Executive Order
ALLOCATION OF FUNDS TO THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
FOR THE ACQUISITION AND DEVELOPMENT OF A HISTORIC SITE TO BE KNOWN AS
THE JEFFERSON NATIONAL EXPANSION MEMORIAL.
WHEREAS the act of August 21, 1935, Public No. 292,
74th Congress, declares it to be a national policy to preserve for
public use historic sites, buildings, and objects of national
significance for the inspiration and benefit of the people of the United
States; and
WHEREAS the Secretary of the Interior through the
National Park Service has determined that certain lands situate on the
west bank of the Mississippi River at and near the site of Old St.
Louis, Missouri, possess exceptional value as commemorating or
illustrating the history of the United States and are a historic site
within the meaning of the said act, since thereon were situate: the
Spanish Colonial office where, during the administration of Thomas
Jefferson, third President of the United States, all the first territory
comprised in the Upper Louisiana Purchase was transferred to the United
States; the Government House at which, on March 9, 1804, Charles Dehault
Delassus, the Spanish commandant in St. Louis, transferred possession of
Upper Louisiana to Captain Amos Stoddard of the United States Army, who
had been delegated by France as its representative, and at which, on the
morning of March 10, 1804, Captain Stoddard, as the agent of the United
States, took formal possession of the Louisiana Purchase and raised the
American flag, by reason of which transactions the Spanish, French, and
American flags waved successively over the site within a period of
twenty-four hours; the old French Cathedral of St. Louis, earliest home
of religion on the western bank of the Mississippi; the place where
Laclede and Chouteau established the first civil government west of the
Mississippi; the place where Lafayette was received by a grateful
people; the places where the Santa Fe, the Oregon, and other trails
originated; the place where Lewis and Clark prepared for their trip of
discovery and exploration; and the Court House in which the Dred Scott
case was tried; and
WHEREAS the City of St. Louis has agreed to
contribute for the project of acquiring and developing the said site the
sum of $2,250,000, which is one-fourth of the entire amount to be
expended for such purposes; and
WHEREAS I find that the said project will be a useful
project, and will provide relief, work relief, and increased
employment:
NOW, THEREFORE, by virtue of and pursuant to the
authority vested in me by the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act of
1935, approved April 8, 1935 (Pub. Res. No. 11, 74th Cong.), I hereby
allocate to the Secretary of the Interior from the funds made available
by the said Act the sum of $6,750,000, which with the sum of $2,250,000
to be contributed by the City of St. Louis and accepted by the Secretary
of the Interior under authority of the said act of August 21, 1935, will
make available for the said project the total sum of $9,000,000; and the
Secretary of the Interior, through the National Park Service, is hereby
authorized and directed to expend the said sum of $9,000,000 in
acquiring the said property and in developing and preserving it for the
purposes of the said act of August 21, 1935, if and when the City of St.
Louis shall make the said sum of $2,250,000 available to the Secretary
of the Interior for such purposes.
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
The White House,
December 21th, 1935
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