Irvin
Nov 21, 2022

Elizabeth and Irvin McDuffie Papers

Irvin "Mac" Henry McDuffie and his wife Elizabeth "Lizzie" Hall McDuffie were domestics in their hometown of Atlanta and later in the employ of Franklin Delano Roosevelt during his presidency. Born in Elberton, Georgia, Irvin moved to Atlanta to be a barber and eventually manage the McDuffie-Herndon Barbershop financed by Alonzo Herndon of the Atlanta Life Insurance Company. Upon the recommendation of a customer, Roosevelt interviewed McDuffie to be his valet at his retreat at Warm Springs, Georgia. McDuffie continued on with Roosevelt through his governorship in New York and his presidency, until McDuffie suffered a nervous breakdown in 1939. Elizabeth worked for 23 years as a maid with the prominent Atlanta family of Edward H. Inman. In 1933 she moved to Washington, D.C. to join her husband and became a maid in the White House where she remained until Roosevelt's death in 1945.

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For:
  • Geographic Location = Brazil--Rio de Janeiro
Photocopy of a newspaper clipping describing preparations for the Inter-American Conference for the Maintenance of Peace.
Elizabeth and Irvin McDuffie Papers
A letter from Irvin McDuffie in which he recounts his travels aboard the U.S.S. Indianapolis with President Franklin Roosevelt. Of note is McDuffie's account of being left at the port in Rio de Janiero as well as the ceremony marking the crossing of the equator and the subsequent "visit" by Neptunus Rex.
Four blank postcards displaying scenery.
Elizabeth and Irvin McDuffie Papers