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              <text>Drinkwater: “The City of Winter Park celebrated its one-hundredth birthday in 1982. And a very nice part of that celebration was the publication of a booklet called Tales of Winter Park. One of the talks was told by Mr. Robert Langford, the owner of the Langford Hotel. He spoke of distinguished guests who had stayed at the hotel, among them, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt. And I should like to add a postscript to what he says about her visit.”&#13;
&#13;
“Mrs. Roosevelt was in Winter Park in February, 1956. She came at the invitation of the United Nations Association, and spoke at a dinner in her honor at the Langford Hotel.”&#13;
&#13;
About President Franklin Roosevelt and wife Eleanor:&#13;
&#13;
Drinkwater: “It was a great occasion, and a very happy time for me. I had lived in Dutchess County, New York, during ten years of the Roosevelt administration. The family came home to vote at Hyde Park, of course, and on Election Eve there was sometimes a political rally in front of the Nelson House, the big old hotel in Poughkeepsie. I remember that the president had to lean heavily on the arm of his son, James, because he carried those heavy braces on his legs. But as soon as he spoke you forgot all that. That wonderful voice. It became familiar to people around the world, and renewed our hope in a troubled time. “We have nothing to fear but fear itself.”&#13;
&#13;
“The last time I saw President Roosevelt was in October, 1944 – a beautiful fall day. He had had a long drive in the lovely Hudson River country which was home. He stopped in front of the post office in Poughkeepsie, which had been built in his administration, and of the fieldstone of Dutchess County, as he wanted it to be. He sat in an open-air car, his cape around his shoulders (He loved that old cape!). He was relaxed and happy, but he looked so tired and old. And in a few months, he was gone. He died April, 1945.”&#13;
&#13;
“Mrs. Roosevelt, of course, was everywhere, and we were delighted to welcome her to Winter Park. Well, some of us were. This was not what you would call Roosevelt country. Or United Nations country, as Mr. Langford points out.”&#13;
&#13;
Finally, some last comments on Eleanor Roosevelt:&#13;
&#13;
Drinkwater: “The last time I saw Mrs. Roosevelt was in Washington, at some kind of United Nations meeting, actually. I blew her a kiss over the heads of the crowd around her, and she returned it with a smile before she stepped into the elevator.”&#13;
&#13;
“Here is Mr. Langford’s appraisal of Mrs. Roosevelt: He said, “She was a very powerful woman, a very fine one. She was very gracious, and very smart.” </text>
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              <text>Mrs. Colado: That is interesting. Oh, did you want to hear about Girl Scouting in Winter Park?&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: Yes. I think that would be very interesting. You were very active in it.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: Because I didn’t start – I didn’t have the first Girl Scout Troop. But the summer after I was married, I guess it was the summer of ’32, I was asked to go out and be on the staff of the Girl Scout camp, Wewa, in Plymouth. But I didn’t know anything about Girl Scouting. I went to teach archery, and do waterfront work and physical education – some of the things, nature hikes, things like that.&#13;
&#13;
But I did get to know all the Girl Scout people, and was really sold on Girl Scout programs. So the next year when I came back, I mean after school had started and everything, Mrs. Caldwell – Halstead Caldwell, asked me if I wouldn’t take a troop. And there was one troop. So I was Troop Two. The Troop One, Mrs. Lawrence was leader of. And it was . . . &#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: Did she organize scouting – Girl Scouting here?&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: Well, it didn’t sort of work that way. Mrs. Christ in Orlando was the leading light of Girl Scouts. And if she wanted a troop some place, she got somebody to organize it, or something.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: I see.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: She was sort of official. And she was very, very good. She – I don’t know how Mrs. Lawrence happened to get the troop, but Mrs. Lawrence was the leader and Mrs. Dumars was the assistant leader and the troop absolutely filled. They weren’t supposed to have more than thirty-two girls, and I’m sure they had a whole bunch more than that. So there was no room for these other girls.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: I see.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: And the girls that live in town now, that I can think of, that were in that first troop were Peggy Caldwell Strong (Mrs. Hope Strong, Jr.) and Carolyn Kent. Carolyn lives in Orlando, but her mother lives here. And there must have been some other – there were other girls, but there were only eight to begin with.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: Oh.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: And we met in my house, and I can remember doing all the Girl Scout things and the Girl Scout songs. I can still remember them. But then, when the troop grew, we moved to the Parish House, All Saints Parish House. And that was a very nice building in back of the little church on Lyman. And we met there for a while. &#13;
&#13;
Then the Kiwanis Club, Mr. Fanning, who was a Kiwanian, donated property on Minnesota Avenue, on the south side of Minnesota, just off of Pennsylvania.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: I remember.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: A tiny little bungalow, back off the street. And the Kiwanians built it.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: Oh.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: . . . and gave it to the Girl Scouts. And it was a pretty little thing – had a beautiful fireplace. An artist, a sculptor in Orlando, did a relief thing, of Girl Scouts, I think, around a camp fire, that was over the fireplace. It was nice, and every troop, for several years, met there. We all had our day. Then, of course, Girl Scouting grew so, by leaps and bounds, that we couldn’t use it any more for every troop. But some of the things that happened when Rollins Chapel was built, and I don’t know exactly what year that was. Nita Mutispaugh and I organized a Vesper service for Girl Scouts, and we had it for all the Scouts in Central Florida, because at the time, the council that we operated was the Orange Lake Council.&#13;
&#13;
About a Winter Park pageant:&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: Did the students really write this pageant every year, or did they have a . . . &#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: No. No, they never wrote it. One year, a Mrs. Rena Carrie Sheffield wrote it. Her daughter was a student at Rollins.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: Oh.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: And she wrote it. She also wrote a song called “Osceola” that was sung and played that time. And there were always Indian maids and Indian warriors, and girls in gauze veils that danced around. &#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: Did it deal with the history of Central Florida?&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: No, I think it had something to do with the history of the Indians before the Florida town developed. I know . . . &#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: This was celebrating the founding of Winter Park, but it dealt with the Indians who were here a long time before.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: I think it did, yes. I know the Indians featured prominently, because Dean Sprague – R.J. Sprague, was Dean, and he was also acting President at one time, at the college. And he was Chief Osceola.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: He played the part of Chief Osceola?&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: He played the part of Chief Osceola. And they started from the McKean’s property – well, it’s next to – I don’t know – it’s across from the home on Interlachen Avenue. That big house.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: Um-hum.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: It’s vacant land, still. And there’s a mound down there that we were always told was Osceola’s grave.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: Oh&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: And that’s where this canoe, war canoe filled with warriors came. Well, the warriors had really imbibed a bit, I’m afraid, in order to get over being stage-struck, maybe, or have the strength to paddle the canoe. (They laugh) But anyway, they came on a very crooked course across that lake, with Dean Sprague standing up in the bow with his hand up, you know. And then the boys, the Indian braves, danced for these Indian maidens. &#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: I see.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: And I could remember my husband, and a couple of the others who had to do this, saying that they would pinch the girls to give them a thrill. (They laugh) You’ll probably want to delete some of this. But it was fun, it was lots of fun. I don’t have the slightest idea what I did. I think a couple of times I did stay behind the bushes and help with the costumes.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Alexander: All the students took part, in one way or another, in this pageant?&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Colado: No, not all of them. Just the girls in the Physical Education section classes. And the boys could be roped into doing it. </text>
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NOTICES&#13;
Unless expressly stated otherwise, the organization that has made this Item available makes no warranties about the Item and cannot guarantee the accuracy of this Rights Statement. You are responsible for your own use.&#13;
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