The entire speech, from start to finish, is about 8 and a half minutes long, very short.
I'll leave two Related Links - one with the entire speech, and another with the effects after the speech.
The "day that will live on in infamy" is the phrase that described the attack on Pearl Harbour in 1941
Franklin Delano Roosevelt declared December 7 a date that will live in an infamy. Here was his speech: "Members of the Senate, and the House of Representatives. Yesterday, December 7th, 1941, a date which will live in an infamy, the United States of America... was suddenly, and deliberately attacked... by a naval air force of theirs: Imperial Japan. I have asked Congress to declare war on Japan and her allies."
It was a speech by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to a joint session of congress the day after Pearl Harbor was attacked by the Japanese. The attack took place on December 6, 1941 and Roosevelt said it was a "day of infamy". He also declared war on Imperial Japan in that speech.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt is the one who wrote his speech to Congress on December 8, 1941. This speech will be remembered as "The Day That Will Live in Infamy" speech.
I'll leave two Related Links - one with the entire speech, and another with the effects after the speech.
State of the Union Address
The "day that will live on in infamy" is the phrase that described the attack on Pearl Harbour in 1941
Franklin Delano Roosevelt declared December 7 a date that will live in an infamy. Here was his speech: "Members of the Senate, and the House of Representatives. Yesterday, December 7th, 1941, a date which will live in an infamy, the United States of America... was suddenly, and deliberately attacked... by a naval air force of theirs: Imperial Japan. I have asked Congress to declare war on Japan and her allies."
It was a speech by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to a joint session of congress the day after Pearl Harbor was attacked by the Japanese. The attack took place on December 6, 1941 and Roosevelt said it was a "day of infamy". He also declared war on Imperial Japan in that speech.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt is the one who wrote his speech to Congress on December 8, 1941. This speech will be remembered as "The Day That Will Live in Infamy" speech.
It was a day that would live on in infamy.
The date that Roosevelt gave the speech was December 18, 1941. The time he gave his speech I do not know. Sorry. : )You can listen to his speech on this web site www.americanrhetoric.com/top100speechesall.html.
Franklin Roosevelt a day of euphony in a speech before congress
he actually said a "date" that will live in infamy, and he was talking about December 7th, the day the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbour.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt's Day of Infamy speech was delivered on December 8, 1941, in response to the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor by the Japanese on December 7. The speech aimed to rally the American public and Congress to support a declaration of war against Japan, marking the United States' entry into World War II. Roosevelt characterized the attack as a "day that will live in infamy," emphasizing the need for unity and resolve in the face of aggression.
"a date which will live in infamy"