American Presidency Project
The American Presidency Project
This online archive, maintained by the University of California at Santa Barbara, contains over 72,000 documents related to the U.S. Presidency.
The searchable database includes:
•The Messages and Papers of the Presidents: Washington - Taft (1789-1913)
•The Public Papers of the Presidents:
Hoover to Bush (1929-1993)
•The Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents:
Clinton - G.W. Bush (1993-2007)
These documents include Executive Orders and Proclamations, State of the Union Addresses, Inaugural Addresses, press conferences, and much more.











Need Executive Order #
I would so appreciate receiving a number for the Executive Order dated August 13, 2002 entitled “Proper Consideration of Small Entities in Agency Rulemaking.†I am writing a paper for graduate school, which is due tomorrow night. Thank you so much.
Rheta Moazzami
Need info? Ask a librarian!
Hello,
I'm sorry that I didn't notice your comment before your deadline. It would be better to contact a federal depository library in your area for this kind of question. To find one near you, check out http://www.gpoaccess.gov/libraries.html.
Our site is for discussing federal information policy and creative ways of presenting and promoting government information. We're not a reference service ourselves and sometimes it takes a few days to get to user comments.
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"And besides all that, what we need is a decentralized, distributed system of depositing electronic files to local libraries willing to host them." -- Daniel Cornwall, tipping his hat to Cato the Elder for the original quote.
Executive Orders are in Federal Register
For future reference, publicly issued presidential executive orders are available in the Federal Register, which you can find online at http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html for 1995 forward. Older years are in the nation's federal depository libraries.
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"And besides all that, what we need is a decentralized, distributed system of depositing electronic files to local libraries willing to host them." -- Daniel Cornwall, tipping his hat to Cato the Elder for the original quote.
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