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By Msgr. Noel C. Burtenshaw
In the beginning it was called Bullochville.
That's because the Bulloch family dominated that
middle western part of Georgia. Maybe dominated is not the right word. For
everyone knows that it was not the family, not the people, but the water, the
spring, that was really the dominant factor.
The Indians called the warm springs magic and they
were wrong. The waters bubbling up from the earth in Warm Springs, Georgia were
not magic but they were and are health-soothing mineral waters always extending
welcome relief to bodies racked with the crippling pains of arthritis and
stroke, and before the vaccine, polio too.
The Indians could easily be forgiven. In 1924 the
rich, influential, young New York politician, Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
mysteriously crippled with polio just three years before, came to Warm Springs
and proclaimed the waters "magic." His coming to this little rural Georgia
community gave new life and worldwide fame to the town, the resort and the
precious waters of Warm Springs.
When Roosevelt first arrived in his famous retreat
it was a resort for a wealthy few. Warm Springs was dominated by the grand
Merriwether Inn. "The guests would come in their noisy Fords," says therapist
Jim Poulson, "using the spring waters to soothe their aches and pains. Crippled
polio victims and other invalids would come too but they never got much of a
welcome. They were clearly unwanted by the monied folks. FDR changed al that."
He certainly did. He bought the place. In 1927,
clearly thrilled with his new find and the medication the waters gave his
crippled legs, Roosevelt bought the land surrounding the springs and set up the
Warm Springs Foundation. The welcome mat in this natural Georgia rehabilitation
center was out. And over the years, hundreds came to be treated.
Today the victims of polio, cleansed by the
miracle vaccine in 1956, no longer come and new buildings have been added, but
the life and times of the great President are there to be seen. FDR is
everywhere.
"Children were a big part of the Foundation in the
President's time," says Rita Kitts, who has worked at the Foundation since 1947
when her brother, a Benedictine priest, was a patient. "That was the school for
them," she says, pointing to a building. "At all times there were at least 30
children receiving treatment at the Foundation."
The children and FDR are well remembered. Even as
President, he could be seen in the warm spring waters, playing with the
children, making them use their crippled joints as they delightedly dashed for
balls he would throw to them in the pool. And Dora Dunn, a therapist in the
Foundation today, vividly remembers the children and their dinner parties with
FDR at Thanksgiving.
"It was beautiful," says Dora. "We would dress
them in their finest, very formal. And then the President would come in, sit at
the head of the table insisting that only the children would sit nearest to him
while he carved the turkey and joked with them all. They laughed and laughed."
Rita Kitts will show you the Interfaith Chapel
where services are still held. Mass is offered each Sunday at 5:00 for patients
and local Catholics. It was in that tiny chapel with its ten little pews that
the President attended his final worship service on Easter Sunday, April 1,
1945. Twelve days later, in the Little White House, in Warm Springs, FDR died.
The pew where he sat is marked with a plaque.
Rita points to the large distance between the
front pew and the altar. "It was here in this open space," says Miss Kitts,
"that the stretcher patients were laid to hear Mass. It was most impressive to
see them lined up in front of the altar."
The old pool, designed partially by Roosevelt,
located at the entrance to the Foundation, is not in use any longer. The warm
waters of the spring now bubble up into a modern indoor pool where the patients
receive therapy. Billy Garrison cares for the pool. "The waters come out of the
ground at a warm 80 degrees," says Billy, a physical therapy technician. "We
then heat it up to 96 or 98 degrees before the patients are placed in it. The
only thing we add is a little chlorine. The waters do the rest."
And what do these famed medicinal waters
accomplish? "No magic," says Jim Poulson. "They are therapeutic. The patients,
who are mostly victims of stroke and arthritis and also amputees, are placed in
the waters and, with the least possible discomfort, have their limbs treated.
They are enabled to relax more easily because the waters give buoyancy and the
patients float. It is a soothing treatment."
It is obvious that Roosevelt fell deeply in love
with his Warm Springs retreat. The waters alone at first drew him to this
Georgia resort. But he came to love the restful pace. At all times of the
years, even in those hectic war years, he would steal away to this exquisite
area.
Overlooking a valley of Pine Mountain, he built
his Little White House, a most unpretentious little home where princes and
rulers of all kinds came to visit the President. Often these same VIPs would be
entertained by country fiddlers and backwoods songsters, loved so much by this
unusual New Yorker. He loved to sit nearby on the banks of the Flint River and
fish for breakfast like any sportsman, or lead a horse gently down one of the
many paths in the rolling hillside.
But mostly it was the warm waters racing over
those polio-stricken legs. It was the exercises his limbs would perform,
miraculously, as he raced around the giant pool with gangs of children
screaming in his ear. Warm Springs was a place of healing for this genius of
the common people. He loved the life it offered him. Little wonder, then, life
ended for Franklin Delano Roosevelt in that sleepy, southern retreat that he so
often called "down home."
On April 12, 1945 at 1:00 p.m. as the famous
"unfinished Portrait" was being completed by Madam Shoumatoff, (it never was)
President Roosevelt suffered a massive cerebral hemorrhage and died in the
Little White House two hours later. His train, standing at the depot, took him
for the last time away from the waters of Warm Springs to Washington and
finally to his New York home for burial.
For his leadership in the nation and finally in
the world Franklin D. Roosevelt, a man who won the Presidency for a record four
terms, was called a savior. Down in Warm Springs, GA, in those famous baths,
still bubbling from the earth, he was known as a man who knew pain in himself
and others and sought to bring healing. |