Skip to main content
Image courtesy of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum.
Image courtesy of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum.
Illustration for Franklin Roosevelt at Hyde Park: Walking Down the Drive
Image courtesy of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum.
Image courtesy of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum.

Illustration for Franklin Roosevelt at Hyde Park: Walking Down the Drive

Artifact IDMO 1956.115
Object Type Drawing
Artist (American painter and printmaker, 1904-1981)
Date1949
Mediumpaper (illustration paper, cardboard, matboard), ink, paint (gouache), pencil
Dimensionsmat H 20 in x W 24 in (50.8 cm x 61 cm )
sheet H 12 3/4 in x W 18 1/2 in (32.4 cm x 47 cm )

Physical DescriptionAn original pen and ink and ink wash drawing with gouache highlights showing Franklin D. Roosevelt walking, with the aid of crutches, down the tree-lined drive of Springwood, the Roosevelts' Hyde Park, New York home. The drawing is signed by the artist in ink in the lower left below the image: Olin Dows © 1949.

On the reverse of the drawing is a handwritten note in ink describing the image: At one time during his illness, The doctor recommended walking. FDR would walk from the home to the gate sometimes with Mrs. R or Louis Howe or alone. This was very difficult and he was in great pain and discomfort but he did it with great fortitude and [illegible] but it had no good effects and was discontinued.

The drawing is mounted to a piece of cardboard and comes with a window mat on which the title is written in pencil: Walking down the Drive.
Historical NoteThis drawing is one in a series of original ink wash drawings created by Olin Dows for his book, "Franklin Roosevelt at Hyde Park," published in 1949 by American Artists Group, Inc. Olin Dows spent two years writing the text and drawing the book's 174 illustrations. This illustration appears on page 96 of the book.

The Dows family had been lifelong friends and neighbors of the Roosevelts and were frequent guests at events at Hyde Park, NY and in Washington, DC, both before and during the presidency. In 1939, Olin Dows received a commission to design and paint the murals in the Rhinebeck, NY Post Office. In 1941, at the suggestion of President Roosevelt, Dows was commissioned to design and paint the murals in the Hyde Park Post Office as well, and worked closely with FDR in the conception and design of the murals.
Additional Details
Custodial History NoteDonated to the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum by Olin Dows in 1955.
Credit LineGift of Olin Dows
Use Restriction StatusUnrestrictedCopyrightReproduction or other use of these holdings or images thereof is unrestricted.
In Collection(s)
Not on view