Story

My Beautiful Journey: Only in America

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Authors: Selwa Roosevelt

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

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Fall 2025 | Volume 70, Issue 4

Selwa "Lucky" Roosvelt (right) helps the Reagans welcome Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to the U.S. White House Photo.
The author, Selwa "Lucky" Roosvelt (right), helps the Reagans welcome Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to the U.S. White House photo

Editor's Note: Selwa "Lucky" Roosevelt is Chairman Emeritus of the Blair House Foundation, and former Chief of Protocol of the U.S. under Ronald Reagan. A former columnist for the Washington Star, she covered the White House and State Department, and managed to get the first interview with Jackie Kennedy after her marriage to JFK. She is the author of Keeper of the Gate, a behind-the-scenes look at the White House.

The journey of my life could only have happened because of two acts of immense daring by two immigrants to America. One was the courage of a fifteen-year old boy—my late father—who left his Lebanese mountain village, stowed away on a boat and, thanks to a sympathetic ship’s captain, was allowed to work his passage to America. Thus, my father arrived on these shores penniless, not speaking a word of English, and began his new life as a peddler. He eventually achieved a modest prosperity in the mountains of Tennessee, but he left me with the richest possible heritage—being born in America.

The journey of my life is that miracle known as The American Dream.

Three hundred years earlier, the first Roosevelt — Nicholas, by name — made an even more intrepid voyage — coming to America in the early 1600’s from a bleak, remote island in Holland. His progeny produced two great American presidents — and later my husband, Archie Roosevelt, Jr., a grandson of Teddy Roosevelt.

And so these two men, by acts 300 years apart, set in motion my own adventure.

Still, you might ask how this woman whose antecedents were from the tiny Lebanese village of Arsoun came to be Ronald Reagan’s Chief of Protocol, thus America’s hostess to the kings and queens, presidents and prime ministers, and other luminaries invited by the president, vice president, and secretary of state.

How did a first-generation American become the arbiter of what is correct and appropriate for American officials regarding protocol, and the planner of much of the nation’s official entertaining? 

Selwa Roosevelt worked her way through college as a reporter.
Selwa Roosevelt worked her way through college as a reporter.

And how did she become the “nanny” of the diplomatic corps, settling questions of diplomatic privileges and immunity, with the power to declare a miscreant diplomat “persona non grata”?

How did a woman born and reared in the mountains of east Tennessee become the chatelaine of Blair House, the 110-room presidential guest house, overseeing its six-year restoration?

This could only happen in America. My journey is that miracle known as The American Dream. And it was small-town America and my loving Arab parents who gave me the roots and strength to make it possible.

After 20 years