173

ROOSEVELT, FRANKLIN D. Autograph Manuscript, unsigned, notes for a speech

"LINCOLN REPUDIATED THE GOLD CLAUSE" ROOSEVELT, FRANKLIN D. Autograph Manuscript, unsigned, notes for a speech [concerning the Gold Clause Cases of early 1935]. Each a place card with the title of a meeting or dinner attendee written vertically under FDR's text in an unknown hand. The first: "The Ambassador to Germany." The second: "The President of the United States." 4 pages, 6 1/2x3 1/4 inches, written on the recto and verso of two cards; titles affecting text (but still legible), vertical crease to first card, short closed tear to second card, scattered minor smudging to text, minor paperclip stain to left edge of second card. (TFC) Np, [1935?]

  • Notes: ". . . Great Britain went off the gold standard a year earlier / Quick adjustment of Congress / Votes for economy . . . Planned economy--Preparation for battle / Lincoln repudiated the gold clause. / Washington who won a war for social freedom in spite of some members of the Continental Congress / Jackson--man on horseback who took the Treasury back to Washington. . . . [Charles Evans?] Hughes led a revolution against W[oodrow?] W[ilson?]. . . . Get the New Deal Religion or Get Hell / Gradual growing Consumerism . . . & Gradual Correction of inequalities . . . ."
    To fulfill his campaign promise to give Americans suffering from the Great Depression a "New Deal," newly-elected FDR introduced sweeping economic reforms, which Congress then passed into law, including a resolution to render invalid all clauses in any contract permitting the creditor to demand payment in gold--thus allowing the government to pay its own debts in greenbacks. Challenges to the resolution were heard by the Supreme Court in February of 1935; the Court upheld the resolution, justifying it as an instance of the government's power to regulate money. According to a New York Times article by Arthur Krock published on February 20, two days after the Court's ruling, President Roosevelt had prepared a speech to be delivered in the event that the ruling had gone otherwise, an historic speech that argued the Courts could not be permitted to decide certain critical questions, just as Lincoln had argued in his First Inaugural speech: "[I]f the policy of the Government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made in ordinary litigation between parties in personal actions the people will have ceased to be their own rulers."

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