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<div id="pageheader"><h3>James Roosevelt (1907-1991)</h3></div>
                  <div class="blockquote"> 
                    <p><img src="../images/fdrl_roosevelt_james_09-178.jpg" alt="[picture: Franklin D. Roosevelt and James Roosevelt, 1934]  " width="277" height="343" align="right" />James 
                      Roosevelt, ("Jimmy") the second child and first son of <a href="roosevelt-franklin.cfm">Franklin</a> 
                      and Eleanor Roosevelt, was, apart from his sister, <a href="halstead-anna.cfm">Anna</a>, 
                      the Roosevelt child most active in <a href="roosevelt-franklin.cfm">FDR</a>'s 
                      political career. He worked on FDR's 1932 presidential campaign 
                      and served officially and unofficially as his father's assistant. 
                      During his brief stint as a presidential secretary (1937-38) 
                      he served as liaison to FDR's "little cabinet" and at his 
                      father's direction coordinated the activities of twenty 
                      federal agencies. He also often appeared at FDR's side to 
                      help his father create the appearance of walking.</p>
                    <p>After graduating from Groton and Harvard, James was a partner 
                      in a Boston insurance company until 1937 when he joined 
                      Roosevelt's staff as presidential assistant to fill the 
                      void left by the death of <a href="howe-louis.cfm">Louis 
                      Howe</a>. However, his tenure as a staff member, like ER's 
                      career with the Office of Civil Defense during the early 
                      days of World War II, was brief due to congressional charges 
                      of nepotism and criticism over his possible use of political 
                      connections to further his business interests. His relationships 
                      with other presidential aides were also strained and he 
                      was known as "the crown prince" and "assistant president."<a HREF="#N_1_"><sup> 
                      (1)</sup></a> The stress was so great that James developed 
                      ulcers and in 1938 resigned. Thereafter, he worked as a 
                      Hollywood film executive until he joined the Marines in 
                      1940.</p>
                    <p>When <a href="world-war-2.cfm">World War II</a> ended
                      in 1945, James returned to California  where he established
                      a branch of his Boston insurance firm 
                      and tried to launch a political career. He served as chairman
                       of the California State Democratic Central Committee in
                      
                      1946 and a Democratic national committeeman from 1948-52.
                       Five years after losing to incumbent Earl Warren in the
                      
                      1950 California governor's race, James was elected to Congress
                       from California's 26th Congressional District. He 
                      served in Congress until 1965 when President Lyndon Johnson
                       appointed him a delegate to the United Nations Economic
                      
                      and Social Council. He resigned that position the next
                      year  to become president of the International Overseas
                      Services 
                      Management Company. Thereafter he returned to California,
                       where he worked as a business consultant and wrote books
                      
                      about his family. Two, <em>Affectionately, F.D.R. </em>and 
                      <em>My Parents</em> were nonfiction accounts; the third, 
                      <em>A Family Matter</em>, was fiction. His last political
                       activity occurred in 1972 when he was active in Democrats
                      
                      for Nixon. </p>
                    <p>James had four wives and six children. His relationship 
                      with ER was equally complicated, in part because of the 
                      interference of FDR's mother, <a href="roosevelt-sara-delano.cfm">Sara</a>, 
                      in his upbringing and in part because of ER's resentment 
                      over the role James and his first wife, Betsey, played during 
                      FDR's first two terms. ER had opposed making James a presidential 
                      assistant because she feared the impact harsh congressional 
                      criticism would have on her son and because she did not 
                      want the Roosevelt children to receive preferential treatment. 
                      At the same time she was hurt when FDR deferred to Betsey's 
                      judgment in matters that she felt were within her purview 
                      as first lady. </p>
                    <p>Later, mother and son disagreed over political candidates. 
                      She supported <a href="stevenson-adlai.cfm">Adlai Stevenson</a> 
                      in 1956 and 1960 while he backed Estes Kefauver and John 
                      Kennedy. However, her support for James was so strong that 
                      she almost resigned from the <a href="un.cfm">United Nations</a> 
                      in 1950 when <a href="truman-harry.cfm">Harry Truman</a> 
                      refused to endorse his candidacy for governor of California. 
                      James died in 1991 of complications from a stroke.<br>
                      &nbsp;</p>
                    <hr style="color: black; " width="20%" align="Left">
                    <h4>Note:</h4>
                    <ol>
                      <li><a NAME="N_1_"></a>Blanche Wiesen Cook, <em>Eleanor
                        Roosevelt Volume Two, 1933-1938</em> (New York: Viking
                        Press, 1999), 411.</li>
                    </ol>
                    <h4>Sources:</h4>
                    <p>Cook, Blanche Wisen.<EM>Eleanor Roosevelt Volume Two,
                        1933-1938</EM>.
                       New York: Viking, 1999, 353-354, 410-411, 538-539, 553.</p>
                    <P>Goodwin, Doris Kearns. <EM>No Ordinary Time: Franklin
                        and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Homefront During World
                        War II</EM>. 
                      New York: Simon &amp; Schuster, 1994, 177-178, 635-636.</P>
                    <P>Graham, Otis L., Jr. and Meghan Robinson Wander. <EM>Franklin
                         D. Roosevelt: His Life and Times.</EM> New York: Da
                         Capo  Press, 1985, 370-371.</P>
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