- Joined
- Jul 12, 2018
- Posts
- 865
- Qantas
- Bronze
- Virgin
- Platinum
There were two more stops before the end of the tour. First stop was the huge (7 acres) Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial. The Memorial was interesting and notable for its two areas of focus. First, it focused on FDR’s amazing achievements – the New Deal, his other efforts to drag America out of the Great Depression, his efforts to support the Allies before America’s official entry into WWII, his accomplishments as a wartime President. There was a large block of land devoted to each of his 4 terms as President (yes, his fourth term only lasted a few months, but a lot was happening in 1945!).
The second focus of the Memorial was on FDR’s disability. He caught Polio in 1928 and was elected President in 1932 – so he accomplished everything as President from a Wheelchair. A passer-by whose son died from, I think, MS last year described the Memorial to the tour group as “a Mecca for people with disabilities”. The first thing a visitor sees is a statue of FDR in his personally-designed wheelchair, and the Memorial has a number of specific features designed to make it easy and welcoming for people with disabilities.
The second focus of the Memorial was on FDR’s disability. He caught Polio in 1928 and was elected President in 1932 – so he accomplished everything as President from a Wheelchair. A passer-by whose son died from, I think, MS last year described the Memorial to the tour group as “a Mecca for people with disabilities”. The first thing a visitor sees is a statue of FDR in his personally-designed wheelchair, and the Memorial has a number of specific features designed to make it easy and welcoming for people with disabilities.