Franklin Delano Roosevelt was a born collector. America’s 32nd president spent a lifetime collecting everything from stamps and coins to Hudson River art and Dutch tiles.
One of FDR’s greatest passions was his enormous naval and maritime collection. Begun during his youth and patiently developed over decades, this rich collection reflects the President’s deep, lifelong love of the sea. An expert sailor, Roosevelt was America’s greatest seafaring president. Whether piloting a sailboat along the New England coast, racing his ice yacht on the Hudson River, fishing aboard pleasure craft, or crossing oceans on naval vessels, he relished time on the water. The sea offered adventure, exercise, and camaraderie. In his later years, it also provided an escape from the pressures of public life. The popular image of FDR as a sailor, guiding the ship of state through rough waters, endures to this day.
This exhibition—a joint effort of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum and the South Street Seaport Museum—presents treasures from FDR’s naval and maritime collection and explores what they tell us about Roosevelt’s connections to ships and the sea.
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| Seven-year-old Franklin Roosevelt in a sailor suit, 1889. FDR Library & Museum |
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| FDR paddles his birchbark canoe in waters off Campobello Island, New Brunswick, 1907. FDR Library & Museum |
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| Roosevelt at the helm of a sailboat near Campobello Island, New Brunswick, 1908. FDR Library & Museum |
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| FDR prepares to launch two model sailboats with his sons Franklin, Jr. (left) and John (right), 1920. FDR Library & Museum |
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| Governor Roosevelt works on one of his ship models, 1930. FDR Library & Museum NPX 48-22:4185(71) |
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| FDR waves to a crowd from the deck of the USS Indianapolis during a 1936 visit to Montevideo, Uruguay. FDR Library & Museum |
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Treasures of a President: FDR and the Sea on view at the South Street Seaport Museum
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| President Roosevelt relaxes in his White House study with historical manuscripts from his personal collections, February 10, 1942. His |
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| A postcard view of the Naval Exhibition Room as it appeared shortly after the opening of the FDR Library in 1941. FDR Library & Museum IMG—348 |
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