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Roosevelt called the unprovoked attack on Pearl Harbor a “date which will live in infamy” in an address to the nation delivered Dec. 8, 1941 He gave the speech on Dec. 8, 1941 Sign Up for Our ...
FDR's Pearl Harbor Speech Didn't Originally Include the Most Famous Line, 'A Date Which Will Live in Infamy' Published Dec 07, 2019 at 3:00 AM EST Updated Dec 08, 2019 at 9:16 AM EST By ...
President Franklin D. Roosevelt Dec. 8, 1941, following the Pearl Harbor attacks in Hawaii. Reuters Dec. 7, 1941, will always be remembered as “the day which will live in infamy.” The powerful ...
Seventy-four years ago Monday, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt prepared an emotional speech as Hawaii’s naval base at Pearl Harbor was in ruins following a massive air assault by Japan. More ...
T he speech given by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the wake of the Dec. 7, 1941, attack by the Japanese on Pearl Harbor remains one of American history’s most famous orations: from his ...
LOS ANGELES - “Yesterday, December 7, 1941, a date which will live in infamy...” The powerful and memorable words from Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s message to Congress which, 75 years later ...
The attack lasted about two hours. The speech ran less than 7 minutes. And one word from a Hyde Park native — infamy — rallied the nation. At the center of it all was President Franklin D ...
But in 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt ... Also known as the “Pearl Harbor Speech,” its words have lived on through the decades since they were first uttered.
Famous quotes after the attack on Pearl Harbor. A day after the Japanese attack on the US island, then US President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared in what is now known as the "infamy speech ...