George Washington delivered his first inaugural address before a joint session of Congress in New York City’s Federal Hall on April 30, 1789. Washington, stepping into the newly created role of ...
All inaugural addresses are not created equal, but through the course of the nation’s history, presidents have used the occasion to sketch their visions on topics as old as the republic itself – unity ...
When Franklin Delano Roosevelt gave his first inaugural address on March 4, 1933, the nation was reeling from the Great Depression and was dissatisfied with the previous administration’s reluctance to ...
Lincoln’s second inaugural address is one of the most consequential presidential speeches in U.S. history, both for its eloquence and its impact. At only 703 words, it was the third shortest inaugural ...
A rapid-fire tour through iconic inaugural lines, showing how presidents framed fear, power, and national purpose in moments of upheaval. These quotes are more than ceremony, they are snapshots of ...
Lincoln’s second inaugural address is one of the most consequential presidential speeches in U.S. history, both for its eloquence and its impact. At only 703 words, it was the third shortest inaugural ...
When President Bush delivers his inaugural address Thursday, he will contribute to a relatively rare genre: the second inaugural. We look back at... Memorable Second Inaugural Speeches Memorable ...
As a longtime subscriber to The Sun-Chronicle, I daily read The Associated Press' "Today in History" column, including this past Tuesday morning, March 4. Two significant presidential quotes of ...