Eleanor Roosevelt

Overview

Eleanor Roosevelt was the longest-serving first lady in US history, serving from 1933 to 1945. She transformed the role from a ceremonial title into a platform for political action—hosting her own press conferences, writing a nationally syndicated column six days a week, and publicly taking stances on issues like civil rights, labor, and poverty. After her husband, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, died, she continued her public life as a UN delegate, chairing the commission that created the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Roosevelt transformed the role of the first lady of the United States

    Eleanor Roosevelt diverged from the traditional expectations of the role—holding her own press conferences, writing a daily column, traveling the country on her own schedule, and taking public stances on controversial political issues. Many subsequent first ladies have modeled their use of the position after her example.

  • Learn about the history of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

    The Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1948. This video explains the history, purpose, preamble, and all 30 articles of the UDHR, which established a universal human rights standard for people worldwide.

  • Take a virtual tour of Val-Kill, Eleanor Roosevelt's home and retreat

    Two miles from the Roosevelt family estate in upstate New York, Val-Kill was built as a furniture factory that Eleanor Roosevelt helped create to employ rural workers and craftspeople. It later became her private home and political hub. World leaders and civil rights activists visited her there, and she called it the place where she "became an individual in her own right."