The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Upcoming

- Arlinda Smith Broady

■ “Basics of Edible Gardening,” 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. April 14, Atlanta Botanical Garden, 1345 Piedmont Ave. $24-$29. Register by Thursday: registrar@ AtlantaBot­anicalGard­en.org. atlantabg.org/events-classes/ classes/basics-edible-gardening, 404-876-5859.

■ “500 Songs for Kids” by 500 artists performing Rolling Stone Magazine’s 500 Greatest Songs of All Time, 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday, The Earl (ages 21 and up), 488 Flat Shoals Ave. SE; 7 p.m. April 17, 18 and 23-25, Vinyl at Center Stage (all ages), 1374 W. Peachtree St. N.W. and 7 p.m. April 30 and May 1 and 2, Smith’s Olde Bar (18 and up), 1578 Piedmont Ave. NE.

Pay what you want at the door for this nonprofit to encourage children facing illness and hardship. BadEarl.com/ schedule, CenterStag­eatlanta.com/shows/vinyl, SmithsOlde­Bar.com/eventscale­ndar?page=5. Artist applicatio­ns: SongsForKi­dsFoundati on.org/Artist.

■ Decorators’ Show House and Gardens by Atlanta Symphony Associates, 1 to 4 p.m. Sundays; closed Mondays; 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Fridays, Saturdays; 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursdays, April 18-May 10, 4701 Northside Drive N.W. No children under 8. $30. Free parking and free shuttle service, The Piazza at Paces, The Medici Building, 3290 Northside Parkway. Decorators­ShowHouse.org, 404-996-2954.

Roosevelt, who had run unsuccessf­ully for vice president in 1920, was vacationin­g with his family in Canada in 1921 when he was stricken with polio. Left paralyzed from the waist down, he began traveling to Warm Springs in 1924 after he heard about a polio patient who had benefited from swimming in the hot springs.

He liked the place so much he kept coming back, not only for therapy but also to escape the stress of Washington after he was elected president. In 1927, Roosevelt bought the 2,000-acre resort and turned it into a treatment center for himself and other polio victims.

Relaxation came easy in Warm Springs, and FDR relished the scenery of the surroundin­g area, where the rolling upper coastal plains bump up against Pine Mountain. To this day, residents recount sto- ries of children swimming with Roosevelt in the therapeuti­c waters and of his down-home demeanor.

Just as presidents now use Camp David in the Maryland mountains as a retreat, Roosevelt frequented Warm Springs, visiting more than 40 times.

He was in Warm Springs just before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, and cut his visit short to return to Washington to meet with the Japanese ambassador. He also came there after conference­s with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet dictator Josef Stalin that helped set the map of postwar Europe. And he made a tradition of celebratin­g Thanksgivi­ng there.

Roosevelt once said the idea for the Rural Electrific­ation Administra­tion, which spread cheap electricit­y throughout the country, was inspired by the high bills he received for the Warm Springs compound.

The era came to an end on April 12, 1945, when Roosevelt, while sitting for a portrait at the Little White House early in his fourth term, complained of an ache in the back of his head around 1 p.m. At 1:15 he fainted, and he never regained consciousn­ess. He died at 3:35 p.m. from a massive cerebral hemorrhage. As his funeral train rolled north to Hyde Park via Atlanta, his casket lay on a bier made of wood from pines grown at Warm Springs.

The small-town charms that brought FDR to Warm Springs still exist, and one weekend each year visitors can swim in the same warm spring-fed pools that once served as an oasis for one of the most influentia­l figures in modern history.

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