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Little White House Photo Tour-1
Historical Marker at Entrance to Little
White House Historic Site
(Text)
Franklin D. Roosevelt came to Warm Springs
in 1924 in hopes of recovering from the effects of polio. His love
for the area and hopes for the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation led
him to build a small white clapboard cottage on these pine scented
slopes. The house was completed in 1932 while F.D.R. was serving as
Governor of New York. During F.D.R.'s four elected terms as the 32nd
President the cottage became known as "The Little White House." It
was designed by architect Henry Toombs who also designed many of the
Foundation buildings. The cost was $8,738 including landscaping. The
cottage, garage, servants quarters and guest house are preserved much
like they were on April 12, 1945 when F.D.R. died of a massive stroke
as he was sitting for a portrait. The "Unfinished Portrait" and
many of F.D.R.'s personal belongings can be seen in the cottage
and in an adjacent museum.
During the busy years between 1932 and 1945
F.D.R. only visited his beloved Little White House on 16 occasions
while he and the nation struggled through the Great Depression of
1929 and then World War II. Many of the solutions to the "people problems"
that beset the nation during his presidency came to F.D.R. as the result
of his association with the people of this area.
Photo: Ed Jackson
Go to Little White House Photo Exhibit page 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
Go to
FDR's Ties to Georgia page
Go to Photos
and Other Images Related to Georgia History page
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