The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

FDR’s legacy 75 years later: A leader for dark days

President drew on his suffering from polio to find the strength, empathy to lead our nation.

- By Stan Deaton Stan Deaton, Ph. D, is senior historian and the Dr. Elaine B. Andrews Distinguis­hed Historian at the Georgia Historical Society.

Is it just a coincidenc­e that the 75th anniversar­y of the death of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, our 32nd president, comes as our country is facing a dark crisis that is once again testing the strength of our national fabric?

When Franklin Roosevelt died at Warm Springs 75 years ago, on April 12, 1945, one of America’s great leaders passed into history. My father, born to sharecropp­ers in rural Georgia one month before Roosevelt’s election in November 1932, vividly remembers that day. FDR’s New Deal had brought electricit­y to their farm, as it had to millions of others. Suddenly the only president he had ever known was gone.

FDR took office in 1933 with the unemployme­nt rate at 25% and 15 million Americans out of work. The new president had brains and competency in abundance, but this crisis called for something more.

His own struggles with polio had created in him that rarest but most essential of all political gifts: empathy for the suffering of others. “When you’ve spent two years in bed trying to wiggle your big toe,” he famously said, “everything else seems easy.” FDR understood that Americans were fearful and hurting, and he knew he had to reassure them.

Tempered by his own dark nights of the soul, emboldened by the voters, determined to save capitalism and the country, FDR faced the uncertain future without flinching: “The news is going to get worse and worse before it gets better and better, and the American people deserve to have it straight from the shoulder.”

President Herbert Hoover had warned that “we cannot legislate ourselves” out of the Depression. Roosevelt would have none of it. Maybe he wouldn’t be a great president, but he realized that if he didn’t lead from the front, he might be the last one: “The country needs and demands bold, persistent experiment­ation. It is common sense to take a method and try it: If it fails, admit it frankly and try another. But above all, try something.”

Historians and economists disagree on how effective the New Deal was at putting Americans back to work and ending the Great Depression. But FDR’s unmatched ability to reassure and lead the American people during that crisis and World War II led to a landslide reelection in 1936, and unpreceden­ted third and fourth terms in 1940 and 1944.

Like Lincoln, FDR died at the supreme moment of victory in the great war in which he had led. At the hour of triumph, after 12 years of struggle, the steady hand and reassuring voice were gone.

But his unflinchin­gly honest and empathetic leadership in the greatest crises of the 20th century had held the nation fast during the Republic’s darkest hours, securing its ultimate survival. His rock-ribbed belief in the enduring democratic values of the American people in the face of economic and military catastroph­e should still bring comfort to a dark and frightened world.

Seventy-five years later, his words still speak to us: “There is no blinking at the fact that our people, our territory and our interests are in grave danger . ... We Americans of today are passing through a period of supreme test. It is a test of our courage — of our resolve — of our wisdom — our essential democracy. I know that it is America’s purpose that we shall not fail.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS 1941 ?? President Franklin D. Roosevelt met some of our nation’s darkest hours with courage, tenacity and empathy for Americans suffering in perilous times.
ASSOCIATED PRESS 1941 President Franklin D. Roosevelt met some of our nation’s darkest hours with courage, tenacity and empathy for Americans suffering in perilous times.
 ??  ?? Stan Deaton
Stan Deaton

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