The author posits that FDR may have become President, but would not be the President he became, were it not for his polio. He acquired the disease in 1921 at the age of 39. Just about everyone was exposed to the polio virus in that era, and it was a very long shot to have the misfortune to be crippled by it. (The author prefers to use 'crippled' as it was the usage of the time.) Roosevelt was very, very ill. Hospitalized for months, he could not even sit up, his physician was afraid he was losing arm and shoulder strength, that matters were continuing to deteriorate, and that he could spend the rest of his life on his back in bed. FDR was famous for never letting anyone know what he was thinking about anything and he never shared his feelings about his illness. While everyone worried, he maintained his steadfast optimism and good cheer, and it is assumed, he determined to not let polio define him. He would continue to pursue the Presidency. I've never given any thought to the rehabilitative effort that he, his family, his doctor and his nurses put into getting him on his feet and capable of his herky-jerky assisted "walking". To say it was a massive undertaking would be an understatement. The rehabilitation changed his relationship with his wife, mother and children. He removed himself from their company for great periods of time, particularly to the south in the winter, as he concluded that it was only in warm weather or in warm water that he was making progress. His progress was limited, and by the two-year mark it had stabilized. It was clear that the progress he had made because of his enhanced upper body strength that allowed him to use crutches while his legs were in braces was about as good as it would get.
FDR's comeback began at Madison Square Garden in the summer of 1924. Al Smith's people wanted an establishment Protestant to nominate him and no one was better suited for the job than the party's most recent VP candidate. He used his crutches to cross the stage, hung onto the podium with all his might and brought down the house with his famous 'Happy Warrior' speech. While FDR worked on his rehabilitation, his aide Louis Howe kept his name and tales of his improving health in the public eye. FDR made some progress in his general mobility while at Warm Springs, GA and had hoped to continue there when the politics of 1928 intervened. In order to help carry NY, Smith felt he needed Roosevelt as the nominee for Governor. FDR refused all summer, but when push came to shove in late September, he accepted. He had retained his ambitions, but Smith had accelerated the timing of his advance. When Smith lost, FDR became the leading Democrat in the US. With Hoover ensconced in the White House and the nation prosperous, 1936 was the objective. Overwhelmingly re-elected in 1930 while Hoover stumbled, FDR and his team moved their date forward. Overcoming smears that he was syphilitic, FDR triumphed at the Chicago convention and at the polls in November, 1932, His wife and his closest aides thought his illness provided new character traits. The author agrees with oldest son, James Roosevelt, that the experience strengthened an already very durable and strong man. The author also posits that his illness kept him away from the intramural wars in the party in the mid-20's, and gave him a story of courage and overcoming adversity that he was able to tell. Once, an aide told him he couldn't do something, and he responded, "I've done a lot of things I can't do."
Needless to say, this is a superb book and one that offers fabulous insight into one of our great Presidents. His courage and willpower are obvious. I am also struck by the fact that his family's wealth was just as important to his political success. Although he held titular jobs between 1921 and 1929, almost all of his time and effort went into his rehabilitation. His father's wealth supported him and his family the entire time. The parallel with Jack Kennedy's career twenty years later is eerie.
IHow come it never gets old reading about FDR? Did you do the book on the court - Supreme Power, came out in 2010? In the middle of it. Great read, and seems like its a story about today's battles between executive and judiciary. Getting excited for Ken Burns show on the
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