Sunday, January 11, 2009

Political Life

Eleanor Roosevelt meets three women from the Bakery



When her husband, Franklin D. Roosevelt, was President, Eleanor Roosevelt was an active First Lady who traveled extensively around the nation. She visited relief projects, surveying working and living conditions, and then reporting her observations to the President. She was extremely dedicated to her work and she accomplished a lot during her time as First Lady.
She became an active member of the American Red Cross and volunteered in Navy hospitals. She also participated in the League of Women Voters,
the Women's Trade Union League, and the Women's Division of the New York State Democratic Committee. She helped to found Val-Kill Industries, a nonprofit furniture factory in Hyde Park, New York, and taught at the Todhunter School, which was a private girls' school in New York City. She became an advocate of the rights and needs of the poor, of minorities, and of the disadvantaged. In the 1930s, she headed a housing project for West Virginian coal miners, and in 1934, helped instigate the National Youth Administration, which acquired employment rights for young workers. In World War II, she visited England and the South Pacific to foster good will among the Allies and boost the morale of US servicemen overseas.

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