|
|
| While on a vacation in Campobello Island, New Brunswick, Franklin Roosevelt was taken ill. At first he thought he had a cold, but within days, his legs became numb, leaving him unable to walk. Roosevelt was to consult William Keen, who had earlier operated on Grover Cleveland and examined Woodrow Wilson. Keen first thought Roosevelt’s condition was spinal thrombosis, and then suggested inflammation of the spinal cord. Another doctor, Robert Lovett, finally diagnosed polio. His promising political career, which had already included service as Assistant Secretary of the Navy and the 1920 vice presidential candidate of the Democrats, seemed over. However, Roosevelt aide Louis Howe still believed
Roosevelt had a future. Roosevelt himself kept Roosevelt’s return to politics came in 1924. Usually confined to a wheelchair, with the aid of braces, crutches, and the steady arm of one of his sons, Roosevelt could simulate walking. He designed a wheelchair from a kitchen chair that was smaller in size than standard models of that era. By 1924, Roosevelt was able to stand at the lectern of the Democratic National Convention to place New York governor Al Smith’s name in nomination for the presidency. Four years later, Roosevelt himself was running for governor of the state. He waged a vigorous campaign and despite a Republican presidential victory, Roosevelt became won his race. Two years later, he was re-elected and was a front-runner for the presidential nomination in 1932. There was a whispering campaign that Roosevelt was not physically fit for the presidency and the Roosevelt team responded with an article in Liberty magazine, which included details from an examination by a team of doctors declaring Roosevelt’s health, was up to the challenge. However, Crispell and Gomez note that this report contained worries for the future. The public had concentrated on the polio, but Roosevelt also showed signs even then of hypertension. Roosevelt won the nomination and the presidency.
Many Americans were unaware that their president had to
spend much of his time in a wheelchair. During a speaking
engagement in 1932, Steve Neal notes that Roosevelt moved
away from the podium, lost his balance and fell. Ferrell does not have a high regard for McIntire’s abilities; he argues that the doctor’s examinations of the President were very cursory and McIntire may have been too deferential to Roosevelt for the President’s own good. Fortunately, Roosevelt had few serious health problems for the first ten years of his presidency, but by 1943, this situation changed.
Democratic leaders could see Roosevelt’s
health was in decline and worried that he would not survive
a fourth term. Worse, many had serious doubts about the
abilities of Vice President Henry Wallace, who was seen
by some as either overly idealistic or dangerously radical.
In the end, Harry Truman replaced Wallace on the ticket,
although not before a lively fight for the nomination. Roosevelt
himself accepted his re-nomination in a radio address to
the convention. In April of 1945, Dr. Bruenn accompanied Roosevelt to his Warm Springs retreat. The President’s health had been in decline since March. Bruenn thought he was seeing some signs of progress, but then, on April 12, the President suffered a massive stroke. Bruenn tried to revive him, without success. Just hours after the stroke, Roosevelt was dead. “Clinical Notes on the Illness and Death of President Franklin D. Roosevelt” by Howard G. Bruenn. Annals of Internal Medicine, April, 1970, Vol. 72, pp. 579-591 Hidden Illness in the White House by Kenneth Crispell and Carlos Gomez Choosing Truman: The Democratic Convention of 1944 by Robert Ferrell The Dying President: Franklin D. Roosevelt 1944-1945 by Robert Ferrell FDR’s Splendid Deception by Hugh Gregory Gallagher A Summer Plague: Polio and Its Survivors by Tony Gould Happy Days Are Here Again by Steve Neal |
|