and President Franklin D. 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 ...
It was Franklin Delano Roosevelt who said in his 1932 inaugural ... In fact, Trump's first inaugural address is not typically remembered for its content, but rather its tone.
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 ...
The second inauguration of Ronald Reagan on Jan. 20, 1985, was forced indoors due to intense cold. As USA TODAY noted that day, "The USA's 50th inauguration today moves indoors – a victim of ...
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 ...
As the Great Depression deepened in early 1933, Franklin D. Roosevelt’s first inaugural address offered hope to the disillusioned nation. “This great Nation,” he assured the American people ...
John F. Kennedy inspired Americans with the words, “Ask not what your country can do for you — ask what you can do for your country.” Franklin D. Roosevelt assured ...
Franklin D. Roosevelt assured them there’s “nothing to fear but fear itself.” Abraham Lincoln sought to heal a nation divided by civil war by calling for “malice toward none” in a speech ...