Eleanor roosevelt biography childhood disintegrative disorder
Eleanor roosevelt biography childhood disintegrative disorder
Eleanor roosevelt biography childhood disintegrative disorder treatment...
“First Lady of the World” Eleanor Roosevelt used her platform as First Lady of the United States and as a member of the wealthy and prominent Roosevelt family to advocate for human and civil rights.
She was a prolific author, speaker, and humanitarian, and chaired the United Nations’ Human Rights Commission. She connected with the public through a popular syndicated column, 'My Day,' in which she recounted her daily adventures from 1935 until her death in 1962.
Born on October 11, 1884 in New York City, Anna Eleanor Roosevelt was the first of Elliot and Anna Hall Roosevelt’s three children.
Her family was affluent and politically prominent, and while her childhood was in many ways privileged, it was also marked by hardship: her father’s alcoholism, as well as the deaths of both parents and one of her brothers before she was ten years old.
She was raised by her harsh and critical maternal grandmother, who damaged Eleanor’s self-esteem.
In 1899, Roosevelt began her three years of