On March 12, 1933, just eight days after taking office, President Franklin D. Roosevelt addressed the American people in an unprecedented national radio broadcast.
Trump's corruption is one thing; his cruelty is quite another, and the most dangerous of his agenda.
On March 12, 2020, the NHL paused its season, and the NCAA canceled its men's and women's tournaments as COVID-19 spread ...
The Blue Goose Bus Line, started by the East St. Louis & Suburban electric carline, connected Alton, Wood River, and more.
Whatever one feels about Trump, some historians say Presidencies like his and Roosevelt's can signal a new era.
Advertisement In 1933, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt made the first of his Sunday evening "fireside chats" -- informal radio addresses from the White House to the American people.
Abe Lincoln’s debates with Stephen Douglas? Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Fireside chats? Martin Luther King’s “I have a dream” speech? The first words uttered from the surface of the moon?
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt mastered radio with his "Fireside Chats" during the Great Depression and World War II. That continued during his State of the Union messages. President Harry ...