FROM FDR’S “GOOD NEIGHBOR” POLICY TO HOSPITALITY DESIGN AMERICAS EXPO: REFLECTIONS FROM THE WOLFSONIAN LIBRARY
• September 25, 2013 • Leave a CommentPosted in 1930s, acquisitions, collectors, Communism, cruise ships, displays, donations, exhibitions, FDR, gifts, Great Depression, Jean S. and Frederic A. Sharf, Jean S. and Frederic A. Sharf Collection, library donors, museums, New Deal, New Deal (1933-1939), New Deal era, ocean liners, oceanliners, passenger ships, promotional materials, rare books and special collections library, Rio de Janeiro, Soviet Union, The Wolfsonian-FIU library, Wolfsonian, Wolfsonian library, Wolfsonian library collection, Wolfsonian library exhibits, Wolfsonian museum library, Wolfsonian staff, Wolfsonian-FIU exhibitions, Wolfsonian-FIU library, World War II, WWII
Tags: American Historical Association, American interventionism, Brazil, Brochures, Buenos Aires (Argentina), Cargo ships, Clara Helena Palacio Luca, Cold War, FDR, Francis Xavier Luca, GI Rountable series, Good Neighbor Fleet, Good Neighbor Policy, Hospitality Design Americas, Latin America, Miami Beach Convention Center, Montevideo (Uruguay), Moore-McCormack Lines, Pamphlets, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882-1945), Rio de janeiro (Brazil), S.S. Argentina, S.S. Uruguay, See the Americas First campaign, Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1919), Thomas C. Ragan, tourism, tourist trade, U.S.S.R., Union of Soviet Socialist Republics