COURTESY OF THE FDR LIBRARY
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was the only U.S. president to be named TIME's Person of the Year three times: 1932, 1934 and 1941
"The test of our progress is not whether we add to the abundance of those who have much. It is whether we provide enough to those who have little."

— Franklin Delano Roosevelt




Named TIME's Man of the Year for the years 1932, 1934 and 1941, Roosevelt was elected president of the United States four times, inaugurated in 1933 and served until his death in 1945. Despite often having severe difficulty walking due to polio contracted early in his political career, Teddy's cousin won the governorship of New York. He was the first governor to state publicly that government had an obligation to the jobless, a concern that carried over into his presidency.

There his New Deal policies, which included establishing Social Security, banking and securities reform, agricultural price supports and minimum wage, placed government at the service of the ordinary American. Roosevelt also led the nation through World War II and helped lay the foundation for the United Nations. TIME described the President's signing of the Lend Lease Act and the Declaration of War as "two acts that made the nation and the man pre-eminent." (1/5/42)

Researched by Joan Levinstein, the Time Inc. Research Center

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