April 21, 2022

In this issue: Hudson Valley History Reading Festival In-Person and Streaming; A Live, Virtual Yom HaShoah Event; FDR's Response to the Fall of France; Family Quilting #ArtifactRoadTrip; Nazis and Auschwitz; Fred Shipman's Mission to Save Europe's Archives

UPCOMING PROGRAMS & EVENTS
IN PERSON AND STREAMING
Hudson Valley History
Reading Festival
Saturday, April 23, 2022

And streamed live to:
The FDR Library and the Friends of the Poughkeepsie Public Library District present the ninth annual Hudson Valley History Reading Festival.

10:00 a.m.
A.J. Schenkman
Patriots and Spies in Revolutionary New York


11:00 a.m.
Robert Titus and Johanna Titus
The Catskills in the Ice Age: Third Edition, Revised and Expanded


1:00 p.m.
Russell Dunn & Barbara Delaney
Paths to the Past: History Hikes through the Hudson River Valley, Catskills, Berkshires, Taconics, Saratoga & Capital Region


2:00 p.m.
Shannon Butler
Roosevelt Homes of the Hudson Valley: Hyde Park and Beyond

Library members receive a discount in the New Deal Store on these featured books (as well as all other merchandise). Sign up for or renew your membership today. Your support through membership makes programs like this possible.
LIVE, VIRTUAL EVENT
WITH Q&A
Yom HaShoah: Remembering with Resources from the Roosevelt Presidential Library
Wednesday, April 27, 2pm
Karen Hochhauser of the Dutchess County Jewish Federation discusses the importance of Yom Hashoah to our community and our world with Jeffrey Urbin, Roosevelt Library Education Specialist.
PROGRAM ARCHIVES
From June 2014

Author David Kaiser examines President Roosevelt's response to the fall of France and the potential fall of the UK in May, 1940, preparing the US to not only enter the war by Pearl Harbor, but win it within three and a half years.

Author David Kaiser
FEATURES AND DIVERSIONS
This painting, Family Quilting by Dorothea Tomlinson Marquis of Des Moines, Iowa, was created for the Treasury Department’s Public Works of Art Project (PWAP). It was displayed at the Corcoran Gallery from April 24-May 20, 1934.


The Nazis used concentration and death camps to punish those deemed politically dangerous or racially, physically, or behaviorally inferior. At the Nuremberg trial, former Auschwitz camp commandant, Rudolf Hoess, described the brutality and criminality which led to the deaths of three million people there, mostly Jews, from starvation, illness, or outright murder.

How the FDR Library's first Director helped recover and preserve threatened archives of Europe during World War II.

SUPPORTING OUR WORK
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"Whatever our individual circumstances or opportunities, we are all in it, and our spirit is good... and do not let anyone tell you anything different."
FDR, Oct 12, 1942, fireside chat.
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