Roosevelt

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This is our second day in the New York City area.  Originally we were supposed to tour the Culinary Arts Institute and have lunch there.  But apparently Fantasy had such a bad experience with them last year they changed the schedule.  Darn, I was looking forward to it because my son-in-law attended that school  Instead, we started the day with an elegant lunch at Cosimo’s Trattoria.

After lunch, we went to Roosevelt’s Homestead and Library.  Roosevelt was born here and lived here his whole life.  In fact, he came back quite often and would conduct official business here.  He built onto the original home – I’m assuming the wings added to each side – to accommodate more family.

The additions were the stone parts on either side. The white stick-like things are a railing on the porch.  They must of lost too many tourists walking off the edge of the porch.
This was FDR’s living area.
This was his library/office area. One of his wheelchairs is in the foreground.
This is Franklin’s bedroom. The phone on the wall above the phone on the night table was a direct line to the White House.
This was Eleanor’s bedroom. She moved to this bedroom after Franklin contracted polio in 1921.
FDR even had a Scottish Terrier, just like us. His dog is a lot shaggier than ours.

I can help but compare this house to the Vanderbilt’s summer home, the Breakers because both were from the same time period.

For an update on the campground yesterday, the river rose 9-1/2 feet, but it didn’t crest the banks.  They evacuated us just in case, because it did crest a week or two earlier.  The photo below is of the campsite I moved to down the road.  I don’t think I’ve ever had a campsite this secluded.

Each time I came out of my door, there was another black walnut cracked on my picnic table. I never did see what was eating them.

 

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