FDR’s Funeral Train: A Betrayed Widow, a Soviet Spy, and a Presidency in the Balance

Illustrated lecture with author Robert Klara

In April 1945, a funeral train carrying the body of Franklin D. Roosevelt embarked on a three-day, thousand-mile odyssey through nine states to bring the presidents remains home to his estate in Hyde Park, New York, where he was buried in the rose garden. Though funeral trains were the customary means of transporting deceased presidents (McKinley, Garfield, and Lincoln had all had them), Washington had never before staged a funeral rite of this scope, duration, and danger: with World War II still raging, the Secret Service’s decision to permit the most important men and women of the federal government to ride in a single train was, tactically speaking, utterly foolish.

But the Roosevelt funeral train turned out to be an event as magisterial as it was necessary. The train not only permitted countless thousands of Americans to pay personal respects to the man who had led them out of a Great Depression and through a global war, but it also furnished Harry S. Truman with the time necessary to school himself in an office had inherited so suddenly. Author and historian Robert Klara will discuss the funeral train’s tactical, political, and symbolic significance, from the difficulty of embalming FDR, to the unknown presence of a KGB spy on board, to the slow national healing process that this remarkable railroad procession allowed to begin.











When: Wed., Sep. 28, 2016 at 7:00 pm
Where: Morbid Anatomy Museum
424 Third Ave. Brooklyn

Price: $8
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Illustrated lecture with author Robert Klara

In April 1945, a funeral train carrying the body of Franklin D. Roosevelt embarked on a three-day, thousand-mile odyssey through nine states to bring the presidents remains home to his estate in Hyde Park, New York, where he was buried in the rose garden. Though funeral trains were the customary means of transporting deceased presidents (McKinley, Garfield, and Lincoln had all had them), Washington had never before staged a funeral rite of this scope, duration, and danger: with World War II still raging, the Secret Service’s decision to permit the most important men and women of the federal government to ride in a single train was, tactically speaking, utterly foolish.

But the Roosevelt funeral train turned out to be an event as magisterial as it was necessary. The train not only permitted countless thousands of Americans to pay personal respects to the man who had led them out of a Great Depression and through a global war, but it also furnished Harry S. Truman with the time necessary to school himself in an office had inherited so suddenly. Author and historian Robert Klara will discuss the funeral train’s tactical, political, and symbolic significance, from the difficulty of embalming FDR, to the unknown presence of a KGB spy on board, to the slow national healing process that this remarkable railroad procession allowed to begin.

Buy tickets/get more info now