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  • Roosevelt, James, 1907-1991
  • LBJ Connection: Eldest son of Franklin Delano Roosevelt; World War II veteran; U.S. congressman 1955-1965; delegate to the United Nations Economic and Social Council 1965-1966.
  • Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano), 1914-1988
  • Telephone conversation # 6144, sound recording, LBJ and FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT, JR.?, 11/4/1964, 12:17AM
  • FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT, JR.?
  • fortunately for us all, is one of the still points in a changing world. I believe that Franklin Delano Roosevelt would consider that today we have made a good beginning. Thank you. ####
  • Bio: James Henry Rowe, Jr. (1909-1984), lawyer and administrative assistant to Franklin D. Roosevelt, helped form and carry out the New Deal.
  • LBJ Connection: Long-time friend and adviser to LBJ; Administrative Assistant to Franklin Roosevelt; Counsel to Democratic Policy Committee, 1956
  • National Archives and Records Administration http://archives.gov National Archives Catalog https://catalog.archives.gov http://www.lbjlibary.org COLLECTION DETAILS and FOLDER TITLE LIST Collection: Papers of Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, 1971
  • The National Archives. Franklin D. Roosevelt Library. 6/30/1941-6/30/1949
  • Bio: (1892-1983) Texas attorney and judge; Youngest County Judge in the country at age 23; Appointed by President Franklin Roosevelt as Federal Judge, 1942; Chief Judge of Southern District, 1954-1962
  • . With Franklin D. Roosevelt's nomination for the New York governorship, she transferred to the Roosevelt campaign and, after his successful election, served as assistant to his personal secretary, Marguerite "Missy" LeHand. Tully’s primary White House duties
  • LBJ Connection: Secretary to Franklin D. Roosevelt; Member, LBJ's Senate Staff
  • Bio: Hugo LaFayette Black (1886-1971) was a judge for the Supreme Court of the United States. He was nominated by Franklin D. Roosevelt on August 12, 1937; confirmed by the Senate on August 17, 1937; and received his commission on August 18, 1937
  • [NAID 5726698] http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/personal PERSONAL PAPERS OF JAMES H. ROWE Creator: Rowe, James H. (James Henry), 1909-1984 Donor: Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum Biographical sketch: James Henry Rowe, Jr
  • holds the Sid Richardson chair at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs. I recall that Washington, D.C. was arm and humid on August 4, l 934. Franklin Delano Roosevelt had been Pre i­ dcnt for 17 months, boldly and enthusiastically exercising
  • lead editorial 'Franklin Delano Reagan.' "Still, that shadow appears to be waning. If Nixon, Carter and Reagan all have acknowledged the influence of Roosevelt, that acknowledgment is largely ritualistic. In the 1980 campaign, Carter failed Lo in. pirit
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh CUNEO -- I -- 6 This resulted in an investigation of the magistrate courts by Seabury. The governor of the state was Franklin Delano Roosevelt after 1928, and as the Depression deepened it became obvious that he
  • Biographical information; involvement with Roosevelt's administration; newspapers' importance to the government; summary of politics in New York State when Roosevelt was governor; genesis of the New Deal; Harvard graduates in FDR's administration
  • for the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial Commission, and for other purposes. H. R, 9588, An Act to provide for the free entry of an electrically driven rotating chair for the use of the Louisiana State University Medical Center, New Orleans, Louisiana. H. R
  • the National Council of Jewish Women, 1965; Citizens Medal Award from President Ronald Reagan, 1989; FDR Freedom Medal from Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute, 1989; Myrtle Wreath of Achievement by Hadassah; Ministerial Interfaith Association Award, 1969
  • spanned seven decades. For a time his ideas gained some influence within the administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and he was an informal economic advisor to Lyndon B. Johnson, especially during Johnson's years in Congress, though he broke
  • Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano), 1882-1945
  • inordinately admired, had captured the Bryan movement, that the Republican Party could not assimilate it, that thereafter Franklin Delano Roosevelt brought it back into the Democratic Party. Almost from the first I think he made due LBJ Presidential Library
  • Biographical information; involvement with Roosevelt's administration; newspapers' importance to the government; summary of politics in New York State when Roosevelt was governor; genesis of the New Deal; Harvard graduates in FDR's administration
  • , Franklin D. Contacts Roosevelt, Franklin D. Tributes Roosevelt, Franklin D. Photographs Roosevelt, Pres. Franklin D. 4 National Archives and Records Administration http://archives.gov http://www.lbjlibrary.org/ Box # 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 10 10 10 10 10
  • , Gov. Rockefeller, Adlai Stevenson, Ralph Bunche, Roosevelt children and grandchildren, Grace Tully, Mayor and Mrs. Wagner, Miss Laura Delano, Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Daniel (Margaret Daniel) Depart cottage Arr. St. James Episcopal Church for funeral
  • DISCUSSION OF LABOR PROBLEMS CAUSED BY SHIPMENTS OF US WHEAT TO USSR; MEANY COMPLAINS ABOUT FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT, JR.'S HANDLING OF ISSUE, ASKS THAT LBJ SEND WILLARD WIRTZ OR JIM REYNOLDS TO NEGOTIATE
  • LBJ REPORTS ON HIS CONVERSATION WITH GEORGE MEANY ON LABOR PROBLEMS CAUSED BY SHIPMENTS OF US WHEAT TO USSR; DISCUSSION OF PROBLEMS IN COMMERCE DEPT BETWEEN LUTHER HODGES AND FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT, JR.
  • Administration in 1939 and 1940, a member of the board of governors of the California Housing and Planning Association in 1942 and 1943, and was appointed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt as a member of the Voluntary Participation Committee in the Office
  • being the president. And of course his great hero was Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who was successful in keeping quite a few things secret, but only because it was wartime. I think that's something else that he didn't fully realize, that in wartime you can
  • to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. He became Roosevelt's Press Secretary in 1945. From 1947 to 1952, Daniels was a member of the Democratic National Committee in North Carolina, and from 1947 t0 1953 he was the U.S. member of the United Nations Subcommittee
  • of the Senate. That's when they really teamed up, and whether the administration was Democratic or Republican, they really came pretty close to running the government between them. M: Did Johnson work closely and admire Franklin Delano Roosevelt? V: Yes
  • -- I -- 3 own, so they tied it onto the coattail of WPA, you might say. Unfortunately, it was about that time [Franklin] Delano Roosevelt and [John Nance] Garner, who was a good friend of mine, didn't see eye to eye on everything. They had
  • As Engineer met LBJ, the NYA director; WPA started by Roosevelt, NYA started by Mrs. Roosevelt; NYA tagged onto WPA for financing through Congress; WPA located in San Antonio, NYA in Austin; LBJ as state of Texas administrator of the NYA; Griffith's
  • or more during the war; I saw more of him during the war than I did while he was President, although I then saw him a few times. B: Have you ever been politically active, sir? s: No, not at all. I knew Franklin Delano Roosevelt better than any
  • working for a saint like Franklin Delano Roosevelt, how can you work for a son-of-a-bitch like Lyndon Baines Johnson?" To which Miss Grace began a rather long reply, with the introductory statement that she questioned both premises that Dr. Schaffer had
  • . Keyserling \ Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Roosevelt, Jr. Mrs. Ralph Kharas '_ \ Hon. and Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr. Hon. and Mrs . Dan A. Kimball ^ ' __..i Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt III Hon. and Mrs . Robert E. Kintner Mr. James Roosevelt, Jr. • Vice Adm. Emory
  • . Stone is the chief Staff Asst to the Chai of the House Committee on Education and Labor) Honorable Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr. Honorable John Doar Hon and Mrs. William L. Taylor Hon. Lisle C. Carter, Jr. COMMUNITY RELATIONS SERVICE STAFF MEMBERS Hon
  • Administration marks the end of a political era stretching from Franklin Delano Roosevelt to the present time. Do you agree with this? R: I think it's quite likely that we are moving into a period in which the issues are going to be different
  • faster. He actually ate a lot and ate well and gained I think quite a lot of weight. Then, the important thing of that time was him going to meet President [Franklin Delano] Roosevelt in Galveston. Now just how he got there I don't know, and isn't
  • Visitors during LBJ's hospitalization after appendix surgery in 1937; LBJ's efforts to befriend political opponents, such as C. N. Avery and Polk Shelton; LBJ meeting Franklin Delano Roosevelt in Texas; Lady Bird Johnson's trip to Washington, D.C
  • a photocopy of a letter from Lyndon B. Johnson to Don C. Jennings transmitting the accompanying reprint portrait of President Franklin D. Roosevelt to Jennings. • • • • Date range of collection: 5/31/1937 - 5/31/1937 2 pages Available for research. (Open 2/13
  • by Lincoln regarding elections, politics, Herbert Hoover, and Franklin D. Roosevelt. • • • • Date range of collection: 3/14/1957 - 12/15/1965 1 linear inch Available for research. (Open 1/3/1979) 1 series FOLDER TITLE LIST This small collection is located
  • that there were about twelve people running for the vacancy in Congress and he took note of the fact that all of them were anti-[Franklin Delano] Roosevelt. All of them were pounding hell out of Roosevelt and charging him with packing the Supreme Court. He told me
  • restriction which would not be admissible were domestic affairs alone involved." Nearly every president since Franklin Roosevelt has used that authority to condu t diplomacy free from congressional interference: in World War II, in the subsequent Cold War
  • in Washington 1a necessary. send tor you. It that happens, I will Please return immediately after .the election. Franklin D. Roosevelt." I think these wires need no comment. I hope you agree with the Pr-esident,and not with these "almost friends" ot his
  • -· that crisis with dictatorship and Hitler. The United States met it with democracy and Roosevelt. Hitler believed in government b~ a ba~d of Nazi overl~rds, with Hitler. himself as the dictator at · :g. Wallace Calls For Third Ter1n . : WALLACE,. from Page 1
  • Franklin Delano Roosevelt, he was a great follower of his. He felt like the strength of America was in the people and that the only problem was to get the people to understand what was before the nation and that the answer they would then give would
  • that at this time I don't believe that we knew definitely what their farm policy would be, but personally I felt that with President Johnson's background and his knowledge of agriculture and his close relationship with Franklin Delano Roosevelt through the years