
The Smithsonian Institute is one of America’s greatest gifts to her citizens. My favorite is the American History museum where such treasures are kept as Dorothy’s ruby slippers, Old Glory, the gowns of the First Ladies and a centuries old ship.
There’s also a display of Presidential memorabilia including this treasure.
It’s the CBS broadcasting microphone that Franklin Delano Roosevelt spoke into when he gave his Fireside Chats.
It was through this microphone that FDR communicated with Americans about the darkest days of the Great Depression and through the terrifying years of World II. It’s hard to imagine a world without internet, a 24 hour television news cycle or immediate access to information. It’s strange to think of a world when people gathered around their radios to take in a sitting President’s Fireside Chats.
Incidentally, this concept was innovative when FDR began addressing the country in this way. His chats were meant to inform and reassure American citizens. He spoke directly to the citizens about his programs and initiatives and about the war.
There was no room for interpretation and no analysis or opinion from commentators who could disguise their opinions as fact as we see so much today.
It was information straight from the horse’s mouth, so to speak.
Are we really better off today with so many news outlets or businesses parading as media while they push their thinly veiled agendas? There was significantly less splintering of information back then and a greater sense of unity.
It’s funny but I long for simpler days that I never even knew in real life,
In case you’ve forgotten your American history, this is Pearl Harbor Day. It was 82 years ago today that a Japanese attack left 2,403 servicemen and civilians dead at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii.
In a Fireside Chat two days after the attack, Roosevelt said these words.
“We are now in this war. We are all in it—all the way. Every single man, woman, and child is a partner in the most tremendous undertaking of our American history. We must share together the bad news and the good news, the defeats and the victories—the changing fortunes of war.”
-Franklin Roosevelt, Fireside Chat, December 9, 1941
“We must share together.” This is a phrase we don’t hear much anymore. We tend to not share so much as sit in our separate corners and nurse our own agendas.
May we never again know a time of such sorrow and hardship as another Great War. However, if we do, let us hope we are led by an individual who can intentionally unite rather than purposefully divide.
And may all those who who lost their lives so horrifically and so unexpectedly 82 years ago today rest in peace.
Beautiful post.
Thank you Betty!
So well stated! There’s a such thing as TMI. And we live in it 24/7. I hope the next big war isn’t Civil War II.
Thank you!
I am fearful for our country and worry that we aren’t far from a civil war.
I can no longer believe “it could never happen,” given the things I observe these days.
Ha!! I hear that!