Wartime
Wednesday: FDR and his Fireside Chats
Even if you are not a student of history, you have
probably heard about the “fireside chats” that President Franklin Roosevelt
conducted during his presidency. Until recently when I researched these radio
broadcasts, I thought they were a “regular” part of his administration. By “regular”
I assumed they occurred on a weekly or perhaps monthly basis. As it turns out
there were only thirty-one of these chats between 1933 and 1944, all broadcast
during the evening hours (after supper).
During his first term, President Roosevelt used the
radio to address the American public directly about serious issues such as the
banking crisis and his New Deal solutions as well as ongoing policy changes. After the attack
at Pearl Harbor, he took to the airwaves on December 9, 1941 to inform and
reassure U.S. citizens.
The idea behind the chats was to communicate encouragement
during times of extreme uncertainty and distress. FDR’s tone and demeanor was
calm as he spoke, giving facts and figures while assuring the American people,
he and the government had a handle on each situation. He was the first
president to use the radio industry in this way.
The term “fireside chat” was coined by CBS broadcast
executive Harry Butcher in a press release before the May 7, 1933 address. It
was inspired FDR’s press secretary Stephen Early who said that the president
liked to think of his audience as a few people seated around his fireside.
Listeners were able to picture the president in his study, in front of his
fireplace and imagine themselves sitting beside him. These images and the
familiar way Roosevelt spoke (referring to the audience as “my friends” and
himself as “I”) made the president a “man of the people,” and his popularity
soared.
June 12, 1944 is the date of his last chat during
which he spoke about the invasion in Normandy, the need to continue to support
the war effort through the purchase of war bonds, and the Pacific campaigns.
Nice one, Linda. FDR was definitely the President we needed at that time.
ReplyDeleteThinking of you this week as I watched not one but TWO PBS series about Britain during the War, "My Mother and Other Strangers" and "Home Fires." Great stuff.
Off to ACFW, will talk (and talk and talk) when I get back.