Jump to content

List of State of the Union addresses

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 1949mercury (talk | contribs) at 03:35, 27 March 2024 (Corrects minor copy/paste error). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

This is a list of State of the Union addresses. The State of the Union is the constitutionally mandated annual report by the president of the United States, the head of the U.S. federal executive departments, to the United States Congress, the U.S. federal legislative body.[1]

William Henry Harrison (1841) and James A. Garfield (1881) died in their first year in office without delivering a State of the Union.

Before 1933, the State of the Union was delivered at the end of the calendar year. The ratification of the 20th Amendment in 1933 changed the opening of Congress from early March to early January, affecting the delivery of the annual message. There was none in 1933, and since 1934 it has been in January, February or March.[2]

There were unofficial addresses by incoming presidents in 1981, 1989, 1993, 2001, 2009, 2017 and 2021.

List

Year President Format Date Word Count[3] Time (Minutes)[4]
Jan 1790 George Washington Spoken Jan. 8 1,089 Unknown
Dec 1790 Dec. 8 1,401
1791 Oct. 25 2,302
1792 Nov. 6 2,101
1793 Dec. 3 1,968
1794 Nov. 19 2,918
1795 Dec. 8 1,989
1796 Dec. 7 2,871
1797 John Adams Spoken Nov. 22 2,063
1798 Dec. 8 2,218
1799 Dec. 3 1,505
1800 Nov. 22 1,372
1801 Thomas Jefferson Written Dec. 8 3,224
1802 Dec. 15 2,197
1803 Oct. 17 2,263
1804 Nov. 8 2,096
1805 Dec. 3 2,927
1806 Dec. 2 2,860
1807 Oct. 27 2,384
1808 Nov. 8 2,675
1809 James Madison Written Nov. 29 1,831
1810 Dec. 5 2,446
1811 Nov. 5 2,273
1812 Nov. 4 3,242
1813 Dec. 7 3,257
1814 Sep. 20 2,111
1815 Dec. 5 3,146
1816 Dec. 3 3,364
1817 James Monroe Written Dec. 12 4,418
1818 Nov. 16 4,376
1819 Dec. 7 4,702
1820 Nov. 14 3,446
1821 Dec. 3 5,814
1822 Dec. 3 4,723
1823 Dec. 2 6,358
1824 Dec. 7 8,400
1825 John Quincy Adams Written Dec. 6 8,985
1826 Dec. 5 7,705
1827 Dec. 4 6,917
1828 Dec. 2 7,282
1829 Andrew Jackson Written Dec. 8 10,525
1830 Dec. 6 15,114
1831 Dec. 6 7,178
1832 Dec. 4 7,863
1833 Dec. 3 7,877
1834 Dec. 1 13,411
1835 Dec. 7 10,825
1836 Dec. 5 12,367
1837 Martin Van Buren Written Dec. 5 11,449
1838 Dec. 3 11,488
1839 Dec. 2 13,431
1840 Dec. 5 8,991
William Henry Harrison
1841 John Tyler Written Dec. 7 8,241
1842 Dec. 6 8,417
1843 Dec. 5 8,036
1844 Dec. 3 9,318
1845 James K. Polk Written Dec. 2 16,111
1846 Dec. 8 18,222
1847 Dec. 7 16,414
1848 Dec. 5 21,309
1849 Zachary Taylor Written Dec. 4 7,617
1850 Millard Fillmore Written Dec. 2 8,322
1851 Dec. 2 13,244
1852 Dec. 6 9,929
1853 Franklin Pierce Written Dec. 5 9,590
1854 Dec. 4 10,139
1855 Dec. 31 11,612
1856 Dec. 2 10,486
1857 James Buchanan Written Dec. 8 13,655
1858 Dec. 6 16,349
1859 Dec. 19 12,336
1860 Dec. 3 14,049
1861 Abraham Lincoln Written Dec. 3 6,987
1862 Dec. 1 8,385
1863 Dec. 8 6,114
1864 Dec. 6 5,865
1865 Andrew Johnson Written Dec. 4 9,232
1866 Dec. 3 7,134
1867 Dec. 3 12,002
1868 Dec. 9 9,834
1869 Ulysses S. Grant Written Dec. 6 7,706
1870 Dec. 5 8,743
1871 Dec. 4 6,459
1872 Dec. 2 10,102
1873 Dec. 1 10,026
1874 Dec. 7 9,819
1875 Dec. 7 12,211
1876 Dec. 5 6,799
1877 Rutherford B. Hayes Written Dec. 3 10,724
1878 Dec. 2 7,879
1879 Dec. 1 11,635
1880 Dec. 6 13,347
James A. Garfield
1881 Chester A. Arthur Written Dec. 6 13,321
1882 Dec. 4 10,274
1883 Dec. 4 8,363
1884 Dec. 1 8,917
1885 Grover Cleveland Written Dec. 8 19,960
1886 Dec. 6 15,285
1887 Dec. 6 5,290
1888 Dec. 3 13,226
1889 Benjamin Harrison Written Dec. 1 13,004
1890 Dec. 1 11,522
1891 Dec. 9 16,306
1892 Dec. 6 13,680
1893 Grover Cleveland Written Dec. 4 12,282
1894 Dec. 3 15,892
1895 Dec. 2 14,670
1896 Dec. 7 15,453
1897 William McKinley Written Dec. 6 12,113
1898 Dec. 5 20,224
1899 Dec. 5 22,831
1900 Dec. 3 19,142
1901 Theodore Roosevelt Written Dec. 3 19,616
1902 Dec. 5 9,782
1903 Dec. 7 14,943
1904 Dec. 6 17,415
1905 Dec. 5 25,071
1906 Dec. 3 23,609
1907 Dec. 3 27,397
1908 Dec. 8 19,411
1909 William Howard Taft Written Dec. 7 13,901
1910 Dec. 6 27,651
1911 Dec. 5 23,744[a]
1912 Dec. 3 25,161[b]
1913 Woodrow Wilson Spoken Dec. 2 3,553 Unknown
1914 Dec. 8 4,537
1915 Dec. 7 7,687
1916 Dec. 5 2,118
1917 Dec. 4 3,913
1918 Dec. 2 5,463
1919 Written Dec. 2 4,756
1920 Dec. 7 2,706
1921 Warren G. Harding Spoken Dec. 6 5,606 Unknown
1922 Dec. 8 5,748
1923 Calvin Coolidge Spoken Dec. 6 6,706
1924 Written Dec. 3 6,968
1925 Dec. 8 10,848
1926 Dec. 7 10,305
1927 Dec. 6 8,777
1928 Dec. 4 8,061
1929 Herbert Hoover Written Dec. 3 10,994
1930 Dec. 5 4,536
1931 Dec. 8 5,682
1932 Dec. 6 4,201
1933
1934 Franklin D. Roosevelt Spoken Jan. 3 2,230 Unknown
1935 Jan. 4 3,525
1936 Jan. 3 3,826 50[6]
1937 Jan. 6 2,732 Unknown
1938 Jan. 3 4,697
1939 Jan. 4 3,768
1940 Jan. 3 3,196
1941 Jan. 6 3,312
1942 Jan. 6 3,511
1943 Jan. 7 4,588
1944 Written Jan. 11 3,805
1945 Jan. 6 8,211
1946 Harry S. Truman Written Jan. 21 27,465
1947 Spoken Jan. 6 6,028 Unknown
1948 Jan. 7 5,094
1949 Jan. 5 3,401
1950 Jan. 4 5,130
1951 Jan. 8 3,994
1952 Jan. 9 5,369
1953 Written Jan. 7 9,683
1953 Dwight D. Eisenhower Spoken Feb. 2 6,973 56[7]
1954 Jan. 7 5,985 52[8]
1955 Jan. 6 7,250 53[8]
1956 Written Jan. 5 8,265
1957 Spoken Jan. 10 4,137 33[9]
1958 Jan. 9 4,915 44[10]
1959 Jan. 9 4,933 42[11]
1960 Jan. 7 5,633 45 [12]
1961 Written Jan. 12 6,210
1961 John F. Kennedy Spoken Jan. 30 5,274 43[13]
1962 Jan. 11 6,569 53[14]
1963 Jan. 14 5,470 43[15]
1964 Lyndon B. Johnson Spoken Jan. 8 3,168 41
1965 Jan. 4 4,399 47
1966 Jan. 12 5,542 51
1967 Jan. 10 7,195 71
1968 Jan. 17 4,914 50
1969 Jan. 14 4,115 44
1970 Richard Nixon Spoken Jan. 22 4,457 37
1971 Jan. 22 4,508 33
1972 Jan. 20 3,976 29
1973 Written Feb. 2 27,147[c]
1974 Spoken Jan. 30 5,144 43
1975 Gerald Ford Spoken Jan. 15 4,126 41
1976 Jan. 19 4,948 51
1977 Jan. 12 4,727 45
1978 Jimmy Carter Spoken Jan. 19 4,580 46
1979 Jan. 25 3,257 33
1980 Jan. 21 3,412 32
1981 Written Jan. 16 33,667
1981[d] Ronald Reagan Spoken Feb. 18 4,446 33
1982 Jan. 26 5,154 40
1983 Jan. 25 5,554 46
1984 Jan. 25 4,931 43
1985 Feb. 6 4,214 40
1986 Feb. 4 3,514 31
1987 Jan. 27 3,847 35
1988 Jan. 25 4,955 44
1989[d] George H. W. Bush Spoken Feb. 9 4,811 48
1990 Jan. 31 3,777 36
1991 Jan. 29 3,823 47
1992 Jan. 28 5,012 51
1993[d] Bill Clinton Spoken Feb. 17 7,003 66
1994 Jan. 25 7,432 64
1995 Jan. 24 9,190 85
1996 Jan. 23 6,317 67
1997 Feb. 4 6,774 64
1998 Jan. 27 7,303 77
1999 Jan. 19 7,514 79
2000 Jan. 27 7,452 89
2001[d] George W. Bush Spoken Feb. 27 4,362 49
2002 Jan. 29 3,878 48
2003 Jan. 28 5,413 60
2004 Jan. 20 5,229 54
2005 Feb. 2 5,096 53
2006 Jan. 31 5,323 51
2007 Jan. 23 5,590 49
2008 Jan. 28 5,760 53
2009[d] Barack Obama Spoken Feb. 24 5,902 52
2010 Jan. 27 7,304 69
2011 Jan. 25 6,878 62
2012 Jan. 24 7,059 65
2013 Feb. 12 6,775 60
2014 Jan. 28 6,989 65
2015 Jan. 20 6,718 60
2016 Jan. 12 6,044 59
2017[d] Donald Trump Spoken Feb. 28 5,006 60
2018 Jan. 30 5,839 81
2019 Feb. 5 5,540 82
2020 Feb. 4 6,217 78
2021[d] Joe Biden Spoken Apr. 28 8,003 65
2022 Mar. 1 7,705 62
2023 Feb. 7 9,216 73
2024 Mar. 7 8,078 67
  1. ^ In 1911 President Taft submitted his written message in four parts on Dec. 5, Dec. 7, Dec. 20, and Dec. 21. This word count includes all four parts.[5]
  2. ^ In 1912 President Taft submitted his written message in three parts on Dec. 3, Dec. 6, and Dec. 19. This word count includes all three parts.[5]
  3. ^ In 1973 President Nixon delivered a series of six written State of the Union messages to Congress from Feb. 2 to Mar. 14. One message was an overview, followed by five additional messages each of which focused on a specific public policy theme. This word count includes all six messages.[5]
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Starting in 1981, first-term Presidents have been invited to address a joint session of Congress shortly after their inauguration. These have reflected the style of a State of the Union address but are not officially titled as a "State of the Union." Since 1989 the opposition party has offered a response.[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ "U.S. Senate: About Traditions & Symbols | State of the Union". www.senate.gov. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  2. ^ "The Speech: Where and When". History, Art & Archives.
  3. ^ Peters, Gerhard. "Length of State of the Union Messages and Addresses in Words". The American Presidency Project. Retrieved March 11, 2024.
  4. ^ Peters, Gerhard. "Length of State of the Union Addresses in Minutes (from 1964)". The American Presidency Project. Retrieved March 12, 2024.
  5. ^ a b c Peters, Gerhard; Woolley, John T. (2024). "Annual Messages to Congress on the State of the Union (Washington 1790 - the present)". Retrieved March 13, 2024.
  6. ^ "The First Evening Annual Message". Office of the Historian of the House of Representatives. Retrieved March 13, 2024.
  7. ^ "GOP Greets President With Cheer a Minute". Philadelphia Inquirer. February 3, 1953. p. 2. Retrieved March 14, 2024. Hand clapping was heard 55 times during the 56-minute speech, mostly from the GOP side of the aisle.
  8. ^ a b "Speeches". Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library, Museum, and Boyhood Home. United States National Archives. August 14, 2023. Retrieved March 14, 2024.
  9. ^ "Ike In Plea For Vigilance". Rutland Daily Herald. Rutland, Vermont. January 11, 1957. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2024. Dressed in a conservative gray business suit, Eisenhower stood for 33 minutes before a combined, undemonstrative Senate-House session in the klieg-lit House chamber.
  10. ^ "First Lady Receives Double Ovation in House Gallery". The Morning News. Wilmington, Delaware. January 10, 1958. p. 9. Retrieved March 14, 2024.
  11. ^ "Ike Challenges Democrats In 'State of Union' Speech". Great Falls Tribune. January 10, 1959. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2024.
  12. ^ "January 7, 1960: State of the Union Address". Miller Center. University of Virginia. Retrieved March 13, 2024.
  13. ^ "January 30, 1961: State of the Union". Miller Center. University of Virginia. Retrieved March 13, 2024.
  14. ^ "January 11, 1962: State of the Union Address". Miller Center. University of Virginia. Retrieved March 13, 2024.
  15. ^ "January 14, 1963: State of the Union Address". Miller Center. University of Virginia. Retrieved March 13, 2024.
  16. ^ The President's State of the Union Address: Tradition, Function, and Policy Implications (PDF). Congressional Research Service. January 24, 2014. p. 2.