Eleanor Roosevelt was born on October 11, 1884, in
New York City. A member of the prominent
Roosevelt family, she grew up surrounded by material wealth, but had a difficult childhood, suffering the deaths of both of her parents and a brother before she was ten. Roosevelt was sent by relatives to the
Allenswood School five years later. While there,
Marie Souvestre, the founder of the school, influenced her. She wrote in
This is My Story that "Whatever I have become had its seeds in those three years of contact with a liberal mind and strong personality." When she was eighteen, Roosevelt returned to New York and joined the
National Consumers League. She married
Franklin D. Roosevelt; her fifth cousin, once removed in 1905. They would have five children. Eleanor was involved in her husband's political career as he won a seat in the
New York State Senate in 1911 and traveled with him to Washington, D.C., when he was made
United States Secretary of War in
Woodrow Wilson's cabinet. She became involved in volunteer work during
World War I. In 1918, she discovered that Franklin was having an affair with
Lucy Mercer Rutherfurd and resolved to develop her own life. She continued to help her husband in his political career but also began working in various reform movements, including the
women's suffrage movement. As
First Lady of the United States following Franklin's election as
President of the United States in
1932, Eleanor "set the standard against which president’s wives have been measured ever since", working to create opportunities for women, the establishment of the
National Youth Administration, and championing
civil rights for African-Americans. While Franklin was president she wrote 2,500 newspaper columns, 299 magazine articles, 6 books, and traveled around the country giving speeches. Eleanor remained politically active after her husband's death, serving as the first
United States Representative to the United Nations and chairing the
United Nations Commission on Human Rights when the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights was drafted. She later chaired
John F. Kennedy's
Presidential Commission on the Status of Women before her death in 1962. The
American National Biography concludes that she was "perhaps the most influential American woman of the twentieth century". == Writing and publication ==