roosevelt with his wife, his mother, and his daughter, Anna, on
   Daisy, the pony, 1911
   The family in Washington, 1916—Elliott, James, Franklin Jr., John, Anna
   Eleanor, with their mother and father
   A ROOSEVELT ON THE JOB
   His first political post, in the New York Senate, 1911
   Assistant Secretary of the Navy at the Navy Yard, New York, 1913
   ARMISTICE WITH TAMMANY
   Roosevelt with Charles F. Murphy, his old Tammany adversary, and John A. Voorhis at Tammany Hall, July 4, 1917
   ‘SOMETHING OF A LION, SOMETHING OF A FOX’
   The rising politician campaigning for Vice-President on the 1920 Democratic ticket—at Dayton, Ohio
   On crutches in 1924, with John W. Davis, who won the presidential nomination, and Al Smith, who lost it, after Roosevelt’s “happy warrior” speech
   ‘A NEW DEAL FOR THE AMERICAN PEOPLE’
   The Democratic nominee for President arriving by plane in Chicago with his family, July 2, 1932, to address the convention
   ‘NOTHING TO FEAR BUT FEAR ITSELF’
   At the Democratic convention, July 4, 1932, with Louis McHenry Howe and his campaign manager, James A. Farley
   The President and his First Lady after arrival in Washington, D. C, March,
   1933, before his first inauguration
   ’A MAN OF MANY ROLES’
   F.D.R. at a dinner for James A. Farley, Feb. 15, 1937, w
ith Henry A. Wallace,
   Cordell Hull, and Henry A. Morgenthau
   A dismal fishing cruise off Miami during the recession, with Robert H. Jackson,
   Harry Hopkins, and Harold Ickes, Nov. 29, 1937
   After hot dogs and a picnic at Hyde Park, President and Mrs. Roosevelt wave farewell to the King and Queen of England at the railroad station, June 11, 1939
   ‘THE INNER CIRCLE’
   The President and his secretaries: Marguerite Le Hand, Marvin H. McIntyre, and Grace Tully, Hyde Park, Nov. 4, 1938
   The President and his cabinet: Henry A. Morgenthau, Secretary of the Treasury; Homer S. Cummings, Attorney General; Claude Swanson, Secretary of the Navy; Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture; Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor; Harry H. Woodring, Secretary of War; Cordell Hull, Secretary of State, Sept. 27, 1938
   ‘THE CHAMP’
   The campaign, 1932
   The press, aboard campaign train, Sept. 13, 1932
   The crowds, at Newburgh, N. Y., Nov. 4, 1940
   The polling booth, with his wife and mother at Hyde Park’s Town Hall, Nov. 8, 1938
   The inauguration, Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes administering the oath of office, Jan. 20, 1937
   THE ROOSEVELT SMILE
   A drought year—but when Roosevelt spoke, it rained—Charlotte, N. C, Sept.
   10, 1936
   Roosevelt laughing at his crippled legs to put others at ease, Hollywood Bowl, Sept. 24, 1932
   ‘NEVER … A MAN WHO WAS LOVED AS HE IS’
   At Warm Springs, Ga., Dec. 1, 1933
   COMMANDER IN CHIEF
   The President reviewing the fleet from the U.S.S. Houston at San Francisco, July 14, 1938
   A prince, wrote Machiavelli, must imitate the fox and the lion, for the lion cannot protect himself from traps, and the fox cannot defend himself from wolves. One must therefore be a fox to recognize traps, and a lion to frighten wolves. Those that wish to be only lions do not understand this. Therefore, a prudent ruler ought not to keep faith when by so doing it would be against his interest, and when the reasons which made him bind himself no longer exist. If men were all good, this precept would not be a good one; but as they are bad, and would not observe their faith with you, so you are not bound to keep faith with them.
   For
   Jan
   David
   Timothy
   Deborah
   Antonia
   PREFACE
   THIS BOOK IS, FIRST of all, a political biography of Franklin D. Roosevelt. It treats much of his personal as well as his public life, because a great politician’s career remorselessly sucks everything into its vortex—including his family and even his dog. How did Roosevelt become what he was? Why was he so effective in winning power? How strong a leader was he in the long run? Where did he fail, and why? What meaning does his life hold for Americans and for American statecraft today?
   This book is also a study in political leadership in the American democracy. It focuses chiefly on the man, but it treats also the political context in which he acted, for my approach is based on the central findings of social scientists that leadership is not a matter of universal traits but is rooted in a specific culture. We can understand Roosevelt as a politician only in terms of his political, social, and ideological environment, the way he shaped his society and in turn was shaped by it.
   
 
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