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    • Franklin D. RooseveltFranklin D. Roosevelt

      m. 1905 - 1945

  2. Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer or questioning (LGBTQ)* people are part of the fabric of American life and history. The stories of their strengths and struggles—the right to live, love, and thrive—is a story of the cultural, social, and legal history of the United States. During Eleanor Roosevelt's lifetime, no lesbian, gay ...

  3. Mar 1, 2021 · In the 1920s, Eleanor explored Greenwich Village in New York City and found a chosen family of lesbian political activists there. They helped push her towards her own advocacy for women’s political rights. Two suffragists who were life partners with each other ー Nan Cook and Marion Dickerman ー became particularly important in Eleanor’s ...

  4. Jan 23, 2023 · Uncle Teddy Stole The Stage At Their Wedding. Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt wed on St. Patrick's Day of 1905 in New York City in the home of Eleanor's grandmother, per History Today. The annual parade was a fixture of New York even then, and the festivities outside reportedly drowned out the exchange of marriage vows.

  5. Jun 6, 2023 · "It's not, 'oh, here's the story of how Eleanor Roosevelt was secretly a lesbian,' or 'here is the story of Emily Dickinson, who was maybe in love with her brother's wife,'" Possanza says.

  6. Lorena Alice "Hick" Hickok (March 7, 1893 – May 1, 1968) was a pioneering American journalist and long-term romantic interest of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt.. After an unhappy and unsettled childhood, Hickok found success as a reporter for the Minneapolis Tribune and the Associated Press (AP), becoming America's best-known female reporter by 1932.

  7. Nov 16, 2009 · In 1903, a 22-year-old Franklin proposed marriage to the 19-year-old Eleanor; the couple wed two years later on St. Patrick’s Day.Former President Theodore Roosevelt gave away the bride.

  8. nna Eleanor Roosevelt was born October 11, 1884, to Anna Hall Roosevelt and Elliott Roosevelt, the scion of two long-standing and wealthy New York families. However, this child, who was called Eleanor and retained the Roosevelt name throughout her life by virtue of marrying a distant cousin with the same last name, would

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