Vital Speeches of the Day

The magazine first appeared on October 8, 1934,[2] and its first issue included speeches by US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Nobel Peace Prize winner Nicholas Murray Butler, David Lawrence, the legal expert Ferdinand Pecora and the economist and eugenicist Irving Fisher.

Its editor, Thomas Daly IV, said of such speeches, "A lot of that is hot air.

"[1] According to its policy statement: The publisher of Vital Speeches believes that the important addresses of the recognized leaders of public opinion constitute the best expression of contemporary thought in America, and that it is extremely important for the welfare of the nation that these speeches be permanently recorded and disseminated.

These guides typically describe it in politically neutral terms, as when Guide to Reference Materials summarised it as "Each semimonthly issue contains the full text of some 12 to 15 addresses on public issues delivered by important figures.

"[5] In January 2009, the magazine launched Vital Speeches International which compiles English-language texts from outside the United States.