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  1. Their given names were Eleanor and Curtis, but the press gave them the nicknames of Sistie and Buzzie. The two children lived in the White House with their mother and grandparents when their parents divorced, and their grandmother, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, had slides, sandboxes, and swings constructed on the South Lawn for the children.

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  2. In 1933, she and the children—who the reporters called “Sistie” and “Buzzie,” moved into the White House.” [2] A prolific writer, Anna Roosevelt published two children’s books, several articles, and a spokesperson for mothers’ and children’s issues; in 1935—Anna became executive board chairman of the National Research Center in Washington, DC.

  3. 30 de sept. de 2016 · Sept. 30, 2016. Curtis Roosevelt, who with his sister, Eleanor, charmed Americans in the mid-1930s as Buzzie and Sistie, the towheaded children who lived in the White House with their...

  4. 29 de sept. de 2016 · Buzzie was formally Curtis Roosevelt Dall, the oldest grandson of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and first lady Eleanor Roosevelt. His sister was Anna Eleanor Dall, known as “Sistie.”

  5. Newspaper articles frequently referred to the children by their nicknames, "Buzzie" and "Sistie." After his parents' 1934 divorce, his mother married journalist Clarence John Boettiger in 1935. His younger half-brother, John, was born in 1939.

  6. 12 de ene. de 2012 · Anna and Curtis Dall, known to many as “SistieandBuzzie,” were the children of Anna Dall, the Roosevelt’s eldest child and only daughter. According to “Buzzie,” he and his sister lived in the White House from September 1933 to November 1935.

  7. Library of Congress. Roosevelt Grandchildren on the South Lawn - 1933. This a photograph of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's grandchildren, Eleanor Roosevelt and Curtis Roosevelt or "Sistie" and "Buzzie" playing on a slide on the South Grounds of the White House.