Here's Where It Gets Interesting - The First Lady of World War II with Shannon McKenna Schmidt
Episode Date: April 28, 2023Today on the show, Shannon McKenna Schmidt joins Sharon to talk about the trifecta of listener-favorite subjects: an American First Lady, World War II, and a secret adventure. Shannon’s new book, Th...e First Lady of World War II: Eleanor Roosevelt's Daring Journey to the Frontlines and Back, chronicles Eleanor Roosevelt’s journey to the Pacific theater during wartime. The five week trip took her through the South Pacific, and began as a secret when she hitched a ride on a transport airplane next to sacks of mail. Tune in to hear what happened when she touched down in Australia. Hosted by: Sharon McMahon Guest: Shannon McKenna Schmidt Executive Producer: Heather Jackson Audio Producer: Jenny Snyder Researcher: Valerie Hoback Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Hello, friends. Welcome. Thanks for joining me today. I think you are really going to
enjoy this episode, which is all about an untold story about one of America's favorite
First Ladies, Eleanor Roosevelt. I'm joined by author Shannon McKenna-Schmidt, and we're
going to be talking about her new book, The First Lady
of World War II. So let's dive in. I'm Sharon McMahon, and here's where it gets interesting.
I am so excited to be chatting with Shannon McKenna Schmidt today. This story is one that
Americans need to hear. Thank you for being here.
Well, thank you so much for having me here to talk about the extraordinary Eleanor Roosevelt.
She is extraordinary. And I know that people who listen to my podcast love First Ladies.
I have done a lot of episodes about First Ladies in general, but we actually have not gotten to
Eleanor Roosevelt. She's obviously coming down the pike, but I know people are fascinated by her.
What about her is enduringly popular? You know, I've always been an Eleanor Roosevelt admirer, and there was truly
no one else like her. And she devoted her life just to making the world a better place, to making
life better for individuals. And I think in that respect, she's unparalleled. And she didn't have
to do what she was doing, which is the other thing that always strikes me about her.
That's right.
She could have just, like most other first ladies prior to her,
just been an accessory.
She could have hosted teas and ladies' luncheons
and worn fancy hats
and had postcards made of herself that people could purchase. She could
have just chosen that route, but why didn't she? What about her in your mind made her want to be
different? When she first went to the White House in 1933, she was well-established as a writer,
as a speaker, as a political advocate, an educator, and a traveler.
And traditionally, first ladies were behind the scenes. They primarily stayed close to the White
House, oversaw social functions. And she was very afraid that her identity was going to be
absorbed into this traditional role and no part in public life. But like I said, she was very
well established when
she went into the White House, and she couldn't fathom giving any of that up. And instead,
what she did was she basically doubled down. And she felt that she could best help the president
by being out there in the United States, taking the pulse of public opinion. And she said that
public opinion is the moving force in any democracy. That of public opinion. And she said that public opinion is the moving
force in any democracy. That's so interesting. And I'm curious, because you've written a fantastic
book, and I want to get into the meat of this story, the First Lady of World War II. But what
was her husband's reaction to that? Was he like, yeah, get out there, get after it. I love it. Or was he more
in the like, well, Eleanor is Eleanor kind of mentality? You know, I would say it's actually
a mix of both, but no, he actually encouraged her solo roaming, which was unusual for a woman at the
time, whoever you are to be out there traveling without your husband. And he knew that she needed this.
And also he benefited from it. Traveling and going places and seeing and meeting people,
inspecting New Deal initiatives, it's the way that she gathered information.
And then that information, she could then use her own means and platforms to exact change.
And it also aided the president and his policy advisors. And FDR said in a cabinet
meeting once, my missus gets around a lot. And he was proud of her ability to connect with people.
And also it helped maintain the ruse that he was a reasonably able-bodied man. If a
representative of his family was checking it out, like the Roosevelt's have
been here, it helped or potentially helped kind of keep that aspect of that which he wanted to hide,
help keep it under wraps. Yes, absolutely. So even if he weren't siloed in Washington because he's
the president, yes, it was difficult because of his adult onset polio for him to get around. And so yes, she was called his eyes and
ears. What about this story piqued your interest? Well, I've always been an Eleanor Roosevelt
admirer. I also grew up in the Hudson Valley, which is where she's from and FDR is from.
But this book really grew out of my love of travel. And I was reading a collection of Eleanor's column
called My Day. And I came across a mention that she had visited Australia during World War II.
And it was just a fleeting mention, but it immediately piqued my interest because I had
recently been to Australia and New Zealand. And the first thought that struck me was the distance
that Eleanor would
have had to have traveled to get there and under wartime conditions. And so I was hooked from the
start. And then very early on, I came across something that she wrote several years later
in one of her autobiographies. She said, the Pacific trip left a mark from which I think I shall never be free.
And I found that statement so powerful and haunting, and it really compelled me to discover
what she experienced during these five weeks that she traveled around the Pacific.
The subtitle of your book is Eleanor Roosevelt's daring journey to the front lines and back.
And the picture on the cover shows Eleanor Roosevelt and a soldier in front of a wrecked
airplane.
So what was she doing in Australia?
So she set out in secret for safety reasons.
It was largely to thank the troops, thank them herself,
and also on behalf of the president. It was partly a diplomatic mission to bolster ties with
allied nations, Australia and New Zealand. She wanted to see the war work that women were doing
in those countries as well. And she also, because she's Eleanor Roosevelt, and she has to heap even
more onto her plate, she went as a representative of the American Red Cross, and she inspected their facilities
in the region.
So she traveled over the course of five weeks, 25,000 miles, and she went through the South
Pacific to Australia, New Zealand, and Hawaii.
And she actually ended up, her ultimate destination was the island of Guadalcanal,
which was still under enemy air attack. And this was not during a time when there was a
lay flat business class. You could, there was no like, you know, now I'll settle in and watch a
nice selection of movies while people bring me a heated face cloth. Like travel
was a lot different. It was a lot different. And I like that you bring that up because at the time
that Eleanor was in the South Pacific, there was a group of bipartisan senators and they were also
traveling around the world inspecting like war stuff. But I got to tell you, they went in a posh
plane and it seemed like they were joyriding around the world. Eleanor war stuff. But I got to tell you, they went in a posh plane and it seemed
like they were joyriding around the world. Eleanor, meanwhile, Eleanor flew on a commercial flight
from New York City to San Francisco. In San Francisco, she boarded a military transport plane,
which was freezing, not pressurized. It was loud. And she traveled in this plane throughout her trip to the Pacific and back.
So she flew to Australia on a transport plane?
She did.
And she talks about like sharing space with sacks of mail and a crew that was being relocated
to Honolulu.
So all throughout the trip, they would do what they were doing.
They were taking supplies.
They were taking mail.
They were relocating personnel.
So she was just hitching a ride along on this. And they had one seat for her. They did make a bed for her. But most of the
time, it was just used for storage. Yeah, she didn't say, you know, I would like to visit Australia,
and I would like you to make it happen for me. She went along with people who were already headed in
that direction. And that, of course, seems ridiculous today, in part for security reasons, of course. But nobody can imagine a representative, a high
level representative of the United States government, Secretary of State, First Lady,
President, whatever, just hitching a ride on a military plane and being like, sit next to the
mail. Right? Like that seems absurd by today's standards. It does. But that's also what I find extraordinary about her. So by the time Eleanor goes to the
Pacific, she's 10 years into her time as First Lady. So she's a highly experienced traveler at
this point in time. And she's a veteran of the road. She doesn't complain. She knows how to rough
it. But even for an experienced traveler like Eleanor, this was
further, longer, more arduous than anything she had previously done. And she did experience a lot
of what the servicemen were experiencing, like traveling on a military transport plane,
you know, sleeping in thatched huts in an army cot, you know, in the South Pacific.
What do you think was the driving force behind this trip? Of course,
she wanted to gather information and she wanted to represent the Red Cross and she wanted to
represent the president. Well, of course, those things are all true. But what was it about perhaps
her thinking that made her feel like this is something I must do. Because she could have
stayed home and represented the Red Cross, you know, at a luncheon in St. Louis, you know,
like she didn't actually have to do any of this. So she had to have some like intrinsic motivation.
She did. I mean, she was enormously driven to contribute to the war effort. And some of the
things that she wanted to do didn't work out.
This was a trip that really only she could take. She was uniquely qualified to do this. She had the diplomatic skills, the reporting skills, the morale building skills, the people skills.
But in the summer of 1943, the war had started to turn both in Europe and in the Pacific in
the Allies' favor. And she felt that the nation was becoming dangerously complacent, as she said. There are factory strikes across the
nation. People are complaining about food rationing and their hardships on the home front.
And this was a way that she could connect the home front and the fighting front and to remind the nation that
they couldn't slacken their pace here on the home front at all until the war was won. And that was
the only way that their servicemen were going to come home. So I really, I really found it
interesting that she was that link. And she had been for a decade been going where Americans
wanted her to come to see what they were doing all over the country. And with the war, hundreds of thousands of American servicemen were in the Pacific.
So she went to them. She wanted to find out what they needed, what they wanted now and after the
war. And she really was haunted by the fact that so many young men were being sacrificed in battle.
What did she learn on this trip, either that affected her
personally or that you can see a reflection of in U.S. policy during the war or afterwards?
What exactly did she take away? One of the reasons that she wanted to go to the Pacific was to talk
with servicemen. And one of the things that she constantly asked them was what they wanted and needed after the war. And she really brought public pressure to bear to help get the GI Bill of Rights passed. And her thinking and what she conveys to the nation is that the men need this now. There are already servicemen coming back who have disabilities, who have been wounded.
coming back who have disabilities, who have been wounded. So this wasn't something in abstract that could be passed after the war. They needed it now. She used her public platforms to bring
pressure to bear. And then the other thing that she took away from this trip, because she came
back and she had lost 30 pounds. And she said that one really sees the results of war in the hospitals.
she said that one really sees the results of war in the hospitals. And in that regard,
pretty much nobody saw more of the war than Eleanor Roosevelt. She visited miles and miles and miles of hospital wards. She went bed to bed comforting these men, and not just in the Pacific.
She had also been doing this in the United States. And all of this really reinforced her determination to work
for peace after the war. So not just to win the war, but to work for peace so that this never
happened again. You mentioned in the book how sharply criticized Eleanor Roosevelt was in this sort of time period leading up to her departure, where people were like,
why doesn't she just stay home? You mentioned that she's, of course, like the most traveled
First Lady. And now today, most people have a very, very favorable opinion of Eleanor Roosevelt.
You know, like she's right up there in people's most favorite first ladies. But that was not always the case when she
was actually first lady. Yes. So she generated huge controversy, whatever she did, she generated
controversy. And one of the things that I find interesting is that part of the reason she
generated controversy and was considered an unconventional first lady was all of this traveling that she did.
But she didn't care. She was Eleanor Roosevelt. They were not going to clip her wings.
And she actually wrote an article for a women's magazine called How to Take Criticism.
She said, you're going to be damned if you do and damned if you don't. So you may as well do
what you want and what you believe in. You know, I wonder how much of her upbringing had to do with that attitude because, you know,
she came from a certain kind of family where she must have felt like, and you correct me if I'm
wrong, maybe making a false assumption here. She must've felt like, listen, if I'm not the first
lady anymore, then that's fine. You know what I mean? Like,
someday I'm not going to be first lady anymore. And I'll go back to doing precisely what I want
to do. You're not going to stop me. I was who I am before I got here. I'm going to keep being who I
am. And if I leave, and or, you know, when we leave office, I'm going to keep on doing what I
want. Absolutely. And I use this quote in the book. Her grandmother once said to her,
a woman's place is not in the public eye.
And I find that funny now in hindsight and retrospect.
And where I use the quote in the book
is as Eleanor is giving a speech
to an auditorium full of women at a theater in Wellington.
And the reporter, a reporter covering this speech, she says that she seems
like a modern day crusader and that her weapons are a microphone and a typewriter. And, you know,
I just, I found that so interesting because yes, women in her class, you were not to get your name
in the paper, not in the spotlight, the public eye. And I always wonder what her grandmother
would have thought. She was such a forward-thinking woman at a time when there were many women who contributed to the
war effort, some in huge, significant ways, of course, of course. But most did not do so in a
really, really public way. In fact, other people, even in FDR's cabinet, who were women, some of them made a point of keeping their names
out of it. So much so that it wasn't even until recently that some of their real contributions
have been uncovered. Because for whatever reason, societal expectations that like,
that's not a woman's place. You know what I mean? It is such an interesting thing about her,
that she was so willing to step into the spotlight.
Yeah, absolutely.
And that's one of the things.
So again, by the time 1943 comes, she's been first lady for a decade.
She has built up all of these platforms that she uses to communicate with the American
public.
There's My Day.
She has other writing that she does.
She gives speeches across the country.
She gives radio addresses.
She has other writing that she does.
She gives speeches across the country.
She gives radio addresses.
And so she was able to use that platform to be an influence, a leading figure during the war.
If she felt that they needed to be chastised for believing Nazi propaganda, then she did
it, telling them not to complain about rationing, not to write complaining letters to their
servicemen.
But she also had this great standing in the world.
She was a world respected figure
and she was asked to give morale raising addresses
to women in Sweden and Brazil and other countries.
So she was recognized on both of those levels.
And her leadership during World War II,
I think really was crucial.
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your podcasts. You talk about quite a bit about the impact that her visiting the military hospitals had on her seeing exactly what was happening. What kinds of things was she actually seeing
when she was visiting these hospitals? She was seeing a lot. And one of the things was she actually seeing when she was visiting these hospitals?
She was seeing a lot. And one of the things that she did, so she had taken a wartime trip to Great
Britain the year before. And while she was there, she began this practice, and she also did this in
the Pacific, is she kept logbooks of the servicemen that she met in the hospitals. She recorded their
name, their injuries, where they received them, and the name of a family member that she met in the hospitals, she recorded their name, their injuries, where they received
them, and the name of a family member that she could write to after she returned to the United
States. And, you know, I cite one in the book, which is gunshot wound to the face. So she was
meeting men with all kinds of injuries. She talks about, in particular, how the smell in the burn wards just stayed with her.
On her return from the Pacific, she stopped at Christmas Island, and the commanding officer in charge asked her to visit one particular soldier who was despondent, and it was impacting his recovery.
He had lost a leg during training when a tank overturned.
So she really saw all kinds of injuries.
And like I said, that haunted her so much.
The fact that this whole generation of young men
was being sacrificed to this.
Yeah, you mentioned that you have a chapter
called Island of Forgotten Men.
And I was like, well, where's that? You know, like, it was very intriguing. Why were soldiers on Christmas Island?
they were back in the air. So her first stop to tour around was Christmas Island. And Christmas Island was one of a chain of island bases connecting the United States with Australia.
So it's very important for communication, keeping the supply line open. But these men on these
islands felt that they were marginalized from the real action in the war, and they weren't making enough of a contribution. And FDR specifically asked Eleanor to visit these men and to let them know that he thought about
them. He knew what they were doing was important. So the trip had to be kept secret for the first
10 days while she was island hopping through the South Pacific. And once news broke after she got
to New Zealand, media outlets were free to, they were alerted to this, they could report on this.
And the GIs on Christmas Island had their own publication called Pacific Times, and they published articles about Eleanor's visit.
And they said that they felt as if they were an island of forgotten men and that her trip there really buoyed their morale and reinvigorated.
Were you described the milk run? this phrase really stuck out at me. You're describing how
after she spends 36 hours on Christmas Island, she heads to Bora Bora. And you say the aircraft
traveled a route dubbed the milk run, along which transport planes carried mail, movies,
magazines, and miscellaneous supplies to outlying bases.
A milk run was a slang term coined by flying crews to describe a routine mission or one where minimal resistance from the enemy was anticipated.
As an airman put it, when you didn't get any holes in your plane, it was called a milk run.
Just made me laugh. Like, oh my. The idea that Eleanor Roosevelt was
traveling under those circumstances, you know, where she is on all of these military planes,
it really did have to feel to the people she was visiting, like she really cared because they knew what it took to get there. And to know that she had made
that same journey had to affect them. Yeah, I think it absolutely did. And they appreciated
what she was doing. Because yes, you're right. The servicemen would know better than anyone else,
you know, the rigors of what she was doing. And I find it interesting. So she goes to the
South Pacific, and there's a lot of commanders who are stymied. They don't know what to do with this
middle-aged woman from the United States. And really, they should have just left her alone
and let her do her thing, because she knew what she was doing and how to do it. But many a serviceman that she met changed their minds about her when they saw
her hardy hood and what she was doing and pouring her whole physical and mental self into this,
her heart and her soul. And in their articles, the GIs on Christmas Island do recognize how
difficult this trip is for her. I thought it was interesting
that the stuff you shared that I had never really considered about Maori troops, and she visits them
and they, you know, say she's, you know, representative of this great democracy. The
United States did not have battalions of entirely indigenous troops. We certainly did have Native Americans who served in
World War II, no question. But I found that really interesting. Can you share a little bit more about
that? So it was a big deal. She made like three or four stops in New Zealand. And one of them was to
Rotorua, which is the home of the Maori, the indigenous people of New Zealand. It was this contrast to the US, which
was not an integrated society. So that was very impactful, I think, in the trip as a whole.
When she was there in Rotorua, they loved it that the whole day, her time there was about
New Zealanders. She wasn't visiting American troops or American Red
Cross clubs or anything like that. So they loved it that she spent her day focused on New Zealanders,
because it was a very big deal that she was in New Zealand and Australia. And her visit was on
par with royalty. But one of the things that they all loved about her is that unlike visits by royalty, which were governed by formality and much more rigid,
she was very informal, very friendly, very down to earth. And she broke protocol whenever she could.
And the newspapers cheered her on, and especially the Australians, they loved that.
I love that. It's just such a different perspective than we're used to seeing diplomatic
missions from the United States or really from anywhere. Yes. Like I said, the newspapers would
cheer whenever she would leave the entourage, say the official entourage in Australia to go talk
with, you know, women working on the grounds of a government building who are part of the land
service. One morning on Bora Bora, she was supposed to dine in the officer's mess.
And instead, she went and dined with the enlisted men. And so she kind of had everybody in a tizzy
all down the ranks. Tell us more about what it took to research this story. I would imagine you
dealt with a ton of primary sources. Yes. So the most important resource was at the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum in Hyde Park, New York. And they have, it's called the Pacific Trip File. And it is like a time capsule of Eleanor Roosevelt's trip. And I just had to pinch myself that I was sitting there touching documents that she had once touched. There's formal seating charts. There's a list of the crew who flew her
in the bomber to Guadalcanal. There's notes between her and FDR, affectionate notes. And it's just,
that was wonderful. And that was really a major source. And also, the New Zealand government
sent a scrapbook of newspaper clippings to her after the trip, which was also very
helpful and important. And then I just started, I described it as like panning for gold
and just going through resource after resource and down rabbit hole after rabbit hole to find
all of these little nuggets that I put together to tell the story. There's oral histories and memoirs from servicemen, from Red
Cross nurses, congressional records. There's these then top secret Navy dispatches in the National
Archives. And they were communications sent in real time as Eleanor was traveling across the
South Pacific. So there were all these wonderful resources and newspaper databases were
extremely important because they're giving us a real-time chronicle of what she's doing in
Australia and New Zealand. And also very, very critical was Eleanor's own My Day column. And
she wrote about 40 columns about her time in the South Pacific. And this is almost a real time chronicle,
delayed a little bit, but we have the First Lady of the United States reporting directly to the
American public from the ground in the Pacific. It's truly extraordinary. First of all, if you
are, I mean, like, if you've ever tried to write anything, the idea that you have to write columns and constantly come up with new ideas, that alone is a feat in and of itself.
But it's extraordinary to think about the first lady of the United States reporting
on a war.
Now, of course, I'm not saying she was reporting as a reporter where she was like 12 guns and
then, you know, blah, blah, blah.
But that she was reporting, as you mentioned, in nearly real time about exactly what she
was seeing and experiencing in ways that would be disseminated far and wide.
It's never happened before or since.
It's an extraordinary accomplishment of hers.
It really is.
And I think that one of the things that she wanted to do was also to give American women,
American wives and mothers a sense of what life was like for their servicemen in the Pacific. She also prepared the nation for
things. Like I said, what I found interesting that she was very forthright with the American public.
And when they needed a little shake, she gave it to them. And, you know, and one of the things was
she was preparing the nation for the number of disabled servicemen who would be coming back and
how they should be treated and what they should do. You know, she told women not to shy away from
talking to their servicemen about their experiences. And she was very frank. She told them about the shadowed eyes of the men who had endured
jungle warfare. So yes, all of these things that she's seeing and experiencing, she is able to
convey back to the American people because of her many, many outlets that she had to communicate.
It's also, I think, her encouragement, first of all, to pass the GI Bill, even before the war ended.
One of the reasons she did that, and of course, there were many proponents of the GI Bill, but
she was really because she had such a high profile, you know, helped galvanize so many Americans
behind this idea. The fact that she was traveling abroad, and asking people who are currently serving, what do you need?
That stands in stark contrast to the way that the United States treats veterans today,
you know, where we have incredible numbers of homeless veterans, incredible numbers of veterans
who die by suicide. Addiction is rampant with veterans. I don't know anybody who's like,
we're on top of our game when it comes to protecting and honoring people who have served.
Just that alone says so much about her and also the mindset of the United States. We are going
to make sure that you are taken care of because you served. It's really remarkable.
you are taken care of because you served. It's really remarkable. Yes. And this stems back to her advocacy for veterans after World War I. And she never wanted to see another world war. And
then one comes. And from the start, she was concerned for and advocating for servicemen.
And I think that they felt seen. And so, yes, so she's in the Pacific
and she's asking them what they want, what they need.
And their chief concerns were jobs and education
after they came back.
And one wrote to her,
and I believe she put this in my day,
and he said, what they were most afraid of
wasn't dying in battle,
but realizing when they got back
that they had been made to be suckers
and that their
government was going to use them and then not support them and take care of them.
She really, I think, was one of their biggest advocates, if not the biggest advocate, because
of all of the platforms that she had.
Right before she went to the Pacific, she told people, she's like, go to your local
representatives and urge for this.
Tell them what you want,
what your servicemen want. And I do, at the end of the day, like the GIs on Christmas Island,
they felt seen. And the fact that she was able to encourage people, like, don't look away.
Courage people.
Like, don't look away.
These people have seen some bad things.
Bad things have happened to them.
Ask them about them.
Talk with them about them.
That also stands in stark contrast with subsequent wars the United States has been involved with. I'm thinking specifically of Vietnam, where nobody wants to talk about what they saw and
experienced.
where nobody wants to talk about what they saw and experienced. And that is psychologically so much better to be able to talk about and process what you experienced. The fact that
the first lady who was, you know, even though she had critics, she was so widely and highly regarded,
encouraged people like, don't ignore this. Don't just stuff it down and never say anything about it, probably contributed to a much healthier GI population, at least mentally, when they returned.
Yes, I think so. And that's another great point is that none of this was abstract for her. She
had four sons in uniform across various branches of the service. So this was very personal to her. And after she
came back from the Pacific, she was at a press conference. And one of the reporters noted that
she looked uncharacteristically tired. And they also said that her eyes seemed worried and like
that they had seen much, perhaps too much for an American mother with four sons in uniform.
And they said that no other U.S. mother had gotten so close to the war, to the sweat, the boredom of the actual war.
That's such a great point.
be visiting all of these men and picturing their mothers at home because she could easily imagine exactly how it would feel to be one of them. And that had to give her a tremendous amount of
empathy that perhaps other people, no matter how well-intentioned, could not convey.
Yeah, absolutely. And I think that that is one of the things that we talk about Eleanor Roosevelt,
First Lady, and she's inspiring everybody around the world, but she was a mother and
she worried about her sons.
I love the quote that you have at the end of the book that says,
Today, a memorial overlooking the water at Pearl Harbor is inscribed with a prayer Eleanor carried
in her wallet throughout the war. And the prayer says, Dear Lord, lest I continue my complacent way,
help me to remember somehow out there, a man died for me today. As long as there be war, I then must ask and answer, am I worth dying for?
Do you know why she had that in her wallet? I think that she always felt like she wasn't
doing enough. Even while she's in Australia, she's going, you know, 20 hours a day. She always felt like she
wasn't doing enough for the men in uniform, which is ridiculous because she so was. But I think,
yes, that was for herself, you know, seeing these young men. I mean, she taught, so she walks through
the hospital wards and she's going bed to bed, comforting these men, giving them a kind word, maybe a joke.
But inside, she talks about how inside she's burning with resentment that men, and she
specifically says men, can't sit around tables and settle their differences without sending
the youth of all of these nations to die. And that was the ultimate thing for her is seeing,
seeing this and witnessing this. And that's, you know, making her really want to strive for peace
was not to have this happen again to another generation of young people. And I gotta tell you,
you know, there were there were a few times when I cried writing this book,
and so reading about jungle warfare and what they experienced, and, you know,
we can only imagine the impact that it truly had on her.
What would you love at the end of the day if a reader picks up your book,
The First Lady of World War II? What would you like them to take away?
I think that this book illustrates so much of what we
already admire about Eleanor Roosevelt. So I would love for them to take away a picture of her
that's even more inspiring than what we already know. We see her in a new light as an adventurer
and a traveler. But the Pacific trip, I think to a very great degree, does illustrate the things
that we love and admire about her, her courage, her compassion, her ability to connect with people
on an individual level, her crusading for a better world. All of that is encompassed in this trip.
And I also think that it shows how crucial her leadership was during World War II.
I love it. Shannon, thank you so much for being here today.
Well, thank you so much.
Author Shannon McKenna Schmidt's book, The First Lady of World War II. Her book comes out May 2nd,
2023. So pick up a copy or pre-order it now. I really think you're going to enjoy it.
I'll see you again soon. This show is researched and hosted by me, Sharon McMahon. Our executive
producer is Heather Jackson. Our audio producer is Jenny Snyder. And if you enjoyed this episode,
would you consider leaving us a rating or review on your favorite podcast platform. That helps us so much.
And we always love to see your shares and tags on social media. We'll see you again soon.