About This Book
A sequence of annual messages to Congress reports on the state of the nation, noting agricultural plenty, rising public credit, and domestic prosperity while recommending policies to secure and strengthen the Union. The speaker emphasizes preparedness through disciplined militia and properly supported troops, addresses frontier security and relations with Native tribes, and calls for clear rules on naturalization and funding for foreign affairs. He urges encouragement of manufacturing, useful inventions, internal communication via post roads, and uniformity in currency, weights, and measures, alongside support for science and education. Several addresses also discuss territorial admission and financial operations such as loans and the coinage of precious metals.
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