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Tuesday, August 9, 2005

FDR museum at Union Station will have more exhibit space

By Pamela H. Sacks TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF
psacks@telegram.com

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Eleanor and Franklin dolls and marionettes are among the many mementoes on exhibit at the Franklin D. Roosevelt American Heritage Center Museum at Union Station. (T&G Staff/PAUL KAPTEYN)
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FDR would no doubt be pleased.

The Franklin D. Roosevelt American Heritage Center Museum, which opened a year ago at Union Station in Worcester, is about to expand into an adjacent room, increasing its size by a third.

Dr. Joseph J. Plaud, who founded the museum with his extensive personal collection of FDR documents, letters, artifacts and mementos, said the expansion will allow space for special displays dedicated to topics of current interest.

“Our collection is so extensive, and it’s very important to have an ability to have topical displays and changing exhibits,” Dr. Plaud said.

City officials were helpful in arranging for the additional space, Dr. Plaud said, but Mayor Timothy P. Murray was “central in getting the expansion under way.”

“We’ve had it all repainted and special tinted window treatment done. New display cases are being built, and we are planning two displays,” he said.

One exhibit will be on Social Security and the other on FDR’s time at Warm Springs, Ga., where he went for rehabilitation from the effects of polio, which left him without use of his legs. The exhibit will include a look at the making of “Warm Springs,” the HBO movie about FDR’s struggle with adversity that aired in April.

“We have so many interesting items of FDR’s from Warm Springs, including a letter he wrote on what progress he was making,” Dr. Plaud said. “He divulged so much personal information. He did not typically do that.”

The museum already has become a magnet for national, state and local Democratic politicians.

In March, former U.S. Sen. Max Cleland of Georgia visited the museum before giving the keynote address at the Center for Living and Working awards night. During his speech, Sen. Cleland mentioned his visit and the inspiration he received from FDR’s legacy.

The following month, the museum, which is on the second floor of the railroad station, was the site of Mr. Murray’s press conference announcing that Worcester will host the 2006 Massachusetts Democratic Convention. On hand were Philip W. Johnston, Democratic Party chairman; Sen. Harriette L. Chandler, D-Worcester; City Manager Michael V. O’Brien; and William J. Eddy, chairman of the Worcester Democratic City Committee.

“We continue to look for ways to expand,” Dr. Plaud said. “In the future, we want to do more educational programs and host conferences. We are doing more to become a bigger and more visible museum. We’re an active cultural component to the growth of Union Station.”



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