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<text id=93HT0274>
<title>
1940s: Return Visit:Eleanor Roosevelt
</title>
<history>Time-The Weekly Magazine-1940s Highlights</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
TIME Magazine
November 2, 1942
Return Visit
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Eleanor Roosevelt could wait no longer; she had to see for
herself. Besides, there was a standing invitation on royal
stationery. Last week she flew to England, accompanied by her
longtime secretary, Malvina Thompson. Each took along the
regulation 44 lb. of baggage.
</p>
<p> London had learned of her pending visit, but no one said
just when she would arrive. Even when the royal red carpet was
rolled out in Paddington Station, no official winked
significantly. Said a loitering cabbie: "Naow, they told me the
Queen was giving away chocolates." When the station's news
vendor finally caught a glimpse of her, he let out a surprised
murmur: "Well, who would have thought it?"
</p>
<p> The King, in the powder blue uniform of an air marshal, and
the Queen, in mourning for the Duke of Kent, were there to greet
her. As Mrs. Roosevelt stepped off the train, she smiled
broadly, walked straight to the Queen, over whom she towered by
a full head and shoulders. Said Mrs. Roosevelt: "How nice to see
you again. How are you?" Newsreels ground away as she chatted
with the royal couple; the crowd let out a ready cheer as she
drove to Buckingham Palace.
</p>
<p> "Hi, Eleanor!" Then began a heavy schedule such as Eleanor
Roosevelt can take. After tea at the palace, a chat with the two
young Princesses, a state dinner with the Churchills and the
Mountbattens, she stayed up until 2 a.m. talking with second son
Lieut. Colonel Elliott Roosevelt, now assigned to London. Next
day the passport room at the American Embassy was cleared of
desks and filing cases for a press conference. Mrs. Roosevelt
called the conference to order like a ladies'-club meeting,
apologized for her slight deafness, charmed the 100 reporters
with quick, unhesitating answers. Question: "What do you think
of Anglo-American relations after the war?" Answer: People in
England know very little about the U.S.--our history for them
stops at the Revolution. There is a mutual lack of knowledge,
but I do not think you can have so many people working together
without increasing understanding."
</p>
<p> With the King and Queen she toured London's bomb-gutted
East End. In lofty St. Paul's she bowed her head before the
ornate sarcophagi of Nelson and Wellington; in a cavernous bomb
shelter (8,000 capacity) she was particularly interested in the
children's toothbrush rack. When she got to the Red Cross's
Washington Club on Curzon Street, the American doughboys greeted
her with shouts of "Hi, Eleanor." In a short speech in the
cafeteria--filled with the good smell of hot coffee and
doughnuts--she made a motherly promise to the troops: warmer
socks and faster mail. She left to see the rest of the country.
As with her own countrymen, Britons did not know where her
curiosity and energy would take her.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>