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The Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies has launched a Web site to provide up-to-date information about the 2009 Presidential Inauguration and related ceremonies along with historical information and photos of inaugurals past.
This Week in Senate History
Burning of Washington in 1814
August 24, 1814

Word reached the Capitol on a sweltering summer's afternoon that invading forces had swept aside the defending American army at Bladensburg, Maryland, and would arrive by dusk.

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2008 Session Schedule
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Tuesday, Sep 02, 2008

12:00 p.m.: Convene for a pro forma session.


Previous Meeting

Friday, Aug 29, 2008

The Senate convened at 2:00 p.m. for a pro forma session. No record votes were taken.


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Classic Senate Speeches: Great Orators of the Senate's past

The Golden Age of the Senate began with the Senate’s rise to national prominence around 1820 and ended with the breakdown of compromise in the 1850s, leading to the Civil War. The era brought to the chamber many of the greatest orators of the day.


The United States Senate, 1850 A.D. by Robert E. Whitechurch Daniel Webster Addressing the United States Senate/Great Debate on the Constitution and the Union 1850. by James M. Edny
Henry Clay: "The Great Compromiser"Daniel Webster: "The Great Orator"

Visitors packed the galleries to hear eloquent oratory and impassioned debate over the nation's most pressing issues. Speeches stretched on for hours and even for days on such vital topics as westward expansion, national development, and the future of slavery. Newspapers often printed the complete texts of these speeches, bringing them national attention. Speakers of that era set a high standard against which future orations would be judged. Located on the Senate Web site are transcripts of some of the best known Classic Senate Speeches.

Today, the speeches given by senators on the Senate floor are recorded and printed in the Congressional Record.


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