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Franklin Roosevelt: FBI Squelches Chatter about his Medical Condition

   
 

Doctor
cover-up?
The nation was stunned when FDR died unexpectedly on April 12, 1945 -- less than six months after being elected to a fourth term in office. The death was unexpected because the president's personal physician, VADM Ross McIntire, whenever asked, had proclaimed that FDR's health was excellent. McIntire, an otolaryngologist and then surgeon-general of the U.S. Navy, must have known FDR was gravely ill -- FDR's physical decay was plainly evident even to non-physicians in the final months [7]. FDR must have known, too, and the FBI was interested in who among the public knew about his condition at the time of the November 1944 election.
   Given his ill health, why did FDR run for a fourth term? FDR told his son he felt compelled to run because he had "to maintain a continuity of command in a time of continuing crisis" [7]. World War II was, after all, still raging in 1944. Was FDR justified in this decision? If McIntire was an accomplice in the deception, was he acting for a greater good?
   Today, no one can precisely say how much McIntire knew and when he knew it. FDR's medical record, which was kept in a safe at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Maryland, has been missing since the president's death. VADM McIntire was one of three people with access to the safe. [7]

More...

At the Roosevelt Library in Hyde Park, NY, there is a letter from J. Edgar Hoover, then head of the FBI, to Stephen Early, then secretary to FDR. It appears that Early was concerned about news of FDR's condition leaking out before the election, and asked the FBI to investigate.

Attached to Hoover's letter was a four-page memorandum, whose flavor may be appreciated from the following paragraph:

It seems that Dr. ----- is a Lieutenant in the Navy, assigned to the Bethesda Naval Medical Center and residing at -----. When interviewed on October 27 relative to any statement which had been made concerning the state of the President's health, Dr. ----- denied making any statements of this kind, but stated that the President's health had been the subject of a general discussion at a luncheon recently held at the Naval Hospital in Bethesda. When asked to name specifically the persons who had attended the luncheon, Dr. ----- declined to do so and stated that the reason the President's health had been discussed at the hospital was because members of the hospital staff recognized the picture of one of the Navy Hospital doctors, Dr. H. G. Bruenn on the President's train at the time he was making the acceptance speech. Dr. ----- stated that he had not discussed the subject of the President's health with Dr. Bruenn. Dr. ----- was obviously disturbed and uneasy during the interview.
The memorandum also recounts that a leading specialist from the Mayo Clinic, who had recently returned to Minnesota from a temporary assignment to Bethesda Naval Hospital, was interviewed by the FBI simply because he had made the statement that "the President has a serious heart ailment" while at a luncheon in Washington.

Hoover's letter summarizes by saying that there was "a lot of loose conversation and talk, all predicted [predicated?] upon the supposition that the President was suffering from some heart ailment by reason of the fact that Bruenn's picture appeared in the group with the President." [7]


     Resources[Top]
Disclosure: Doctor Zebra gets a few pennies if you click & buy from Amazon.
  1. Bollet, Alfred Jay. Plagues and Poxes: The Impact of Human History on Epidemic Disease. Revised edition. New York: Demos, 2004. ISBN 1-888799-79-X @ Amazon
        As reviewed in New Engl J Med. 2005;352:1055-1056.

  2. Bruenn, HG. Clinical notes on the illness and death of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Ann Int Med. 1970;72: 579-591. Pubmed.

  3. Dallek, Robert. An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy 1917-1963. Boston: Little, Brown, 2003. ISBN 0-316-17238-3 @ Amazon   [a] p. 198

  4. Dugan, James. Bedlam in the boudoir. Colliers. 22 Feb. 1947; pages 17, 69-70.
        Credibility is dubious. Just before a list of Presidents, the article states: "Twenty of the 32 Presidents ... are proved or believed on a thick web of circumstance to have been nocturnal nuisances in the White House."

  5. Evans, Hugh E. The Hidden Campaign: FDR's Health and the 1944 Election. Armonk, NY: M.E.Sharpe, 2002. ISBN 0765608553 @ Amazon

  6. Gary, Ralph. Following Lincoln's Footsteps. New York: Carroll & Graf, 2001. ISBN 0-7867-09413 @ Amazon

  7. Goldsmith, HS. Unanswered mysteries in the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Surgery, Gynecology, & Obstetrics. 1979;149: 899-908. Pubmed.

  8. Katz, SL. From culture to vaccine -- Salk and Sabin. New England Journal of Medicine. 2004; 351: 1485-1487.

  9. MacMahon, Edward B. and Curry, Leonard. Medical Cover-Ups in the White House. Washington, DC: Farragut, 1987. ISBN 0-918535-01-8 @ Amazon

  10. McIntire, RT. White House Physician. New York: GP Putnam's Sons, 1946.
        McIntire was FDR's White House physician. Today, there is a street named after him at the Naval Hospital complex in San Diego.

  11. Montgomery-Massingberd, Hugh (ed). Burke's Presidential Families of the United States of American. 2nd ed. London: Burke's Peerage Limited, 1981. ISBN 0-85011-033-5 @ Amazon
        Enumerates the ancestors and descendants of American presidents up through Ronald Reagan.

  12. Stoddard, Henry L. It Costs to Be President. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1938.   [a] p. 141
        Stoddard was editor and owner of the New York Evening Mail from 1900 to 1925.

  13. The Franklin Roosevelt web page at the White House.

  14.  (29 matches when checked in November 2003)
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