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The donation became official June 30 after President Barack Obama signed the bill into law. In the past month, archivist Robert Clark has sorted and organized about a third of the collection. "For the first time, you see the inner workings of FDR's inner office and how Missy and Grace interacted with the president
-- but also how they interacted with all those people around Roosevelt," Clark said. A month after World War II broke out in Europe, U.S. Ambassador Joseph Kennedy wrote a personal note from London to LeHand. He described his view of the war, along with some personal reflections. "It is lonesome as the devil here without the family and at the same time the delivery of mail is very bad, and chances are from now on it is going to be worse," Kennedy wrote. The Roosevelt library plans to make the papers available to the public for research by Nov. 15 and will post them all online in January. Clark said it's too soon to know whether the collection will change any Roosevelt history. Much is still unknown about Roosevelt, so the collection will prove valuable, said U.S. Archivist David Ferriero. "They help fill gaps in the record of a presidency that changed America," he said. "Roosevelt did not keep a diary, did not sit for extensive interviews with historians, did not live to write his memoirs, and he never completely confided in anyone, not even his wife." ___ Online: Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum: http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/
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