FDR Presidential Library and Museum

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Welcome back to National Parks and other public lands with T!
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Franklin Delano Roosevelt directed the building of the FDR Roosevelt Presidential Library himself in order to preserve the records of the 32nd president of the United States. Roosevelt had been a collector his whole life. He believed he would only serve two terms when he broke ground for the library and wanted to insure public access to his presidential collections. Dedicated in 1941, it is managed by the National Archives and Records Administration.

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Because of the precedent set by FDR’s library, Congress passed the Presidential Libraries Act in 1955 in order to preserve the papers of future presidents for the public. FDR’s is the first of 13 Presidential Libraries.

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FDR and his mother, Sara Roosevelt, donated the land for the library. It sits on 16 acres within the Hyde Park estate and the FDR National Historic Site. FDR used a room in the library as his office.

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The museum has sections for Roosevelt’s early life and family history, his four presidential campaigns and the different eras spanned by his terms. The library also devotes displays to Eleanor, the First Lady.

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There are many interactive displays and videos…you could spend the whole day here if you stopped to press all the buttons, read all of the displays and watch the clips. But I wanted to see the three NPS sites in Hyde Park that day, so I had to take a more abbreviated tour through the library.

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Hyde Park Posts

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Location: 4079 Albany Post Rd, Hyde Park, NY
Designation: Presidential Library
Date designated/established: June 30, 1941
Date of my visit: October 3, 2018

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Freedom Court, in front of the presidential library, commemorates the shared ideals of FDR and Winston Churchill. The sculpture, ‘Break Free’, stands at the center. Churchill’s granddaughter designed it.