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Hidden Assets: a new window into the FDR White House.


That Man: An Insider's Portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt By Robert H. Jackson For the photographer, see .

Robert Houghwout Jackson (February 13, 1892–October 9, 1954) was United States Attorney General (1940–1941) and an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court (1941–1954).
 Oxford University Press, $30.00

In the late 1940s, Robert Jackson Robert Jackson may refer to:
  • Two Cleveland Browns players:
  • Robert E. Jackson (football player), (b. 1953)
  • Robert L. Jackson (football player), (b.
, a Supreme Court Justice, decided to write a book about FDR and recount his experiences in Washington during the New Deal and World War II. His former colleagues, he thought, had written their memoirs, and they had said their piece about Roosevelt; now Jackson wanted to weigh in with a balanced, honest recollection, a candid portrait of the man who had nominated him to the high court. He called the manuscript "That Man" as a rejoinder The answer made by a defendant in the second stage of Common-Law Pleading that rebuts or denies the assertions made in the plaintiff's replication.

The rejoinder allows a defendant to present a more responsive and specific statement challenging the allegations made
 to Roosevelt's critics, who so hated FDR they couldn't bear to say his name.

But in 1954,Jackson suffered a heart attack and died before he could finish this book. More than 40 years later, Robert Barrett, a law professor at St. John's University, working on a Jacksun biography, received a call from Jackson's family. They told him that Jackson's son, Bill, had died, and that the relatives had found a manuscript in a closet in Bill Jackson's Manhattan apartment.

Barrett read the pages and believed that he had struck historical gold. He decided that the book deserved to get published. In order to round out the portrait of FDR that Jackson was seeking to write, Barrett inserted excerpts from many other sources, including Jackson's oral history and his unpublished autobiography. At times, these insertions disrupt the book's flow. But on the whole, this is a winning memoir--the story of Jackson's life in the White House; a powerful portrait of our 32nd president; and, most of all, a tribute to the humanity and the vision that stood at the heart of the Roosevelt administration There have been two Presidents of the United States with the surname "Roosevelt":
  • Theodore Roosevelt Administration, the 26th President of the United States, 1901 - 1909.
and his younger distant cousin
  • Franklin D.
.

Robert Jackson had a unique vantage point on his times. When he arrived in Washington in 1934, he took a job as general counsel at the Bureau of Revenue, the IRS's predecessor. He rose rapidly through the ranks. He became the chief of the anti-trust division at the Department of Justice. He later served as solicitor general An officer of the U.S. Justice Department who represents the federal government in cases before the U.S. Supreme Court.

The solicitor general is charged with representing the Executive Branch of the U.S. government in cases before the U.S. Supreme Court.
, then as assistant attorney general, and then as a Supreme Court justice followed by the capstone to his career--as the senior US. prosecutor at Nuremberg. One of Roosevelt's close friends, Jackson played various rules in FDR's White House: As presidential counselor and aide-de-camp, he served as an unofficial sounding hoard for Roosevelt's ideas and strategies.

Jackson had a hand in many of the most important debates of the 1930s and 1940s. He sent memos to the president, and he helped draft speeches and write messages to Congress. He took to the airwaves mad the committee hearing morns of Capitol Hill to defend Roosevelt's policies and articulate his own views on the nation's biggest issues. When he attacked the business tycoons who opposed the New Deal on the radio mad in the papers, some of Roosevelt's critics branded Jackson a socialist.

Jackson doesn't shy away from Verb 1. shy away from - avoid having to deal with some unpleasant task; "I shy away from this task"
avoid - stay clear from; keep away from; keep out of the way of someone or something; "Her former friends now avoid her"
 discussing FDR's shortcomings A shortcoming is a character flaw.

Shortcomings may also be:
  • Shortcomings (SATC episode), an episode of the television series Sex and the City
. He argues, for example, that FDR was weak when it crone crone

see crock.
 to administration. Roosevelt didn't like in fire his aides, and he didn't like to settle disputes between staff members. He had a habit of changing his would depending on the views of the prison who had talked to him last, and had a "happy disregard of channels, ranks and priorities." While this often worked to his advantage, FDR occasionally infuriated in·fu·ri·ate  
tr.v. in·fu·ri·at·ed, in·fu·ri·at·ing, in·fu·ri·ates
To make furious; enrage.

adj. Archaic
Furious.
 bureaucrats with that stone disregard. Lower-level officials were sometimes asked to intervene in matters where only the president had the authority to make a decision.

FDR once asked Jackson to settle a dispute over foreign financial policy between Secretary of State Cordell Hull and Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau. Jackson was shocked. " [It] would be impossible for me," wrote Jackson, "to arbitrate between two men, both my senior in years, both my senior in Cabinet rank, both my senior in service there ..." Jackson demurred. FDR "ultimately had to take up the task himself."

That Man, in the end, is a strong endorsement of Roosevelt. It contain s a trove of new information about Roosevelt's life--his interactions with staff and friends, his habits when he was on vacation, his temperament and style away from the spotlight. The book also has some charming vignettes such as the one about a sailing trip through the Florida Keys. FDR had been ill, but once at sea, he began to relax. He caught mackerel mackerel, common name for members of the family Scombridae, 60 species of open-sea fishes, including the albacore, bonito, and tuna. They are characterized by deeply forked tails that narrow greatly where they join the body; small finlets behind both the dorsal and  and ate cooked fish for breakfast. He played nightly games of low stakes poker and his luck, Jackson writes, was "phenomenal."

"... [FDR] had rested. Life had been most informal in dress and in conduct. He was of course treated respectfully by all, but with perfect informality. In fishing contest, playing cards, and conversation, he was and wanted to bc an equal. He asked no flavors and granted none. He played the game on its merits. He was able to avoid all pose. He was away from curious eyes. We were completely isolated ... It had been one of the delightful experiences of life."

When Roosevelt died suddenly of a stroke on April 12, 1945, Jackson returned to the Department of Justice to eulogize eu·lo·gize  
tr.v. eu·lo·gized, eu·lo·giz·ing, eu·lo·giz·es
To praise highly in speech or writing, especially in a formal eulogy.



eu
 his friend. Millions of people stood with FDR, Jackson mid the audience, because "while be walked with Kings ... he never lost the common touch; ... he was their friend and advocate; ... while he lived there would be no forgotten man." Jackson predicted that long into the future, "The figure of Roosevelt will stand "like a sharply cut rock in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?"
midmost
 of a shapeless shape·less  
adj.
1. Lacking a definite shape.

2. Lacking symmetrical or attractive form; not shapely.



shape
 sea."' That Man, after languishing lan·guish  
intr.v. lan·guished, lan·guish·ing, lan·guish·es
1. To be or become weak or feeble; lose strength or vigor.

2.
 in a closet for so many years, is a unique historical find and a ringing affirmation of that prediction.

Matthew Dallek, the author of The Riqht Moment: Ronald Reagan's First Victory and the Decisive Turning Point in American Politics, works as a speech writer in Washington D. C.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Author:Dallek, Matthew
Publication:Washington Monthly
Date:Nov 1, 2003
Words:966
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