She continued on the staff of the Roosevelt Library until she retired in 1963.
The Roosevelt Library now receives about 200,000 visitors a year, but that is enough to make it the third most popular tourist attraction in New York State, outdone only by the Empire State Building and Niagara Falls.
The Roosevelt Library has 17 million pages of documents, while the Clinton Library has more than 76 million, but the number of archivists has not kept pace.
The Roosevelt Library and Museum, administered by the National Archives, is open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily, as is the Henry A. Wallace Center.
There was also a memorable moment in the Roosevelt Library, which is overseen by the National Archives and which houses President Roosevelt's papers and mementos.
Under the direction of the National Archives and Records Administration, the Roosevelt Library is one of seven Presidential libraries.
The cornerstone of the Roosevelt Library and Museum was laid by President Roosevelt on Nov. 19, 1939.
But over the years, the Roosevelt Library, which is in a combined museum-library building, has become a popular tourist attraction, with about 350,000 people visiting it a year.
The records at the Roosevelt Library in Hyde Park, N.Y., are clear about this.
Roosevelt Library will reopen on June 1, 2013 with a new meeting room and completely revitalized interior and mechanical systems.