FDR always proud of valley roots
Boyhood, river, friends stay in his thoughts
By Thomas W. Casey
For the Poughkeepsie Journal
‘‘That body snatcher,’’ snapped Franklin Delano Roosevelt to his secretary,
Grace Tully. This irreverent reference was to no less than the Episcopal
bishop of the Washington National Cathedral.
It seems the bishop had asked FDR to consider his cathedral crypt
as his final resting place. After all, the bishop explained, he
already had some venerable captives in his crypt, including the
remains of President Woodrow Wilson.
Alas, the bishop did not know his subject well, for FDR was aghast
anyone would suggest his final resting place would be anywhere other
than the place of his birth and boyhood in the Hudson Valley. He
dictated instructions to Miss Tully on how he was to be buried in
the Rose Garden of his Hyde Park home.
Hence it is that tourists from around the world have journeyed
here to visit the home and burial site of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt
on the banks of the Hudson River.
Countless volumes have been written about Roosevelt as an unsurpassed
leader on the world and national stage in the century we now close,
but scant attention has been paid to the depth and duration of his
love affair with the valley.
His crucial role as president and commander-in-chief (a term he
invented) at a time when the demonic forces of Nazism and Fascism
threatened the existence of western democracy has been well chronicled
by historians. They have also given thorough and critical appraisal
of FDR as architect of the New Deal, the bold, sprawling domestic
program designed to rescue a nation from the Great Depression.
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Franklin D. Roosevelt Library
The "Big Three" meet in Yalta in the
Ukraine on Feb. 9, 1945. From left are British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill, President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Soviet
Premier Joseph Stalin. |
Valley forever beckons
However, a fascinating third facet of this complex personality
has gone largely neglected, i.e., how remarkably parochial he remained.
How, during his election to four terms, he remained in constant
contact with his Hudson Valley ties through well over 100 visits
to his boyhood home and through constant correspondence dealing
with the history and development of the valley.
All indications are FDR’s boyhood was a happy one. All the ingredients
were there — parental love, health, economic security, recreational
opportunities offered by a vast estate, distinguished ancestry.
All of these combined to form the exuberant adult who would later
inspire a nation and world. When plagued by sleepless nights in
the White House, he tells of finding relief recalling the honest
fatigue brought on by boyhood sledding.
His interest in family and Hudson Valley history manifested themselves
early on. At age 19 at Harvard in 1901, he chose as a term paper
topic, ‘‘The Roosevelt Family in New Amsterdam Before
the Revolution.’’ His Christmas gift to his mother in
the same year was a copy of William S. Pellertreau’s, ‘‘Early
New York Houses with Historical and Geneological Notes.’’
In 1910, at age 28, he joined a Dutch historical group called
the Holland Society of New York and soon became a member of the
newly formed Dutchess County Historical Society. He would later
become the official historian of Hyde Park, a post he held for 10
years.
FDR’s involvement in local history brought him in contact
with Helen Wilkinson Reynolds. Besides their common interest in
regional history, both were physically handicapped. Reynolds, FDR
and a Dr. Poucher would spend Sundays picnicing on his estate in
what they called ‘‘historical afternoons.’’
Topics ranged from the Great Nine Partners Patent to the importance
of the Hudson River during the Revolutionary War. Conversations
were enlivened by a concoction known as ‘‘Dr. Poucher’s
Punch.’’
In 1923, Helen Reynolds and FDR collaborated on a book about the
history of Dutch-style homes in the valley. FDR appealed for their
preservation and was appalled by what he called ‘‘the
march of modernism.’’ To be sure, their collaboration
found Helen Reynolds doing most of the actual work as FDR had perfected
the art of delegation well before his White House years.
When FDR was called to the presidency, his abiding link with Hudson
Valley history was through Helen Reynolds. They corresponded frequently
and on many visits to Hyde Park, time was found for visits with
her. In fact, he planned for her to become the curator of documents
related to local history to be housed at the FDR Library. It was
not to be, as Helen died in 1943, prompting Roosevelt to remark,
‘‘ ... what a tragedy. She was a good friend and we had
worked together so much on things related to Dutchess County that
I shall greatly miss her. And so much remains to be done with nobody
to take her place.’’
In the summer of 1939, FDR made the Hudson Valley the center of
world attention by arranging a visit of the king and queen of England.
Correspondence shows an FDR more insistent they come to Hyde Park
than to Washington, D.C. They found time to do both.
Menu topped by hot dogs
It was but a 24-hour visit, but time was found for a picnic at
Top Cottage on the Val-Kill property. There, Roosevelt served good
old American hot dogs — the story stole the day. The king and
queen were escorted to Sunday services at St. James Church in Hyde
Park. The queen was to later recall seeing a sign indicating it
to be the church of ‘‘Franklin Delano Roosevelt, President
of the United States.’’ Under it, someone — no doubt
a local Republican — had added, ‘‘What a shame, it
used to belong to God.’’
Roosevelt’s interest in local architecture remains everywhere
evident today. He was partial to native Dutchess fieldstone and
the slung Dutch roof. A few of the buildings where we can see his
architectural signature include the FDR Library; the winged additions
to his home; Val-Kill, his wife Eleanor’s home; the post offices
in Poughkeepsie, Hyde Park and Rhinebeck; the Hyde Park Public Library;
and the Violet Avenue and Haviland schools.
His architectural influences led one Poughkeepsie newspaper to
exclaim he was Dutchess County’s leading architect. FDR commented
at the cornerstone ceremony for the Poughkeepsie Post Office, ‘‘Let
me straighten out this matter of my being an architect. I think
the easiest way to put it is this: If when the post office is completed
and you good people of Poughkeepsie have had a chance to look at
it ... if, then you like it, I will take all the credit in the world.
But, if you don’t like it when it is finished, why, I had nothing
to do with it whatsoever.’’
Shortly before his death in 1945, weary of war abroad and depression
at home, he confided to a friend, ‘‘Everything in me yearns
to return to the Hudson Valley.’’
Thomas W. Casey is a professor of philosophy and regional history
at Marist College in Poughkeepsie.
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