Actually, just about every radio utterance of FDR's was recorded, paid for
by Thomas Watson of IBM. A while ago (30 years ago?), the records were at
the Roosevelt home in Hyde Park where I inspected them. They are either
still there or at National Archives.
There are many other sources for most of his major speeches as well.
Steve Smolian
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mike Richter" <mrichter@xxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, November 26, 2006 12:57 PM
Subject: [ARSCLIST] FDR Recordings (was Re: [ARSCLIST] National Recorded
Sound Preservation Study)
> George Brock-Nannestad wrote:
>
>> I don't know enough about US history, but it seems that there must be a
>> printed collection of Franklin Roosevelt's broadcast speeches, from which
>> the yellow parts have been recorded. First I thought it was a private
>> off-air recording, but the selection is too precise, unless it is from an
>> announced repeat broadcast. So, if it is indeed Roosevelt's voice, it
>> must be a dubbing from someone else's aircheck. However, it may be a
>> completely different person, reciting at a later date than 29 December
>> 1940 those parts of Roosevelt's speech. All in all it seems to be on the
>> fringe of oral history. The provenance means everything under those
>> circumstances.
>
> I have a six-LP set of "F.D.R. Speaks" with introduction by Eleanor
> Roosevelt and annotation by Henry Steele Commager. His speeches while in
> office were routinely recorded; these are selected from first inaugural to
> one read by his son which he did not live to deliver.
>
> My guess is that many or all were recorded by the Signal Corps which
> surely had both the technology and the charter to do so. Whether the glass
> disc in question came from such a source is another question.
>
> Mike
> --
> mrichter@xxxxxxx
> http://www.mrichter.com/
>
>
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