Gerald R. Ford photo

New Year's Day Message.

December 31, 1975

THE YEARS that are special in the lives of nations and individuals are those in which imagination produces action--action that offers hope, opportunity, a fresh start, and a vehicle for our optimism.

One of our great national characteristics is optimism. I can't even remember facing a new year with anything less than anticipation--and a few of those new years were difficult ones.

Some of us can remember new years in the great depression when the road to prosperity seemed closed--we can remember other new years spent in the midst of a world war that threatened our very survival.

But I can also remember new years in the late 1940's and throughout the 1950's when the future sizzled with promise and we led the world back to stability and greater achievement than it had ever known before. The road to prosperity was not closed--we had just been on a detour--our resolve, our determination and our ability had been tested--and we were not found wanting.

The new year we are now entering embodies the 200th anniversary of the founding of this great Republic. We look back with pride, but all of our national experience should prove to us that we must also look forward with eagerness to the unfolding years ahead.

We are Americans ! We move into the future with the strength and confidence of 200 years of a proud heritage. Liberty is the most precious possession of our past and it is still our greatest promise for the future. The freedoms we have today must be preserved and extended.

I ask you to join me in a 1976 New Year's resolution to cherish and protect what we have achieved in America--and, with God's help, to build upon it in the years ahead.

A very Happy New Year to each of you.

GERALD R. FORD

Gerald R. Ford, New Year's Day Message. Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/257341

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