On March 12, 1933, just eight days after taking office, President Franklin D. Roosevelt addressed the American people in an unprecedented national radio broadcast.
Late President Franklin D. Roosevelt gave his first fireside chat on this day in 1933 to an audience of approximately 60 million, setting the standard for a leader's obligation to explain himself.
The month of March has been recognized as "Red Cross Month" since President Franklin D. Roosevelt first issued the proclamation back in 1943.
On March 12, 1933, eight days after his inauguration, President Franklin D. Roosevelt gives his first national radio address ...
Franklin D Roosevelt's explosive 1941 meeting with Frank Aiken ended with raised voices, histrionics and flying knives, forks and plates ...
Caribbean District is making history in Puerto Rico’s timber industry by becoming the first federal agency to incorporate ...
HDOT announces an 8-day closure of O'ahu's Fort Barrette Road for railroad crossing and lighting upgrades starting March 17.
Former speechwriters for previous presidential administrations weighed in on President Donald Trump’s expansive speech before ...
Through a coincidence of history, President Donald Trump’s speech to Congress on Tuesday took place on the 92nd anniversary of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s first inauguration.
Under the glare of an 8-inch-by-10-inch official photo of President Donald Trump in the Franklin D. Roosevelt National ...
Amid the abundance of controversies evoked by the presidencies of Donald Trump, I am anticipating legal scholars will opine ...
Donald Trump is seeking to do what several Republican predecessors failed to do: reverse the promise and the premises of ...