Letter from President Franklin D. Roosevelt to Secretary of Treasury Regarding the Allocation of Funds to the Administrator of the Federal Security Agency
- 2/6/1942
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Description
The “Emergency Fund for the President,” called by different names at different times, is money reserved for a President’s unanticipated needs. The emergency funds have been used under a variety of circumstances that affect national interests such as disasters, security threats, and national defense. In 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt used his $100 million “Emergency Fund for the President” to recover, mobilize, and protect the country as it moved from peace to war. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, shocked and outraged the nation. Congress declared war against Japan the following day. A couple months later, on February 6, 1942, President Roosevelt’s signature allocated more funds for “the removal of enemy aliens….and for transportation of their dependents, and for the relocation of and temporary aid to enemy aliens or their dependents who have been removed from such prohibited areas or whose normal means of livelihood has been interrupted….”
Citation
This primary source comes from the Records of the Bureau of Accounts (Treasury).
National Archives Identifier: 7856782
Full Citation: Letter from President Franklin D. Roosevelt to Secretary of Treasury Regarding the Allocation of Funds to the Administrator of the Federal Security Agency; 2/6/1942; Records of the Bureau of Accounts (Treasury),. [Online Version, https://docsteach.org/document/letter-from-president-franklin-d-roosevelt-to-secretary-of-treasury-regarding-the-allocation-of-funds-to-the-administrator-of-the-federal-security-agency/, April 3, 2026]
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