No one ever accused Eleanor Roosevelt  of messing around, doing things halfway.  When her husband, Franklin Delano Roosevelt  assumed office to try to medicate the Great Depression , Eleanor set herself upon the task of expanding the role of the First Lady.   She did things first ladies hadn't done before: she put together her own staff, wrote magazines, and began holding her own press conferences.  This last involved a stinging dart into the state of gender relations, since she rarely invited male journalists.  This was, of course, a protest against the under-representation of female correspondents at presidential press conferences.   At the end of the dramatic and wildly-effective first term, Eleanor launched her own radio program, which, owing to a fondness for literalness, was named Mrs. Roosevelt's Own Program .  This twice-weekly dispatch was themed around women's issues and aired by NBC.   Good for her, we say!  She was born on this day in 1884.
Today in Old Radio History...