1895 State of the Union Address
Address by US president Grover Cleveland
The 1895 State of the Union Address was written by Grover Cleveland. It was presented on Monday, December 2, 1895, to both houses of the 54th United States Congress. He said, "Although but one American citizen was reported to have been actually wounded, and although the destruction of property may have fallen more heavily upon the missionaries of other nationalities than our own, it plainly behooved this Government to take the most prompt and decided action to guard against similar or perhaps more dreadful calamities befalling the hundreds of American mission stations which have grown up throughout the interior of China under the temperate rule of toleration, custom, and imperial edict.[1]
References
Wikisource has original text related to this article:
1895 State of the Union Address
- ^ "State of the Union Address: Grover Cleveland (December 2, 1895)". www.infoplease.com.
Preceded by 1894 State of the Union Address | State of the Union addresses 1895 | Succeeded by 1896 State of the Union Address |
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- Joint session of Congress
- President's guests
- Designated survivor
- Responses
- State of the State
- State of the City
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- Legend: Address to Joint Session
- Written message
- Written message with national radio address
* Split into multiple parts - † Included a detailed written supplement
- ‡ Not officially a "State of the Union"
Presidents William Henry Harrison (1841) and James Garfield (1881) died in office before delivering a State of the Union