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🗓️ 6 March 2025
⏱️ 20 minutes
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March 6, 1933. Eleanor Roosevelt is the first First Lady to hold her own press conference. The event becomes a weekly tradition for over a decade.
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0:00.0 | There are more ways than ever to listen to History Daily ad-free. |
0:04.1 | Listen with Wondry Plus in the Wondry app. |
0:06.0 | As a member of NoisorPlus at noisor.com or in Apple Podcasts, |
0:10.6 | or you can get all of History Daily plus other fantastic history podcasts at IntoHistory.com. It's March 6, 1933, in the White House in Washington, D.C., two days after President Franklin |
0:33.6 | D. Roosevelt took office. America's new first lady, Eleanor Roosevelt, descends the |
0:39.0 | stairs from her private quarters and walks down a long hallway. She's about to do something |
0:44.0 | unprecedented, something many consider shocking or even scandalous, but she's determined to see it |
0:49.4 | through. At the end of the hall, an usher opens the door to the red room, a parlor typically used for entertaining. |
0:56.9 | Today, though, the red room is packed with reporters, 35 of them in all, and every one of them is a woman. |
1:03.7 | This is the first time a first lady has ever called her own press conference, and Eleanor has made the controversial decision to only include female |
1:12.6 | journalists. A hush falls over the room as the reporter spot Eleanor standing in the doorway. |
1:19.1 | There aren't enough chairs in the cramp space, so many of them sit on the carpet or lean against |
1:23.2 | the walls. Producing a box of candied fruit from a pocket in her dress, Eleanor asked the woman nearest her to pass it around before moving into the walls. Producing a box of candied fruit from a pocket in her dress, Eleanor asked the |
1:28.7 | woman nearest her to pass it around before moving into the center of the room. Cameras flash as she |
1:34.4 | collects her thoughts, and then Eleanor begins to speak. The reporter scribble on their notepads, |
1:40.1 | hanging on her every word. Calmly, Eleanor explains why she's called this press conference |
1:45.0 | and why she has excluded men from it. |
1:47.8 | She says that for too long, women have lacked a voice in America. |
1:51.6 | But from now on, she intends to use these meetings to speak to women directly, |
1:55.8 | and she promises to be their representative and advocate in her husband's new administration. |
2:02.0 | Having delivered this brief but powerful message, Eleanor exits the Red Room, leaving the |
2:06.7 | reporters to whisper and exchange excited glances. Many are very aware that they've just witnessed |
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