Front cover image for My fellow Americans : presidential addresses that shaped history

My fellow Americans : presidential addresses that shaped history

The presidency, in Theodore Roosevelt's famous words, is a "Bully Pulpit." No one has studied the presidency from this vantage point. This book, in a sense, is a study of American political history seen through the prism of selected presidential addresses. It reveals how presidents use major addresses to create a theme for their administrations, to introduce history-making legislation or programs, or to rally successfully a majority of the nation behind their policies. No other book has examined the major presidential addresses--their construction and their impact--as history. No other book examines, in such detail, the background of the speechwriters who drafted the addresses. James C. Humes, a former White House speechwriter, has a unique understanding of the process of presidential speech drafting. A single speech can be a defining point in American history, such as the Kennedy inaugural ("Ask not what your country can do for you--ask what you can do for your country"), or a rallying cry, such as Franklin Roosevelt's inaugural ("The only thing we have to fear is fear itself"). It can become an American creed as did the Gettysburg Address or a prophecy like the Reagan address to the House of Parliament in 1982. Washington's Farewell Address would prescribe our conduct in foreign policy for a century, as did the Monroe Doctrine in 1823. Sometimes the message is a declaration for war, such as Wilson's speech in 1917, or a "war" against an economic elite like Jackson's Bank veto in 1832 or Cleveland's Tariff message in 1887. This book is of great interest not only to historians and political scientists but also to students of the presidency and government
Print Book, English, 1992
Praeger, New York, 1992
Messages
xviii, 287 pages ; 25 cm
9780275935078, 0275935078
24247643
The farewell address : Washington's declaration of independence in foreign policy
Jefferson's first inaugural : the revolutionary as reconciler
The Monroe Doctrine : the whispered warning
The Jackson bank veto : the war against the eastern establishment
Polk's inaugural : action as eloquence
The Gettysburg Address : the great American poem
The Cleveland tariff message : the battle against big business
The big stick : Monroe Doctrine à la Theodore Roosevelt
Wilson's declaration of war : a latter-day Paul on Mars Hill
The sesquicentennial address : the sermon at the shrine
Franklin Roosevelt's first inaugural : the rhetoric of recovery
Harry Truman's acceptance address : the Turnip Day talk
Eisenhower's farewell address : an old soldier's warning
The Kennedy inaugural : a young warrior's call to arms
President Nixon's toast to Chairman Mao : the Beijing breakthrough
The Reagan address at the Palace of Westminster : a prophecy for a free world