State of the Union
Selected Annual Presidential Addresses to Congress, From George
Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt, Ronald Reagan, George Bush,
Barack Obama, and Others
Red and Black Publishers, St Petersburg, Florida
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
State of the Union : selected annual presidential addresses to Congress, from
George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt, Ronald Reagan, George
Bush, Barack Obama, and others.
p.
cm.
ISBN
978-1-934941-59-1
1. Presidents--United States--Messages. 2. United States--Politics
and government--Sources.
J81.4.S74 2009
352.23'840973--dc22
2009008114
Red and Black
Publishers, PO Box 7542, St Petersburg, Florida, 33734
Contact us at:
info@RedAndBlackPublishers.Com
Printed and manufactured in the United States of America
Contents
Adoption
of the US Constitution
George Washington,
January 8, 1790
5
War
of 1812
James Madison, November 4,
1812 9
The
Civil War
Abraham Lincoln,
December 3, 1861
15
Abraham Lincoln, December
1, 1862 26
Abraham Lincoln,
December 8, 1863
40
Abraham Lincoln,
December 6, 1964
49
Spanish-American
War
William McKinley, December
5, 1898 59
World
War I
Woodrow Wilson, December 8,
1914 93
Woodrow Wilson, December 7,
1915 100
Woodrow Wilson, December 6,
1916 111
Woodrow Wilson, December 4,
1917 115
Woodrow Wilson, December 2,
1918
121
The
Great Depression
Herbert Hoover, December 2,
1930 131
Herbert Hoover, December 8,
1931 140
Herbert Hoover, December 6,
1932 150
Franklin D Roosevelt,
January 3, 1934
158
Franklin D Roosevelt,
January 4, 1935
162
Franklin D Roosevelt,
January 3, 1936
168
Franklin D Roosevelt,
January 6, 1937
174
Franklin D Roosevelt,
January 3, 1938
179
Franklin D Roosevelt,
January 4, 1939
187
World
War II
Franklin D Roosevelt,
January 3, 1940
195
Franklin D Roosevelt,
January 6, 1941 201
Franklin D Roosevelt,
January 6, 1942
206
Franklin D Roosevelt,
January 7, 1943
212
Franklin D Roosevelt,
January 11, 1944
220
Franklin D Roosevelt,
January 6, 1945
226
Korean
War and Cold War
Harry S Truman,
January 8, 1951
241
Harry S Truman, January 9,
1952
248
Vietnam
and Civil Rights
Lyndon B Johnson,
January 8, 1964
257
Lyndon B Johnson, January
4, 1965
263
Lyndon B Johnson, January
12, 1966
272
Lyndon B Johnson, January
10, 1967
282
Lyndon B Johnson, January
17, 1968
294
Lyndon B Johnson, January
14, 1969
303
Richard Nixon, January 22,
1970
310
The
End of the Cold War
Ronald Reagan, January 35,
1988
319
George Bush, January 31,
1990
327
The
First Gulf War
George Bush, January 29,
1991
335
9-11
and the Second Gulf War
George W Bush, January 29,
2002
343
George W Bush, January 20,
2004
349
Economic
Meltdown
Barack Obama, February 24,
2009
359
Adoption of the US Constitution
State of the
Union January 8, 1790
George Washington
Fellow-Citizens of
the Senate and House of Representatives:
I embrace with
great satisfaction the opportunity which now presents itself of congratulating
you on the present favorable prospects of our public affairs. The recent
accession of the important state of North Carolina to the Constitution of the
United States (of which official information has been received), the rising
credit and respectability of our country, the general and increasing good will
toward the government of the Union, and the concord, peace, and plenty with
which we are blessed are circumstances auspicious in an eminent degree to our
national prosperity.
In
resuming your consultations for the general good you can not but derive
encouragement from the reflection that the measures of the last session have
been as satisfactory to your constituents as the novelty and difficulty of the
work allowed you to hope. Still further to realize their expectations and to
secure the blessings which a gracious Providence has placed within our reach
will in the course of the present important session call for the cool and
deliberate exertion of your patriotism, firmness, and wisdom.
Among
the many interesting objects which will engage your attention that of providing
for the common defense will merit particular regard. To be prepared for war is
one of the most effectual means of preserving peace.
A
free people ought not only to be armed, but disciplined; to which end a uniform
and well-digested plan is requisite; and their safety and interest require that
they should promote such manufactories as tend to render them independent of
others for essential, particularly military, supplies.
The
proper establishment of the troops which may be deemed indispensable will be
entitled to mature consideration. In the arrangements which may be made
respecting it, it will be of importance to conciliate the comfortable support of
the officers and soldiers with a due regard to economy.
There
was reason to hope that the pacific measures adopted with regard to certain
hostile tribes of Indians would have relieved the inhabitants of our southern
and western frontiers from their depredations, but you will perceive from the
information contained in the papers which I shall direct to be laid before you
(comprehending a communication from the Commonwealth of Virginia) that we ought
to be prepared to afford protection to those parts of the Union, and, if
necessary, to punish aggressors.
The
interests of the United States require that our intercourse with other nations
should be facilitated by such provisions as will enable me to fulfill my duty in
that respect in the manner which circumstances may render most conducive to the
public good, and to this end that the compensation to be made to the persons who
may be employed should, according to the nature of their appointments, be
defined by law, and a competent fund designated for defraying the expenses
incident to the conduct of foreign affairs.
Various
considerations also render it expedient that the terms on which foreigners may
be admitted to the rights of citizens should be speedily ascertained by a
uniform rule of naturalization.
Uniformity
in the currency, weights, and measures of the United States is an object of
great importance, and will, I am persuaded, be duly attended to.
The
advancement of agriculture, commerce, and manufactures by all proper means will
not, I trust, need recommendation; but I can not forbear intimating to you the
expediency of giving effectual encouragement as well to the introduction of new
and useful inventions from abroad as to the exertions of skill and genius in
producing them at home, and of facilitating the intercourse between the distant
parts of our country by a due attention to the post-office and post-roads.
Nor
am I less persuaded that you will agree with me in opinion that there is nothing
which can better deserve your patronage than the promotion of science and
literature. Knowledge is in every country the surest basis of public happiness.
In one in which the measures of government receive their impressions so
immediately from the sense of the community as in ours it is proportionably
essential.
To
the security of a free constitution it contributes in various ways - by
convincing those who are intrusted with the public administration that every
valuable end of government is best answered by the enlightened confidence of the
people, and by teaching the people themselves to know and to value their own
rights; to discern and provide against invasions of them; to distinguish between
oppression and the necessary exercise of lawful authority; between burthens
proceeding from a disregard to their convenience and those resulting from the
inevitable exigencies of society; to discriminate the spirit of liberty from
that of licentiousness - cherishing the first, avoiding the last - and uniting a
speedy but temperate vigilance against encroachments, with an inviolable respect
to the laws.
Whether
this desirable object will be best promoted by affording aids to seminaries of
learning already established, by the institution of a national university, or by
any other expedients will be well worthy of a place in the deliberations of the
legislature.
Gentlemen
of the House of Representatives:
I
saw with peculiar pleasure at the close of the last session the resolution
entered into by you expressive of your opinion that an adequate provision for
the support of the public credit is a matter of high importance to the national
honor and prosperity. In this sentiment I entirely concur; and to a perfect
confidence in your best endeavors to devise such a provision as will be truly
with the end I add an equal reliance on the cheerful cooperation of the other
branch of the legislature.
It
would be superfluous to specify inducements to a measure in which the character
and interests of the United States are so obviously so deeply concerned, and
which has received so explicit a sanction from your declaration.
Gentlemen
of the Senate and House of Representatives:
I
have directed the proper officers to lay before you, respectively, such papers
and estimates as regard the affairs particularly recommended to your
consideration, and necessary to convey to you that information of the state of
the Union which it is my duty to afford.
The
welfare of our country is the great object to which our cares and efforts ought
to be directed, and I shall derive great satisfaction from a cooperation with
you in the pleasing though arduous task of insuring to our fellow citizens the
blessings which they have a right to expect from a free, efficient, and equal
government.
GEORGE
WASHINGTON
The War of 1812
State of the Union November
4, 1812
James Madision
Fellow-Citizens of
the Senate and House of Representatives:
On our present
meeting it is my first duty to invite your attention to the providential favors
which our country has experienced in the unusual degree of health dispensed to
its inhabitants, and in the rich abundance with which the earth has rewarded the
labors bestowed on it. In the successful cultivation of other branches of
industry, and in the progress of general improvement favorable to the national
prosperity, there is just occasion also for our mutual congratulations and
thankfulness.
With
these blessings are necessarily mingled the pressures and vicissitudes incident
to the state of war into which the United States have been forced by the
perseverance of a foreign power in its system of injustice and aggression.
Previous
to its declaration it was deemed proper, as a measure of precaution and
forecast, that a considerable force should be placed in the Michigan Territory
with a general view to its security, and, in the event of war, to such
operations in the uppermost Canada as would intercept the hostile influence of
Great Britain over the savages, obtain the command of the lake on which that
part of Canada borders, and maintain cooperating relations with such forces as
might be most conveniently employed against other parts.
Brigadier-General
Hull was charged with this provisional service, having under his command a body
of troops composed of regulars and of volunteers from the State of Ohio. Having
reached his destination after his knowledge of the war, and possessing
discretionary authority to act offensively, he passed into the neighboring
territory of the enemy with a prospect of easy and victorious progress. The
expedition, nevertheless, terminated unfortunately, not only in a retreat to the
town and fort of Detroit, but in the surrender of both and of the gallant corps
commanded by that officer. The causes of this painful reverse will be
investigated by a military tribunal.
A
distinguishing feature in the operations which preceded and followed this
adverse event is the use made by the enemy of the merciless savages under their
influence. Whilst the benevolent policy of the United States invariably
recommended peace and promoted civilization among that wretched portion of the
human race, and was making exertions to dissuade them from taking either side in
the war, the enemy has not scrupled to call to his aid their ruthless ferocity,
armed with the horrors of those instruments of carnage and torture which are
known to spare neither age nor sex. In this outrage against the laws of
honorable war and against the feelings sacred to humanity the British commanders
can not resort to a plea of retaliation, for it is committed in the face of our
example. They can not mitigate it by calling it a self-defense against men in
arms, for it embraces the most shocking butcheries of defenseless families. Nor
can it be pretended that they are not answerable for the atrocities perpetrated,
since the savages are employed with a knowledge, and even with menaces, that
their fury could not be controlled. Such is the spectacle which the deputed
authorities of a nation boasting its religion and morality have not been
restrained from presenting to an enlightened age.
The
misfortune at Detroit was not, however, without a consoling effect. It was
followed by signal proofs that the national spirit rises according to the
pressure on it. The loss of an important post and of the brave men surrendered
with it inspired everywhere new ardor and determination. In the States and
districts least remote it was no sooner known than every citizen was ready to
fly with his arms at once to protect his brethren against the blood-thirsty
savages let loose by the enemy on an extensive frontier, and to convert a
partial calamity into a source of invigorated efforts. This patriotic zeal,
which it was necessary rather to limit than excite, has embodied an ample force
from the States of Kentucky and Ohio and from parts of Pennsylvania and
Virginia. It is placed, with the addition of a few regulars, under the command
of Brigadier-General Harrison, who possesses the entire confidence of his fellow
soldiers, among whom are citizens, some of them volunteers in the ranks, not
less distinguished by their political stations than by their personal merits.
The greater portion of this force is proceeding in relieving an important
frontier post, and in several incidental operations against hostile tribes of
savages, rendered indispensable by the subserviency into which they had been
seduced by the enemy - a seduction the more cruel as it could not fail to impose
a necessity of precautionary severities against those who yielded to it.
At
a recent date an attack was made on a post of the enemy near Niagara by a
detachment of the regular and other forces under the command of Major-General
Van Rensselaer, of the militia of the State of New York. The attack, it appears,
was ordered in compliance with the ardor of the troops, who executed it with
distinguished gallantry, and were for a time victorious; but not receiving the
expected support, they were compelled to yield to reenforcements of British
regulars and savages. Our loss has been considerable, and is deeply to be
lamented. That of the enemy, less ascertained, will be the more felt, as it
includes among the killed the commanding general, who was also the governor of
the Province, and was sustained by veteran troops from unexperienced soldiers,
who must daily improve in the duties of the field.
Our
expectation of gaining the command of the Lakes by the invasion of Canada from
Detroit having been disappointed, measures were instantly taken to provide on
them a naval force superior to that of the enemy. From the talents and activity
of the officer charged with this object everything that can be done may be
expected. Should the present season not admit of complete success, the progress
made will insure for the next a naval ascendancy where it is essential to our
permanent peace with and control over the savages.
Among
the incidents to the measures of the war I am constrained to advert to the
refusal of the governors of Maine and Connecticut to furnish the required
detachments of militia toward the defense of the maritime frontier. The refusal
was founded on a novel and unfortunate exposition of the provisions of the
Constitution relating to the militia. The correspondences which will be laid
before you contain the requisite information on the subject. It is obvious that
if the authority of the United States to call into service and command the
militia for the public defense can be thus frustrated, even in a state of
declared war and of course under apprehensions of invasion preceding war, they
are not one nation for the purpose most of all requiring it, and that the public
safety may have no other resource than in those large and permanent military
establishments which are forbidden by the principles of our free government, and
against the necessity of which the militia were meant to be a constitutional
bulwark.
On
the coasts and on the ocean the war has been as successful as circumstances
inseparable from its early stages could promise. Our public ships and private
cruisers, by their activity, and, where there was occasion, by their
intrepidity, have made the enemy sensible of the difference between a
reciprocity of captures and the long confinement of them to their side. Our
trade, with little exception, has safely reached our ports, having been much
favored in it by the course pursued by a squadron of our frigates under the
command of Commodore Rodgers, and in the instance in which skill and bravery
were more particularly tried with those of the enemy the American flag had an
auspicious triumph. The frigate Constitution, commanded by Captain Hull,
after a close and short engagement completely disabled and captured a British
frigate, gaining for that officer and all on board a praise which can not be too
liberally bestowed, not merely for the victory actually achieved, but for that
prompt and cool exertion of commanding talents which, giving to courage its
highest character, and to the force applied its full effect, proved that more
could have been done in a contest requiring more.
Anxious
to abridge the evils from which a state of war can not be exempt, I lost no time
after it was declared in conveying to the British Government the terms on which
its progress might be arrested, without awaiting the delays of a formal and
final pacification, and our charge’ d’affaires at London was at the same
time authorized to agree to an armistice founded upon them. These terms required
that the orders in council should be repealed as they affected the United
States, without a revival of blockades violating acknowledged rules, and that
there should be an immediate discharge of American sea men from British ships,
and a stop to impressment from American ships, with an understanding that an
exclusion of the sea men of each nation from the ships of the other should be
stipulated, and that the armistice should be improved into a definitive and
comprehensive adjustment of depending controversies.
Although
a repeal of the orders susceptible of explanations meeting the views of this
Government had taken place before this pacific advance was communicated to that
of Great Britain, the advance was declined from an avowed repugnance to a
suspension of the practice of impressments during the armistice, and without any
intimation that the arrangement proposed WRT sea men would be accepted. Whether
the subsequent communications from this Government, affording an occasion for
reconsidering the subject on the part of Great Britain, will be viewed in a more
favorable light or received in a more accommodating spirit remains to be known.
It would be unwise to relax our measures in any respect on a presumption of such
a result.
The
documents from the Department of State which relate to this subject will give a
view also of the propositions for an armistice which have been received here,
one of them from the authorities at Halifax and in Canada, the other from the
British Government itself through Admiral Warren, and of the grounds on which
neither of them could be accepted.
Our
affairs with France retain the posture which they held at my last communications
to you. Notwithstanding the authorized expectations of an early as well as
favorable issue to the discussions on foot, these have been procrastinated to
the latest date. The only intervening occurrence meriting attention is the
promulgation of a French decree purporting to be a definitive repeal of the
Berlin and Milan decrees. This proceeding, although made the ground of the
repeal of the British orders in council, is rendered by the time and manner of
it liable to many objections.
The
final communications from our special minister to Denmark afford further proofs
of the good effects of his mission, and of the amicable disposition of the
Danish Government. From Russia we have the satisfaction to receive assurances of
continued friendship, and that it will not be affected by the rupture between
the United States and Great Britain. Sweden also professes sentiments favorable
to the subsisting harmony.
With
the Barbary Powers, excepting that of Algiers, our affairs remain on the
ordinary footing. The consul-general residing with that Regency has suddenly and
without cause been banished, together with all the American citizens found
there. Whether this was the transitory effect of capricious despotism or the
first act of predetermined hostility is not ascertained. Precautions were taken
by the consul on the latter supposition.
The
Indian tribes not under foreign instigations remain at peace, and receive the
civilizing attentions which have proved so beneficial to them.
With
a view to that vigorous prosecution of the war to which our national faculties
are adequate, the attention of Congress will be particularly drawn to the
insufficiency of existing provisions for filling up the military establishment.
Such is the happy condition of our country, arising from the facility of
subsistence and the high wages for every species of occupation, that
notwithstanding the augmented inducements provided at the last session, a
partial success only has attended the recruiting service. The deficiency has
been necessarily supplied during the campaign by other than regular troops, with
all the inconveniences and expense incident to them. The remedy lies in
establishing more favorably for the private soldier the proportion between his
recompense and the term of his enlistment, and it is a subject which can not too
soon or too seriously be taken into consideration.
The
same insufficiency has been experienced in the provisions for volunteers made by
an act of the last session. The recompense for the service required in this case
is still less attractive than in the other, and although patriotism alone has
sent into the field some valuable corps of that description, those alone who can
afford the sacrifice can be reasonably expected to yield to that impulse.
It
will merit consideration also whether as auxiliary to the security of our
frontiers corps may not be advantageously organized with a restriction of their
services to particular districts convenient to them, and whether the local and
occasional services of mariners and others in the sea port towns under a similar
organization would not be a provident addition to the means of their defense.
I
recommend a provision for an increase of the general officers of the Army, the
deficiency of which has been illustrated by the number and distance of separate
commands which the course of the war and the advantage of the service have
required.
And
I can not press too strongly on the earliest attention of the Legislature the
importance of the reorganization of the staff establishment with a view to
render more distinct and definite the relations and responsibilities of its
several departments. That there is room for improvements which will materially
promote both economy and success in what appertains to the Army and the war is
equally inculcated by the examples of other countries and by the experience of
our own.
A
revision of the militia laws for the purpose of rendering them more systematic
and better adapting them to emergencies of the war is at this time particularly
desirable.
Of
the additional ships authorized to be fitted for service, two will be shortly
ready to sail, a third is under repair, and delay will be avoided in the repair
of the residue. Of the appropriations for the purchase of materials for ship
building, the greater part has been applied to that object and the purchase will
be continued with the balance.
The
enterprising spirit which has characterized our naval force and its success,
both in restraining insults and depredations on our coasts and in reprisals on
the enemy, will not fail to recommend an enlargement of it.
There
being reason to believe that the act prohibiting the acceptance of British
licenses is not a sufficient guard against the use of them, for purposes
favorable to the interests and views of the enemy, further provisions on that
subject are highly important. Nor is it less so that penal enactments should be
provided for cases of corrupt and perfidious intercourse with the enemy, not
amounting to treason nor yet embraced by any statutory provisions.
A
considerable number of American vessels which were in England when the
revocation of the orders in council took place were laden with British
manufactures under an erroneous impression that the non-importation act would
immediately cease to operate, and have arrived in the United States. It did not
appear proper to exercise on unforeseen cases of such magnitude the powers
vested in the Treasury Department to mitigate forfeitures without previously
affording to Congress an opportunity of making on the subject such provision as
they may think proper. In their decision they will doubtless equally consult
what is due to equitable considerations and to the public interest.
The
receipts into the Treasury during the year ending on the 30th of
September last have exceeded $16.5M, which have been sufficient to defray all
the demands on the Treasury to that day, including a necessary reimbursement of
near $3M of the principal of the public debt. In these receipts is included a
sum of near $5.85M, received on account of the loans authorized by the acts of
the last session; the whole sum actually obtained on loan amounts to $11M, the
residue of which, being receivable subsequent to the 30th of
September last, will, together with the current revenue, enable us to defray all
the expenses of this year.
The
duties on the late unexpected importations of British manufactures will render
the revenue of the ensuing year more productive than could have been
anticipated.
The
situation of our country, fellow citizens, is not without its difficulties,
though it abounds in animating considerations, of which the view here presented
of our pecuniary resources is an example. With more than one nation we have
serious and unsettled controversies, and with one, powerful in the means and
habits of war, we are at war. The spirit and strength of the nation are
nevertheless equal to the support of all its rights, and to carry it through all
its trials. They can be met in that confidence.
Above
all, we have the inestimable consolation of knowing that the war in which we are
actually engaged is a war neither of ambition nor of vain glory; that it is
waged not in violation of the rights of others, but in the maintenance of our
own; that it was preceded by a patience without example under wrongs
accumulating without end, and that it was finally not declared until every hope
of averting it was extinguished by the transfer of the British scepter into new
hands clinging to former councils, and until declarations were reiterated to the
last hour, through the British envoy here, that the hostile edicts against our
commercial rights and our maritime independence would not be revoked; nay, that
they could not be revoked without violating the obligations of Great Britain to
other powers, as well as to her own interests.
To
have shrunk under such circumstances from manly resistance would have been a
degradation blasting our best and proudest hopes; it would have struck us from
the high rank where the virtuous struggles of our fathers had placed us, and
have betrayed the magnificent legacy which we hold in trust for future
generations. It would have acknowledged that on the element which forms
three-fourth of the globe we inhabit, and where all independent nations have
equal and common rights, the American people were not an independent people, but
colonists and vassals.
It
was at this moment and with such an alternative that war was chosen. The nation
felt the necessity of it, and called for it. The appeal was accordingly made, in
a just cause, to the Just and All-powerful Being who holds in His hand the chain
of events and the destiny of nations.
It
remains only that, faithful to ourselves, entangled in no connections with the
views of other powers, and ever ready to accept peace from the hand of justice,
we prosecute the war with united counsels and with the ample faculties of the
nation until peace be so obtained and as the only means under the Divine
blessing of speedily obtaining it.
JAMES
MADISON