Unlike the much-scrutinized style choices of recent decades, all of the inaugural ones that were made by Roosevelt, who served as first lady between 1933 and 1945, are not readily accessible online.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s first inaugural address and “Four Freedoms” State of the Union speech and John F. Kennedy’s inaugural address. Lincoln’s first inaugural address was an all ...
Roosevelt’s first inaugural (1933). All are well worth reading. Jefferson did an astonishing job in his first address explaining the importance of the peaceful transfer of power — and the ...
Most people can recall one line from Franklin Delano Roosevelt's first inaugural address: "The only thing we have to fear, is fear itself." It wasn't the best line in the speech. Toward the end ...
President Franklin D. Roosevelt famously began his first inaugural address in 1933 with the words: “This is a day of national consecration and I know that on this day my fellow Americans expect that I ...
When it comes to presidential inaugural addresses, there are certain lines that live on through history ... New presidents have generally used the speech to lay out their goals and address current ...
Eight years ago, Donald Trump delivered an inaugural address that overshadowed ... for politicians to set expectations. Franklin Delano Roosevelt was talking about the economic realities of ...
Franklin D. Roosevelt's first inaugural address on March 4, 1933, came at the height of the Great Depression. With millions unemployed and the banking system on the verge of collapse, Roosevelt's ...
American Carnage': Looking Back at Trump's First Inaugural Address Before His ... for politicians to set expectations. Franklin Delano Roosevelt was talking about the economic realities of the ...
Roosevelt said of his unilateral 1903 action ... in reference to the 32nd president’s first inaugural address, “a speech [that] was more than a speech – it was an act that loosened ...