...The only limit to our realization of tomorrow 
				  will be our doubts of today. Let us move forward with strong and active faith. 
				   
				  Franklin D. Roosevelt, April, 1945
William 
					 Jefferson Clinton,May 2, 1997
 On May 2, 1997, 
				President Clinton joined Mike Wallace, Master of Ceremonies, FDR Commission 
				Co-chairs Senators Daniel K. Inouye and Mark O. Hatfield, David B. Roosevelt, 
				Princess Margriet of the Netherlands and opera singer Denyce Graves to dedicate 
				the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial. The FDR memorial is only the third 
				presidential memorial dedicated in the United States this century. The last 
				time such a dedication took place was in 1943, when President Roosevelt 
				dedicated the Jefferson Memorial. 
				The Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial Commission was 
				  established by the United States Congress in 1955 "for the purpose of 
				  considering and formulating plans for the design, construction and location of 
				  a permanent memorial. . ." to honor our 32nd President. In 1959, land was set 
				  aside in West Potomac Park for the memorial, following a layout established in 
				  1901 by the McMillan "kite" Plan for monuments in the city of Washington. In 
				  1978, after several design competitions, Lawrence Halprin's memorial design 
				  received final approval from the FDR Memorial Commission of Fine Arts.
 
				The 7.5 acre memorial honors President Roosevelt in a landscape 
				  of four outdoor rooms with granite walls, statuary, inscriptions, waterfalls 
				  and thousands of plants, shrubs and trees. The memorial is located along the 
				  famous cherry tree walk on the Tidal Basin. The memorial's four outdoor gallery 
				  rooms offer visitors a historical narrative of the years 1933 to 1945, each 
				  symbolizing one of FDR's four terms in office.
 
				Five sculptors were assembled by designer Halprin to create 
				  bronze sculptures placed throughout the memorial. They are: Leonard Baskin, 
				  Neil Estern, Robert Graham, Tom Hardy, and George Segal. Master stone carver 
				  John Benson inscribed the enduring words of FDR on the memorial,s meandering 
				  800 foot granite wall. Among these are: "This generation has a rendezvous with 
				  destiny." "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself." "I pledge you, I 
				  pledge myself, to a New Deal for the American People."
 
				The FDR Memorial marks the first time that a First Lady has been 
				  honored in a presidential memorial. It includes a bronze statue of Eleanor 
				  Roosevelt standing before a symbol of the United Nations, for which she served 
				  as America's first Delegate after the president's death. Also included is an 
				  exact replica of one of FDR's wheelchairs, on display in the Memorial Entry 
				  Building.
 
				The FDR Memorial is maintained by the National Park Service and 
				  is staffed from 8 am to midnight every day of the year except Christmas. 
				  Entrance is free to the public.