First we sat in one of the meeting rooms of the library and learned about presidential libraries in general. George Washington actually had the idea for a presidential library, a place in which the public would be able to search for and view official documents pertaining to his presidency. Washington died before his vision was realized, and it wasn't until FDR that the first presidential library was established. FDR was the first to actually open a presidential library, but in his retirement Herbert Hoover (FDR's predecessor) decided to open a library of his own, so FDR isn't the first president chronologically with his own library. Each president since has opened his own library, and there are now twelve throughout the US. And their collections, as you might imagine, are massive.
The special exhibit at the museum right now is called "Action and Action Now: FDR's First 100 Days." (You can download a pdf file of the exhibition catalog on the website if you're interested.) We had discussed FDR's first 100 days in class, as well as a NYTimes article comparing Obama's first 100 Days to those of FDR and other presidents. This is the article comparing Obama to FDR - the tagline is "Obama has led people to re-think their assumptions. Just like F.D.R." The exhibition wasn't much new information, but it was certainly interesting to see, and was put together well. The room about FDR's Fireside Chats (his conversations with the nation broadcasted over the radio) was set up like a 1930s kitchen, and a video on the Fireside Chats played, incorporating lighting and sounds in the room itself that were designed to make you feel like you were sitting at home listening to the radio during the Depression.
i LOVE FDR. he was one of my favorite presidents (sorry FDR, abe's my man! though abe will have to make room for bamy)
ReplyDeleteit's amazing to go to historic places. you know you should go to the morgan library. we should go this summer. that man's library is IMPRESSIVE. oh robber barons.
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