1934 Presidential visit: Difference between revisions

From Bhamwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 12: Line 12:
[[Category:1934 events]]
[[Category:1934 events]]
[[Category:Presidential visits]]
[[Category:Presidential visits]]
[[Category:Linn Park]]
[[Category:Linn Park events]]

Revision as of 15:34, 14 June 2016

The 1934 Presidential visit consisted of brief remarks given by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on Sunday November 18, 1934 at Woodrow Wilson Park.

The president had given a longer speech that morning in Tupelo, Mississippi, and was en route to his retreat in Warm Springs, Georgia when he stopped in Birmingham. He addressed a crowd at the park at 2:00 PM with short, extemporaneous remarks.

Roosevelt referred to a special economic and social connection between the city of Birmingham and the "great territory" of the Tennessee Valley to the north. He expressed his understanding of the economic difficulties of the Great Depression, especially in the heavy industries so important to the Birmingham District. He referred to the increasing demand for iron and steel due to the expansion of public works projects, as well as the successful rationalization of coal mining under the National Recovery Act's "Coal Code" (which was later ruled unconstitutional).

He went on to call for local support for the Tennessee Valley Authority, including its regional planning and economic development projects. He acknowledged that "a few, just a few, of your citizenry are leaving no stone unturned to block, to harass and to delay this great national program," but insisted that, "the overwhelming majority of your business men, big and little, are in hearty accord with the great undertaking, [and] eager to carry forward the development of this region in which Birmingham plays so important a part."

References

  • Roosevelt, Franklin D. (November 18, 1934) "Remarks at Birmingham, Ala." The American Presidency Project. Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, transcribers