This stamp is practically worthless. I do know one dealer who will pay 5 cent sper hundred for them, if you put them in neat bundles of 100 each, have $50 worth to sell and pay postage to send them to him.
That is Scott number US 932 It has a value of 40 cents mint and 15 cents used.
Will need more information. You can consult a stamp catalogue at your local library to identify the year and condition of the item with an estimated value for it.Many stamps have been printed that picture FDR. You'll have to identify it with a great deal more detail for anyone to be able to help you out.
FDR appeared on a 3-center as part of a memorial set for him soon after he died. He died in 1945; the stamp appeared in 1945 or 1946. The same set had stamps of 1 cent, 2 cent, and 5 cent denominations, all with the same portrait, but different scenes related to his life . I am pretty sure that Theodore Roosevelt never was on a 3 cent stamp.
FDR
FDR'S hobbies were fishing, swimming, ship models, and his stamp collection.
This stamp is a interesting US commemorative stamp, issued as a memorial to FDR, who died shortly before it came out, Since it only cost 1 cent, millions were sold and it is still common. If it is mint, I would not use as postage even though it is worth no more than one cent except to a young collector who needs it for his collection. A dealer would probably charge him 15 to 25 cents for one, so you might be able to get that if you find such a collector. Otherwise, keep it in your stamp collection for your children or yourself when you have more time. If you have more than one, you may be able to trade it for stamps of similar value. .
Fdr
Scott #930 Green horizontal format commemorative with Hyde Park. Like most used US postage stamps are this one is worth 15 or 20 cents, the minimum amount required to catalog and stock the stamps. Unused (Mint) will always be worth at least their face value. Special cancellations and different values are likely to be worth more. Consult a postage stamp catalog, usually available at your local library for exact identification and catalog values.
The 32nd president, Franklin D. Roosevelt. (FDR)
FDR disproves the idea that the declining value in hard work has caused the Great Depression.
Use them for postage.
No, FDR is not single.