Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial, monument in Washington, D.C., honouring U.S. Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was president (1933–45) during most of the Great Depression and World War II. The monument, designed by Lawrence Halprin, is located just south of the Mall along the western bank of the Tidal Basin, off the Potomac River. The site was dedicated as the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial Park in 1969, and the memorial was authorized by the U.S. Congress in 1982 but not completed until 1997. It covers approximately 7.5 acres (3 hectares) and consists of a sequence of four open-air rooms, one for each of Roosevelt’s terms in office. The rooms contain sculptural works by Leonard Baskin, Neil Estern, Thomas Hardy, and George Segal, including not only depictions of the president and his wife, Eleanor Roosevelt, but also representations of American citizens in Depression-era tableaus.
(Read Eleanor Roosevelt’s Britannica essay on Franklin Roosevelt.)
The rooms are constructed of granite inscribed with quotations from Roosevelt’s speeches. Water features, such as waterfalls and pools, make reference to the president’s hydrotherapy treatments and the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation (Warm Springs, Ga.), which he established for people who, like him, were paralyzed as a result of poliomyelitis. During his lifetime, Roosevelt made efforts to hide his disability from the public, and he was never seen publicly in a wheelchair. However, in 1998, at the urging of disability advocates, a statue of Roosevelt in a wheelchair, by sculptor Robert Graham, was installed at the entrance to the memorial.