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NGE >> Features >> Science and Medicine >> Medicine >> Major Hospitals >> Roosevelt Warm Springs Institute for Rehabilitation |
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Roosevelt Warm Springs Institute for Rehabilitation The Roosevelt Warm Springs
The pools
Roosevelt, the Democratic candidate for vice president in 1920, had contracted polio in 1921. Three years later
In 1926 Roosevelt invested two-thirds of his savings in property at Warm Springs and incorporated the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation in 1927. An enclosed pool funded by automotive pioneer Henry Ford's son Edsel was added, and improvements began to be made. Physicians and physiotherapists worked with Roosevelt to develop muscle exercises. The "spirit of Warm Springs" became firmly entrenched as patients relearned to function in society and to laugh and enjoy life. Roosevelt's experiences at Warm Springs during the 1920s were dramatized in the film Warm Springs (2005), produced by Home Box Office and starring Kenneth Branagh as Roosevelt and Cynthia Nixon as his wife, Eleanor. After
Roosevelt
In 1980 the facility was renamed the Roosevelt Warm Springs Institute for Rehabilitation, which is administered today by the Georgia Department of Labor. The institute encompasses 940 acres. New facilities have been added, and patients with post-polio symptoms, spinal cord injuries, strokes, and other disabilities find treatment at Warm Springs. Suggested Reading Regina P. Pinkston, comp., Historical Account of Meriwether County, 1827-1974 (Greenville, Ga.: Gresham, 1974). William P. Rhoads, "Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Architecture of Warm Springs," Georgia Historical Quarterly 67 (spring 1983). Susan Richards Shreve, Warm Springs: Traces of a Childhood at FDR's Polio Haven (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2007). Turnley Walker, Roosevelt and the Warm Springs Story (New York: A. A. Wyn, 1953). Kaye Lanning Minchew, Troup County Archives Published 12/9/2003 |
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