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Harry S. Truman's address to joint session of Congress (July 27, 1948)

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Truman Administration
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President Harry S. Truman
Presidential addresses
Recent addresses:
Donald Trump's State of the Union Address, 2026
Donald Trump's address to joint session of Congress (March 4, 2025)
Joe Biden's State of the Union Address, 2024
Joe Biden's State of the Union Address, 2023

Historical addresses:

On July 27, 1948, President Harry S. Truman delivered an address to a joint session of Congress at 12:30 p.m. EST. Truman used the address to kick off a special session of the 80th Congress, asking for action to fight inflation and a rising cost of living.[1]

The president can deliver a joint address before both the House of Representatives and Senate upon invitation from both chambers. This is typically done by presidents in order to speak on specific topics.

Joint sessions require both chambers to pass concurrent resolutions to conduct formal business. [2]

Truman’s address to a joint session of Congress

Transcript

The following text is a transcript of Truman's address, as prepared for delivery:

The urgent needs of the American people require our presence here today.

Our people demand legislative action by their Government to do two things: first, to check inflation and the rising cost of living, and second, to help in meeting the acute housing shortage.

These are matters which affect every American family. They also affect the entire world, for world peace depends upon the strength of our economy.

The Communists, both here and abroad, are counting on our present prosperity turning into a depression. They do not believe that we can--or will--put the brake on high prices. They are counting on economic collapse in this country.

If we should bring on another great depression in the United States by failing to control high prices, the world's hope for lasting peace would vanish. A depression in the United States would cut the ground from under the free nations of Europe. Economic collapse in this country would prevent the recovery throughout the world which is essential to lasting peace. We would have only ourselves to blame for the tragedy that would follow.

In these tense days, when our strength is being taxed all over the world, it would be reckless folly if we failed to act against inflation.

High prices are not taking "time off" for the election.

High prices are not waiting until the next session of Congress.

High prices are getting worse. They are getting worse every day.

We cannot afford to wait for the next Congress to act.

The 81st Congress will not get under way for nearly 6 months. Before the new Congress could take action against high prices, it would have to draft new bills, study them, hold hearings, debate and decide whether to pass them. It would be at least 8 months from now before the new Congress could pass the laws we need.

Eight months more of inflation would be much too long.

It was 8 months ago--November 1947--that I called a special session of this Congress, and recommended a comprehensive anti-inflation program. But that program was not enacted. If it had been enacted, we would have lower prices today.

Since last November, prices have gone even higher. As every housewife knows, food prices rose rapidly throughout 1947. They are climbing even faster now. Month after month, the cost of clothing, fuel, and rent keeps on going up.

The cost of living is now higher than ever before in our history.

There are not many very rich men in the Congress of the United States. You all-most of you--have to live on your salaries. All you need do is just go home and ask your wife how living costs are now, as compared to what they were January 1st, 1947.

We cannot risk the danger, or suffer the hardship, of another 8 months of doing nothing about high prices.

Prices are already so high that last year more than one-fourth of the families of this country were forced to spend more than they earned. Families of low or moderate income are being priced out of the market for many of the necessities of life. They are not able to buy as much as they could buy 2 years ago, and they are paying a lot more for what they can buy.

At the same time, industrial prices, which affect all business and employment, are rising, and rising fast. Large price increases have recently been announced by industries that set the pace for the whole economy. Just within the last few days, the steel industry, for example, increased its prices, on the average, by more than $9 a ton.

The rise in industrial prices is just as important, in the long run, as the high cost of living. It is already squeezing the independent businessman. It threatens to destroy a fair balance between industry and agriculture. It can end only in catastrophe if it is allowed to continue.

In the face of these facts, it is foolish to point at every feeble straw as a sign that the danger is disappearing. In February, some people said that the break in commodity prices meant that inflation was almost over. They were wrong. Prices rose again.

There are still some people who repeat the old argument which was used by those who killed price control 2 years ago. They said that if we would only take controls off, production would increase, prices would go down, and there would be more for everybody at lower cost.

The record shows unmistakably that this argument was false.

Production has increased somewhat, and we want it to increase still more. But even with full employment, full use of available materials, and practically full use of plant capacity--all of which we have today--prices are still climbing much faster than production. It is obvious that we cannot rely solely on more production to curb high prices. Instead, we must attack inflation directly.

If we do not stop inflation, production and employment will both fall sharply when the break comes.

Positive action by this Government is long over-due. It must be taken now.

I therefore urge the Congress to take strong, positive action to control inflation. I have reexamined the anti-inflation program I proposed to the Congress 8 months ago. In its essentials that program is as sound now as it was then. It has been revised and strengthened in the light of changing circumstances. The program I now propose is as follows:

First, I recommend that an excess profits tax be reestablished in order to provide a Treasury surplus and to provide a brake on inflation.

Second, I recommend that consumer credit controls be restored in order to hold down inflationary credit.

Third, I recommend that the Federal Reserve Board be given greater authority to regulate inflationary bank credit.

Fourth, I recommend that authority be granted to regulate speculation on the commodity exchanges.

Fifth, I recommend that authority be granted for allocation and inventory control of scarce commodities which basically affect essential industrial production, or the cost of living.

Sixth, I recommend that rent controls be strengthened, and that adequate appropriations be provided for enforcement, in order to prevent further unwarranted rent increases.

Seventh, I recommend that standby authority be granted to ration those few products in short supply which vitally affect the health and welfare of our people. On the basis of present facts, and unless further shortages occur, this authority might not have to be used.

Eighth, I recommend that price control be authorized for scarce commodities which basically affect essential industrial production or the cost of living. I have said before, and I repeat, that many profit margins have been adequate to absorb wage increases without the price increases that have followed. Rising wages and rising standards of living, based on increasing productivity and a fair distribution of income, is the American way. Noninflationary wage increases can and should continue to be made by free collective bargaining. Where the Government imposes a price ceiling, wage adjustments which can be absorbed within the price ceiling should not be interfered with by the Government. The Government should have the authority, however, to limit wage adjustments which would force a break in the price ceiling, except where wage adjustments are essential to remedy hardship, to correct inequities, or to prevent an actual lowering of the living standards.

The measures I have recommended make up a balanced program to attack high prices. They are all necessary to check rising prices and safeguard our economy against the danger of depression. If they are made the first order of business by the Congress, as they should be, they can be promptly enacted. Every week of delay will mean additional hardship for the American people.

The second reason why I have called the Congress back is that our people need legislation now to help meet the national housing shortage.

We desperately need more housing at lower prices--prices which families of moderate income, particularly veterans' families, can afford to pay. We are not getting it.

Even more urgently, we need more rental housing--especially low-rent housing. We are not getting it.

Most of the housing now being built is for sale, or for rent, at prices far above the reach of the average American family.

I have recommended time and again that the Congress pass a comprehensive housing bill which would help us obtain more housing at lower prices--both for sale and for rent.

A good housing bill, Senate Bill 866, known as the Taft-Ellender-Wagner bill, passed the Senate on April 22. This bill would provide aid to cities in clearing slums and in building low-rent housing projects. It would give extensive aid to the private home building industry. It includes provisions for farm housing, and for research to bring down building costs. It contains many other provisions, all aimed at getting more housing at lower prices and at lower rents.

This is the bill we need. We need it now, not a year from now.

If this legislation is passed this summer, it will be possible to start immediately the production of more houses of the kind our families need, and at prices they can afford to pay. If it is not passed now, the 81st Congress will have to start all over again with a new housing bill. In that case, we might lose a full year in meeting our national housing need.

This Congress can complete action on this comprehensive housing bill in a few days. And I strongly urge that it do so.

I have called the Congress back primarily to deal with high prices and with the housing shortage. Delay on either of these items would be most dangerous. In addition, there are other important legislative measures on which delay would injure us at home and impair our world relations.

I therefore recommend that the present session, without allowing anything to interfere with its vital work on legislation concerning high prices and housing, take action on certain other important measures. These measures can speedily be enacted now because of the amount of study already given to them by the Congress.

First, the Congress should provide Federal assistance to the States in meeting the present crisis in education. The children in our schools, and the men and women who teach there, have been made the victims of inflation. More children are entering school than ever before. But inflation has cut down the purchasing power of the money devoted to educational purposes. Teachers' salaries, for the most part, have lagged far behind the increased cost of living. The overcrowding of our schools is seriously detrimental to the health and the education of our boys and girls. Every month that we delay in meeting this problem will cause damage that can never be repaired. Several million children of school age are unable to attend school, largely because of lack of facilities or teachers.

To meet these vital educational needs, the Congress should complete action on Senate Bill 472, which passed the Senate on April the 1st. All that remains to be done is its passage by the House of Representatives.

Prompt action by the Congress is also needed to help another group of our people who are suffering from inflation. These are the workers who depend on the protection of the minimum wage law. The present minimum wage law is pitifully inadequate in the face of today's high prices. Proposals to raise minimum wages have long been before the Congress. I urgently recommend that the minimum wage be raised to at least 75 cents an hour at this session. Senate Bill 2062 and its companion House bills would be suitable measures for this purpose.

I also urge that action be taken by the Congress to relieve other victims of inflation. These are the people who depend upon the benefits being paid under the old-age and survivors insurance system. The average old-age retirement benefit for a man and his wife is only $39 a month. For a widow with two children, the average monthly benefit is only $49. These benefits are utterly inadequate. I urge that they be increased by at least 50 percent and that the age at which women can receive benefits be lowered from 65 to 60 years. I also hope that the protection of this system will be extended to the millions who are not now covered.

In our relations with the rest of the world, action is also needed at once, and can be taken quickly, to afford additional proof that we mean what we say when we talk about freedom, humanity, and international cooperation for peace and prosperity. Three measures are involved.

First, the Displaced Persons Act in its present form discriminates unfairly against some displaced persons because of their religion, land of origin, or occupation. These provisions are contrary to all American ideals. This act should be promptly amended to wipe out these discriminations. Furthermore, the present act permits the entry of only 200,000 persons, and charges them against future immigration quotas. I believe strongly that this act should provide for the entry of 400,000 persons over a 4-year period, and they should be outside the normal immigration quotas. The act can and should be amended promptly.

Second, many people in the world must wonder how strongly we support the United Nations when we hesitate to assist the construction of its permanent home in this country. Legislation can and should be passed at once to authorize a loan by the United States Government to the United Nations, for the construction of its headquarters buildings in New York City.

The International Wheat Agreement is another vital measure on which the Congress should act. This agreement is designed to insure stability in the world wheat market in the years ahead when wheat will be more plentiful. It would guarantee American farmers an export market of 185 million bushels of wheat at a fair price during each of the next 5 years. Since the agreement is in the form of a treaty it requires only ratification by the Senate. Although this agreement should have been ratified by July 1st of this year, we have good reason to believe that it can still be made effective if it is now ratified promptly.

Also, I wish to call the attention of the Congress to three other problems on which action can and should be taken at this session.

The Congress should reconsider its recent actions which cut sharply into our national electric power policy. There is an acute shortage of electric power in this country now. I am therefore re-submitting to the Congress appropriation requests for certain power projects which must be provided right away. These requests include the TVA steamplant at New Johnsonville, Tenn., and certain other projects on which congressional reductions, if allowed to stand, will delay the production of power for a year or more. These appropriations should be promptly enacted, and at the same time certain crippling limitations should be removed from the law.

In the final days before adjourning in June, the Congress passed a bill raising the salaries of some Federal employees. However, this bill neglected long overdue reforms in the Federal pay scales and discriminated unfairly against certain groups of employees. The Congress should take this opportunity to enact more equitable and realistic Federal pay legislation.

Finally, I again urge upon the Congress the measures I recommended last February to protect and extend basic civil rights of citizenship and human liberty. A number of bills to carry out my recommendations have been introduced in the Congress. Many of them have already received careful consideration by congressional committees. Only one bill, however, has been enacted, a bill relating to the rights of Americans of Japanese origin. I believe that it is necessary to enact the laws I have recommended in order to make the guarantees of the Constitution real and vital. I believe they are necessary to carry out our American ideals of liberty and justice for all.

I hope that there is no misunderstanding of the recommendations I have made. have asked the Congress to return, first of all, in order to meet the urgent need of our people for relief from high prices and the housing shortage. I urge the Congress not to be distracted from these central purposes.

At the same time, as I have stated, the Congress can and should act on certain other important items of legislation at this special session.

There are still other problems of great moment which vitally affect the welfare of the Nation. I have discussed them in previous messages to this Congress. I have made recommendations for legislation to meet them. I do not repeat them now--because the purposes and limited time of this special session do not readily permit action on them.

However, I feel just as strongly as ever that all these measures are necessary. If the Congress finds time to enact any of them now the country will greatly benefit. Certainly, the next Congress should take them up immediately.

These include: a comprehensive health program, based on health insurance; a fair and sound labor-management relations law-in place of the Taft-Hartley law which has proved to be unfair and unsound and which should be repealed; a real long-range farm program; a stronger reciprocal trade agreements act; a universal training program; a national science foundation; strengthened antitrust laws; and the approval of the St. Lawrence waterway treaty.

The vigor of our democracy is judged by its ability to take decisive actions--actions which are necessary to maintain our physical and moral strength and to raise our standards of living. In these days of continued stress, the test of that vigor becomes more and more difficult. The legislative and executive branches of our Government can meet that test today.

The American people rightfully expect us to meet it together. I hope that the American people will not look to us in vain.[3]

—President Harry S. Truman (D), July 27, 1948 [1]

Designated survivor

For some speeches, a member of the president's Cabinet is chosen to stay in an undisclosed location outside of Washington, D.C. to assume the presidency in case of an attack on Congress, the president, and other high-ranking officials.

While designated survivors have been chosen since at least the 1960s, the federal government did not begin revealing the identity of the designated survivor to the public until 1984.[4]

Background

The following table provides a list of annual and other presidential addresses delivered to joint sessions of Congress between 1790 and 2026. It does not include inaugurations. Click the link in the Occasion or topic column to read more about each address. The information was compiled from the U.S. House of Representatives Office of the Historian.[5]

  • President Woodrow Wilson (D), whose administration overlapped with World War I, delivered the most addresses: 23.
  • President Franklin D. Roosevelt (D) followed with 19 addresses, which included a joint speech with the ambassador of France in 1934 and an address read before Congress on his behalf in 1945. World War II took place during his administration.
  • President Harry S. Truman had the third-most addresses at 16. His administration covered the end of World War II and the beginning of the Cold War.
  • Among presidents who served between 1981 and 2026, Presidents Ronald Reagan (R) and Barack Obama (D) delivered the most addresses with 11 and 10, respectively.
Presidential addresses to joint sessions of Congress
DateSession of CongressOccasion or topicPresident and other speaking dignitaries
February 24, 2026120th CongressState of the Union AddressPresident Donald J. Trump
March 4, 2025119th CongressAddressPresident Donald J. Trump
March 7, 2024118th CongressState of the Union AddressPresident Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
February 7, 2023118th CongressState of the Union AddressPresident Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
March 1, 2022117th CongressState of the Union AddressPresident Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
April 28, 2021117th CongressAddressPresident Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
Feb. 4, 2020116th CongressState of the Union AddressPresident Donald J. Trump
Feb. 5, 2019116th CongressState of the Union AddressPresident Donald J. Trump
Jan. 30, 2018115th CongressState of the Union AddressPresident Donald J. Trump
Feb. 28, 2017115th Congress AddressPresident Donald J. Trump
Jan. 12, 2016114th CongressState of the Union AddressPresident Barack H. Obama
Jan. 20, 2015114th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Barack H. Obama
Jan. 28, 2014113th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Barack H. Obama
Feb. 12, 2013113th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Barack H. Obama
Jan. 24, 2012112th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Barack H. Obama
Sept. 8, 2011112th Congress Address on American Jobs ActPresident Barack H. Obama
Jan. 25, 2011112th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Barack H. Obama
Jan. 27, 2010111th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Barack H. Obama
Sept. 8, 2009111th Congress Address on Health Care ReformPresident Barack H. Obama
Feb. 24, 2009111th Congress AddressPresident Barack H. Obama
Jan. 28, 2008110th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident George W. Bush
Jan. 23, 2007110th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident George W. Bush
Jan. 31, 2006109th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident George W. Bush
Feb. 2, 2005109th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident George W. Bush
Jan. 20, 2004108th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident George W. Bush.
Jan. 28, 2003108th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident George W. Bush.
Jan. 29, 2002107th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident George W. Bush.
Sept. 20, 2001107th Congress Address on the War on TerrorismPresident George W. Bush.
Feb. 27, 2001107th Congress Budget MessagePresident George W. Bush.
Jan. 27, 2000106th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident William J. Clinton.
Jan. 19, 1999106th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident William J. Clinton.
Jan. 27, 1998105th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident William J. Clinton.
Feb. 4, 1997105th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident William J. Clinton.
Jan. 23, 1996104th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident William J. Clinton.
Jan. 24, 1995104th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident William J. Clinton.
Jan. 25, 1994103rd Congress State of the Union AddressPresident William J. Clinton.
Sept. 22, 1993103rd Congress Address on Health Care ReformPresident William J. Clinton.
Feb. 17, 1993103rd Congress Economic AddressPresident William J. Clinton.
Jan. 28, 1992102nd Congress State of the Union AddressPresident George Bush.
Mar. 6, 1991102nd Congress Conclusion of Persian Gulf WarPresident George Bush.
Jan. 29, 1991102nd Congress State of the Union AddressPresident George Bush.
Sept. 11, 1990101st Congress Invasion of Kuwait by IraqPresident George Bush.
Jan. 31, 1990101st Congress State of the Union AddressPresident George Bush.
Feb. 9, 1989101st Congress Address on Building a Better AmericaPresident George Bush.
Jan. 25, 1988100th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Ronald Reagan.
Jan. 27, 1987100th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Ronald Reagan.
Feb. 4, 198699th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Ronald Reagan.
Nov. 21, 198599th Congress Address on Geneva SummitPresident Ronald Reagan.
Feb. 6, 198599th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Ronald Reagan.
Jan. 25, 198498th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Ronald Reagan.
Apr. 27, 198398th CongressAddress on Central AmericaPresident Ronald Reagan.
Jan. 25, 198398th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Ronald Reagan.
Jan. 26, 198297th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Ronald Reagan.
Apr. 28, 198197th Congress Address on Economic Recovery--inflationPresident Ronald Reagan.
Feb. 18, 198197th Congress Address on Economic RecoveryPresident Ronald Reagan.
Jan. 23, 198096th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Jimmy Carter.
June 18, 197996th Congress Address on Salt II agreementsPresident Jimmy Carter.
Jan. 23, 197996th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Jimmy Carter.
Sept. 18, 197895th Congress Address on Middle East Peace agreementsPresident Jimmy Carter; Joint session attended by Anwar El Sadat, President of Egypt, and by Menachem Begin, Prime Minister of Israel.
Jan. 19, 197895th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Jimmy Carter.
Apr. 20, 197795th Congress Address on EnergyPresident Jimmy Carter.
Jan. 12, 197795th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Gerald R. Ford.
Jan. 19, 197694th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Gerald R. Ford.
Apr. 10, 197594th Congress Address on State of the WorldPresident Gerald R. Ford.
Jan. 15, 197594th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Gerald R. Ford.
Oct. 8, 197493rd Congress Address on the EconomyPresident Gerald R. Ford.
Aug. 12, 197493rd Congress Assumption of officePresident Gerald R. Ford.
Jan. 30 197493rd Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Richard M. Nixon.
June 1, 197292nd Congress Address on Europe tripPresident Richard M. Nixon.
Jan. 20, 197292nd Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Richard M. Nixon.
Sept. 9, 197192nd Congress Address on Economic policyPresident Richard M. Nixon.
Jan. 22, 197192nd Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Richard M. Nixon.
Jan. 22, 197091st Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Richard M. Nixon.
Jan. 14, 196991st Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Lyndon B. Johnson.
Jan. 17, 196890th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Lyndon B. Johnson.
Jan. 10, 196790th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Lyndon B. Johnson.
Jan. 12, 196689th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Lyndon B. Johnson.
Mar. 15, 196589th Congress Voting rightsPresident Lyndon B. Johnson.
Jan. 4, 196589th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Lyndon B. Johnson.
Jan. 8, 196488th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Lyndon B. Johnson.
Nov. 27, 196388th Congress Assumption of officePresident Lyndon B. Johnson.
Jan. 14, 196388th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident John F. Kennedy.
Jan. 11, 196287th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident John F. Kennedy.
May 25, 196187th Congress Urgent national needs: foreign aid, defense, civil defense, and outer spacePresident John F. Kennedy.
Jan. 30, 196187th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident John F. Kennedy.
Jan. 7, 196086th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Jan. 9, 195986th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Jan. 9, 195885th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Jan. 10, 195785th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Jan. 5, 195785th Congress Address on the Middle EastPresident Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Jan. 6, 195584th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Jan. 7, 195483rd Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Feb. 2, 195383rd Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Dwight D. Eisenhower.
June 10, 195282nd Congress Address on Steel StrikePresident Harry S. Truman.
Jan. 9, 195282nd Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Harry S. Truman.
Jan. 8, 195182nd Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Harry S. Truman.
Jan. 4, 195081st Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Harry S. Truman.
Jan. 5, 194981st Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Harry S. Truman.
July 27, 194880th Congress Address on inflation, housing, and civil rightsPresident Harry S. Truman.
Apr. 19, 194880th Congress Address on 50th anniversary, liberation of CubaPresident Harry S. Truman; Guillermo Belt, Ambassador of Cuba.
Mar. 17, 194880th Congress National security and conditions in EuropePresident Harry S. Truman.
Jan. 7, 194880th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Harry S. Truman.
Nov. 17, 194780th Congress Address on Aid to EuropePresident Harry S. Truman.
Mar. 12, 194780th Congress Address on Greek-Turkish aid policyPresident Harry S. Truman.
Jan. 6, 194780th Congress State of the Union AddressPresident Harry S. Truman.
May 25, 194679th Congress Address on Railroad StrikePresident Harry S. Truman.
Oct. 23, 194579th Congress Address on Universal Military TrainingPresident Harry S. Truman.
May 21, 194579th Congress Address on Bestowal of Congressional Medal of Honor to Tech. Sgt. Jake William LindseyGeneral George C. Marshall, Chief of Staff, U.S. Army; President Harry S. Truman.
Apr. 16, 194579th Congress Address on Assumption of Office and WarPresident Harry S. Truman.
Mar. 1, 194579th Congress Address on Yalta ConferencePresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Jan. 6, 194579th Congress Annual MessagePresident Roosevelt was not present. His message was read before the Joint Session of Congress.
Jan. 11, 194478th Congress Annual MessagePresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Jan. 7, 194378th Congress Annual MessagePresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Jan. 6, 194277th Congress Annual MessagePresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Dec. 8, 194177th Congress Address on the "Day of Infamy"President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Jan. 6, 194177th Congress Annual MessagePresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
May 16, 194076th Congress Address on National DefensePresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Jan. 3, 194076th Congress Annual MessagePresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Sept. 21, 193976th Congress Address on NeutralityPresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Mar. 4, 193976th Congress Address on Sesquicentennial of the 1st CongressPresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Jan. 4, 193976th Congress Annual MessagePresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Jan. 3, 193875th CongressAnnual MessagePresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Jan. 6, 193775th Congress Annual MessagePresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Jan. 3, 193674th Congress Annual MessagePresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
May 22, 193574th Congress Address on Budget Bill VetoPresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Jan. 4, 193574th Congress Annual MessagePresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
May 20, 193473rd Congress Address on 100th anniversary of the death of the Marquis de LafayetteAndre de Laboulaye, Ambassador of France; President Franklin Delano Roosevelt; ceremony attended by Count de Chambrun, great-grandson of Lafayette.
Jan. 3, 193473rd Congress Annual MessagePresident Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Feb. 22, 193272nd Congress Address on bicentennial of George Washington's birthPresident Herbert Hoover.
Dec. 6, 193272nd Congress Annual MessagePresident Herbert Hoover.
Dec. 8, 193172nd Congress Annual MessagePresident Herbert Hoover.
Dec. 2, 193071st Congress Annual MessagePresident Herbert Hoover.
Dec. 3, 192971st Congress Annual MessagePresident Herbert Hoover.
Dec. 4, 192870th Congress Annual MessagePresident Calvin Coolidge.
Feb. 22, 192770th Congress Address on upcoming George Washington birthday bicentennialPresident Calvin Coolidge.
Dec. 6, 192770th Congress Annual MessagePresident Calvin Coolidge.
Dec. 6, 192669th Congress Annual MessagePresident Calvin Coolidge.
Dec. 8, 192569th Congress Annual MessagePresident Calvin Coolidge.
Dec. 6, 192468th Congress Annual MessagePresident Calvin Coolidge.
Dec. 3, 192368th Congress Annual MessagePresident Calvin Coolidge.
Feb. 7, 192367th Congress Address on British debt due to the United StatesPresident Warren G. Harding.
Dec. 8, 192267th Congress Annual MessagePresident Warren G. Harding.
Nov. 21, 192267th Congress Address on promotion of the American Merchant MarinePresident Warren G. Harding.
Aug. 18, 192267th Congress Address on coal and railroad strikesPresident Warren G. Harding.
Feb. 28, 192267th Congress Address on maintenance of the Merchant MarinePresident Warren G. Harding.
Dec. 6, 192167th Congress Annual MessagePresident Warren G. Harding.
Apr. 12, 192167th CongressFederal problem messagePresident Warren G. Harding.
Aug. 8, 191966th CongressCost of living messagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Dec. 2, 191865th CongressAnnual MessagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Nov. 11, 191865th CongressTerms of armistice signed by GermanyPresident Woodrow Wilson.
May 27, 191865th CongressWar finance messagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Feb. 11, 191865th CongressPeace messagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Jan. 8, 191865th CongressProgram for world's peacePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Jan. 4, 191865th CongressFederal operation of transportation systemsPresident Woodrow Wilson.
Dec. 4, 191765th CongressAnnual Message/War with Austria-HungaryPresident Woodrow Wilson.
Apr. 2, 191765th CongressWar with GermanyPresident Woodrow Wilson.
Feb. 26, 191764th CongressArming of merchant shipsPresident Woodrow Wilson.
Feb. 3, 191764th CongressSevering diplomatic relations with GermanyPresident Woodrow Wilson.
Dec. 5, 191664th CongressAnnual MessagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Aug. 29, 191664th CongressRailroad message (labor-management dispute)President Woodrow Wilson.
Dec. 7, 191564th CongressAnnual MessagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Dec. 8, 191463rd CongressAnnual MessagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Sept. 4, 191463rd CongressWar tax messagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Apr. 20, 191463rd CongressMexico messagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Mar. 5, 191463rd CongressPanama Canal tollsPresident Woodrow Wilson.
Jan. 20, 191463rd CongressTrusts messagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Dec. 2, 191363rd CongressAnnual MessagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Aug. 27, 191363rd CongressMexican affairs messagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
June 23, 191363rd CongressCurrency and bank reform messagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Apr. 8, 191363rd CongressTariff messagePresident Woodrow Wilson.
Nov. 22, 18006th CongressAnnual MessagePresident John Adams.
Dec. 3, 17996th CongressAnnual MessagePresident John Adams.
Dec. 8, 17985th CongressAnnual MessagePresident John Adams.
Nov. 23, 17975th CongressAnnual MessagePresident John Adams.
May 16, 17975th CongressRelations with FrancePresident John Adams.
Dec. 7, 17964th CongressAnnual MessagePresident George Washington.
Dec. 8, 17954th CongressAnnual MessagePresident George Washington.
Nov. 19, 17943rd CongressAnnual MessagePresident George Washington.
Dec. 3, 17933rd CongressAnnual MessagePresident George Washington.
Nov. 6, 17922nd CongressAnnual MessagePresident George Washington.
Oct. 25, 17912nd CongressAnnual MessagePresident George Washington.
Dec. 8, 17901st CongressAnnual MessagePresident George Washington.
Jan. 8, 17901st CongressAnnual MessagePresident George Washington.

See also

External links

Footnotes

Footnotes