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For an unabashed liberal and believer in social
justice, visiting President Franklin D. Roosevelt's home,
Springwood, in Hyde Park, New York was a special trip for me in
September 2004. As I walked the grounds and toured the
buildings, I was thinking "with all the history here, if only the
walls could talk." Since they can't, here are a few pictures
that you won't see on a lot of postcards!

The front of the home, seen here,
looks very much as it did when President Roosevelt lived here before
moving to the Governor's Mansion in Albany, and later, the White
House.
Inside the house, you find such FDR
reminders as his original low-profile wheelchair, made from one of
the home's straight back chairs...


...to the hand-pulled
elevator he used to lift himself between the upper and lower floors
of the house so he would not be trapped if there was a fire and no
one was with him.

Before you say, "that's just a gravel
driveway", remember "if only the walls could talk..."
You're looking down the main house's driveway to the New
York Route 9, on the very spot, about 300 yards from the
mansion shown above, where FDR stopped after carrying himself
on crutches to prove to himself that polio would not beat
him. He went on from here to become the Governor of
New York and President of the United States.
Back in the house complex, there are
more signs of FDR's presidency including the "radio room" in the
"tower wing", located to the left rear of
the bell hanging over the porch, where FDR made his Election Night
speeches to the nation.

If you look closely at
the upper right part of the photo,
you'll see the broadcast antenna is still in place!
A slow walk through FDR's
stable showed not only part of his saddle and equestrian equipment
collection, but also his horses' stalls.

A closer look at the stalls
shows FDR's confidence in his ideas -- his horse is named after his
first administration, the New Deal!

The Rose Garden a few steps away
contains the graves of FDR and Mrs. Roosevelt (aka
"Eleanor")...

...while on the other side of the
white marble memorial lay circular markers for the final resting
places of Chief and Fala, two of the President's dogs.

While walking from the Rose Garden to
the FDR Presidential Library, one is struck by how this man crippled
by polio inspired and led the Free World to victory in World War
II.

One sculptor, sensing this president's
role in history, honored FDR's leadership with a statue called
simply "The War President".
As a military retiree who used
his veteran's educational benefits to attain an Associate, Bachelor
and Master degree, I was touched when I walked into the presidential
library and found the desk where FDR signed the GI Bill, the law
that created the middle class in America.

As I often say, "God Bless FDR; God
Bless the GI Bill!" I wouldn't be
where I am in life without either!
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