Immigration Myths (A Series): FDR Never Addressed the DAR as "Fellow Immigrants"It's a familiar
story that FDR "fashionably
insulted" the Daughters
of the American Revolution, by addressing
them in a speech
as "fellow immigrants." Like a lot of familiar
stories, it's not true. In They
Never
Said
It,
Paul Boller reports that a reporter improved the
story slightly, but that FDR did make the point,
which we
are all
very tired of, that
Americans are all descended from immigrants. After remarking that
through no fault of his own, he was descended
from a number of people who came over on the Mayflower, he said "Remember, remember always that all of us,
and you and I especially, are descended from
immigrants and revolutionists.” This is true, of course,
even of the Indians. Maybe at some point in
history North America was occupied by peaceful,
lovable, hunter-gatherers, living in harmony
with nature. We never met these people, though.
Long before the arrival of Columbus, they had
been killed, (and in some cases eaten),
by invading Indians. But Roosevelt was
unjustified in using this story to mock a group
of patriotic ladies who were quite right to
worry about immigrants
and revolutionists. For example, you may wonder
why Roosevelt, who is thought of as being from
an old Dutch patroon
family, should have so many ancestors on the
Mayflower. In Country
Squire In The White House, John
T.
Flynn , after
explaining the family history from the 17th
century on says: "...Franklin D. has in his
veins a mere three per cent of Dutch blood and
almost ninety per cent of English blood. The
Dutch name persists, of course, but the blood is
British. There is nothing unusual about this.
The early settlers were Dutch but very few in numbers. They were quickly followed by large
numbers of English settlers who formed the bulk
of the immigrants in the first years of the
colonies and of the states." (Emphasis
added.) So that explains that! Of course, the Van
Cortlandts, Stuyvesants, Van Rensselaers, and
Roosevelts had little choice about this kind of
immigration. You see, in 1664 the English had
defeated them in a war. So far that hasn't happened
to the United States. Has it? March 21, 2001 |
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