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  1. 20. Apr. 2008 · While working on his book, Mr. Persico obtained from Lucy Mercer’s granddaughters a bound copy of a lecture Roosevelt gave at Milton Academy in May 1926, on the flyleaf of which is an ...

  2. Some Essays & Reviews. ‘ Remembering Louise Glück’, Art Review (2023) ‘Miracle Of Transmission: An Interview with Ben Lerner’, Port Magazine (2023) ’Dear Flame: The Language of Candles’, INQUE (2023) ’Movements of Resistance: Lucy Mercer on dance, disciplines and control’, Poetry Review (2023) ‘Self-Replicating Textual Worms ...

  3. Lucy Mercer. academic things. Too Little / Too Hard: writers on the intersections of work, time & value & TL/TH podcast. email: lmerceronline [at} gmail.com. interviews / podcasts. Faber Poetry Podcast. The Something In Things: An Interview With Lucy Mercer. BBC Radio 3.

  4. www.fdrlibraryvirtualtour.org › page04-10FDR Museum: Lucy Mercer

    Lucy Mercer. In September 1918, FDR became ill with pneumonia on his way home from an overseas trip. While unpacking his bags, Eleanor made a devastating discovery - a packet of letters from Lucy Mercer, her former social secretary. It is unclear when FDR's relationship with Mercer began or precisely how involved she and Roosevelt were, but ...

  5. Other articles where Lucy Mercer is discussed: Eleanor Roosevelt: …affair with her social secretary, Lucy Mercer. It was one of the most traumatic events in her life, as she later told Joseph Lash, her friend and biographer. Mindful of his political career and fearing the loss of his mother’s financial support, Franklin refused Eleanor’s offer of a divorce and…

  6. Lucy Mercer. Bettmann / CORBIS. Hired as a secretary by Eleanor Roosevelt, Mercer ended up having an affair with Roosevelt's husband. Eleanor discovered love letters between Franklin D. Roosevelt and Mercer in 1918, when the presidency was just a distant ambition for her husband. Fearing for his political life, Franklin convinced Eleanor to ...

  7. together — and the founder and the owner of the Throckmorton Theatre. I’m with Lucy Mercer today. Lucy, thank you so much for talking with me today. I know it’s a really busy season, and that you made time for our oral history collection is so much appreciated. 0:00:49 Lucy Mercer: You’re so welcome.