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- <text id=93HT0274>
- <title>
- 1940s: Return Visit:Eleanor Roosevelt
- </title>
- <history>Time-The Weekly Magazine-1940s Highlights</history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TIME Magazine
- November 2, 1942
- Return Visit
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Eleanor Roosevelt could wait no longer; she had to see for
- herself. Besides, there was a standing invitation on royal
- stationery. Last week she flew to England, accompanied by her
- longtime secretary, Malvina Thompson. Each took along the
- regulation 44 lb. of baggage.
- </p>
- <p> London had learned of her pending visit, but no one said
- just when she would arrive. Even when the royal red carpet was
- rolled out in Paddington Station, no official winked
- significantly. Said a loitering cabbie: "Naow, they told me the
- Queen was giving away chocolates." When the station's news
- vendor finally caught a glimpse of her, he let out a surprised
- murmur: "Well, who would have thought it?"
- </p>
- <p> The King, in the powder blue uniform of an air marshal, and
- the Queen, in mourning for the Duke of Kent, were there to greet
- her. As Mrs. Roosevelt stepped off the train, she smiled
- broadly, walked straight to the Queen, over whom she towered by
- a full head and shoulders. Said Mrs. Roosevelt: "How nice to see
- you again. How are you?" Newsreels ground away as she chatted
- with the royal couple; the crowd let out a ready cheer as she
- drove to Buckingham Palace.
- </p>
- <p> "Hi, Eleanor!" Then began a heavy schedule such as Eleanor
- Roosevelt can take. After tea at the palace, a chat with the two
- young Princesses, a state dinner with the Churchills and the
- Mountbattens, she stayed up until 2 a.m. talking with second son
- Lieut. Colonel Elliott Roosevelt, now assigned to London. Next
- day the passport room at the American Embassy was cleared of
- desks and filing cases for a press conference. Mrs. Roosevelt
- called the conference to order like a ladies'-club meeting,
- apologized for her slight deafness, charmed the 100 reporters
- with quick, unhesitating answers. Question: "What do you think
- of Anglo-American relations after the war?" Answer: People in
- England know very little about the U.S.--our history for them
- stops at the Revolution. There is a mutual lack of knowledge,
- but I do not think you can have so many people working together
- without increasing understanding."
- </p>
- <p> With the King and Queen she toured London's bomb-gutted
- East End. In lofty St. Paul's she bowed her head before the
- ornate sarcophagi of Nelson and Wellington; in a cavernous bomb
- shelter (8,000 capacity) she was particularly interested in the
- children's toothbrush rack. When she got to the Red Cross's
- Washington Club on Curzon Street, the American doughboys greeted
- her with shouts of "Hi, Eleanor." In a short speech in the
- cafeteria--filled with the good smell of hot coffee and
- doughnuts--she made a motherly promise to the troops: warmer
- socks and faster mail. She left to see the rest of the country.
- As with her own countrymen, Britons did not know where her
- curiosity and energy would take her.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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