Traitor to His Class: The Privileged Life and Radical Presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt (176 page)

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Authors: H. W. Brands

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BOOK: Traitor to His Class: The Privileged Life and Radical Presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt
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“Mrs. Roosevelt has been winning”: From Churchill, Nov. 1, 1942.

“What would you do in China”: ER, 2:284.

“Those delicate little petal-like fingers”: Lash, 679.

“This trip will be attacked”: Ibid., 682.

“This is the kind of thing”: From ER, Sept. 6, 1943, FDRL.

“I’ve never been so hedged”: Lash, 688.

“Wherever Mrs. Roosevelt went”:
Christian Advocate,
Dec. 30, 1943.

“I wrote a column”: ER to Joseph Lash, July 14, 1944, FDRL.

“I don’t think Pa”: Roosevelt and Shalett, 353.

“Mrs. Roosevelt urged the President”: Sherwood, 831.

“Men and women”:
New York Times,
Aug. 26, 1945.

“We rejoice with the gallant French people”: Statement, Aug. 24, 1944.

“We should have sufficient material”: Briefing paper by Groves, Dec. 30, 1944,
FRUS: Conferences at Malta and Yalta, 1945.

“This was the first indication”: Sherwood, 844–45.

“He says that if we had spent ten years”: Log of Malta trip, Feb. 2, 1945,
FRUS: Malta and Yalta.

“more bloodthirsty…only out of kindness”: Bohlen notes of Roosevelt-Stalin meeting, Feb. 4, 1945,
FRUS: Malta and Yalta.

“the whole map of Europe, in fact”: Combined Chiefs of Staff minutes of Roosevelt-Stalin-Churchill meeting, Feb. 4, 1945,
FRUS: Malta and Yalta.

“Marshal Stalin, the President, and the Prime Minister…where for they sang”: Bohlen minutes of Roosevelt-Stalin-Churchill dinner meeting, Feb. 4, 1945,
FRUS: Malta and Yalta.

“I would like to know, definitely…would be the limit”: H. Freeman Matthews minutes, Feb. 5, 1945,
FRUS: Malta and Yalta.

“in the Black Sea area”: Joint communiqué, Feb. 7, 1945,
FRUS: Malta and Yalta.

“in an excellent humor…from our grasp”: Bohlen minutes, Feb. 8, 1945,
FRUS: Malta and Yalta.

“I come from a great distance…they will be shot”: Matthews minutes, Feb. 6, 1945,
FRUS: Malta and Yalta.

“I am greatly disturbed”: To Stalin, Feb. 6, 1945.

“Nazi Germany is doomed…and secret ballot”: Yalta communiqué, Feb. 12, 1945,
FRUS: Malta and Yalta.

“The leaders of the three Great Powers”: Agreement, Feb. 11, 1945,
FRUS: Malta and Yalta.

CHAPTER
56

“It was the best I could do”: Berle, 477.

“Ten years from now”: Bohlen minutes, Feb. 6, 1945,
FRUS: Malta and Yalta.

“The President has lost ten pounds”: Margaret Suckley,
Closest Companion: The Unknown Story of the Intimate Friendship between Franklin Roosevelt and Margaret Suckley,
ed. Geoffrey C. Ward (1995), 346.

“I had quite a talk with Anna”: Ibid., 366–70.

“He was obviously greatly fatigued”: Bruenn, “Clinical Notes.”

“very tired”: Churchill, 6:391, 397.

“Franklin feels his death very much”: Suckley,
Closest Companion,
397.

“I hope that you will pardon me…We cannot fail them again”: Address to Congress, March 1, 1945.

“I did not think it”: Hassett, 318.

“Tonight had another talk”: Ibid., 327–28.

“The drive was too long”: Suckley,
Closest Companion,
413.

“His color was much better”: Bruenn, “Clinical Notes.”

“preceded by an Old-fashioned cocktail”: Hassett, 332.

“His voice was wonderful”: Smith,
Thank You, Mr. President,
186.

“I have been offered”: Morgenthau, 3:417.

“In the quiet beauty of the Georgia spring”: Hassett, 333.

“He had slept well”: Bruenn, “Clinical Notes.”

“He came in, looking very fine”: Suckley,
Closest Companion,
417.

“He was in good spirits but did not look well”: Hassett, 333.

“We have fifteen minutes…‘back of my head’”: Suckley,
Closest Companion,
418.

“It was apparent that the President”: Bruenn, “Clinical Notes” Notes by Bruenn, April 12, 1945, FDRL.

CHAPTER
57

“I have a terrible announcement to make…miracle”:
New York Times
and
Washington Post,
April 13–16, 1945.

“He should gain weight…in the question”: Lash, 719–20.

“I did not even ask why”: ER, 2:344.

“I am more sorry for the people…trouper to the last”: Ibid.;
New York Times,
April 13, 1945; McCullough,
Truman,
342.

She said that Lucy had been with the president: Lash, 722.

“I had schooled myself to believe”: ER, 2:348–49.

“She would rather light a candle”:
New York Times,
Nov. 8, 1962.

“Americans are gathered together”: Posthumous message, April 13, 1945.

“You cannot go all this way”: Churchill, 4:694.

“It’s the most lovely spot”: Charles McMoran Wilson Moran,
Churchill: The Struggle for Survival, 1940–1965, Taken from the Diaries of Lord Moran
(1966), 90.

“Come, Pendar, let’s go home”: Kenneth Pendar,
Adventure in Diplomacy: Our French Dilemma
(1945), 154.

 

ALSO BY H. W. BRANDS

 

The Reckless Decade

T.R.

The First American

The Age of Gold

Lone Star Nation

Andrew Jackson

 

 

Copyright © 2008 by H.W. Brands

 

All Rights Reserved

 

Published in the United States by Doubleday, an imprint of The Doubleday Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

www.doubleday.com

 

DOUBLEDAY
is a registered trademark and the DD colophon is a trademark of Random House, Inc.

 

All photographs are courtesy of the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Library, except for “With Hoover en route to the Capitol” and “Signing the Social Security Act,” which are courtesy of the Library of Congress.

 

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Brands, H. W.

Traitor to his class: the privileged life and radical presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt / H. W. Brands.—1st ed.

p. cm.

Includes bibliographical references.

1. Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano), 1882–1945. 2. Presidents—United States—Biography. 3. United States—Politics and government—1933–1945. I. Title.

E807.B735 2008

973.917092—dc22

[B]

2008015164

 

eISBN
: 978-0-385-52838-2

 

v1.0

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