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Draft of FDR’s “Day of Infamy” Speech. December 7, 1941.
A few hours after learning of the attacks on Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt dictated a short address to be delivered to a Joint Session of Congress the following day.
His handwritten revisions—visible in this December 7 draft of the speech—made the “Day of Infamy” speech one of the most memorable in American history.
Read more about the drafting of this significant speech.
–from the FDR Library
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ourpresidents:

Draft of FDR’s “Day of Infamy” Speech. December 7, 1941.

A few hours after learning of the attacks on Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt dictated a short address to be delivered to a Joint Session of Congress the following day.

His handwritten revisions—visible in this December 7 draft of the speech—made the “Day of Infamy” speech one of the most memorable in American history.

Read more about the drafting of this significant speech.

–from the FDR Library

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  1. randomwhimsy likes this
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  3. asoftrevolt reblogged this from nickturse and added:
    Interesting that infamy wasn’t in the first draft.
  4. apenas1gril reblogged this from nickturse
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  42. kscott790 reblogged this from hernameiseliza and added:
    Even the best need a good once over.
  43. thethingstaught reblogged this from figuringitoutasigoalong
  44. mbaldi reblogged this from publicradiointernational
  45. copypasto likes this
  46. enbandejadeplata reblogged this from theatlantic and added:
    Borrador del discurso del Día de la infamia con anotaciones a mano de...Roosevelt, por el...
  47. kscott790 likes this
  48. hernameiseliza reblogged this from fightlikeawarrior
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  50. kirbyaraullo reblogged this from mlq3 and added:
    Notice how FDR omitted Manila.. Manila would later suffer the most destruction in the Pacific theater of World War II.
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