Mr. Vice President, Governor Freeman, Postmaster General
Day, and members of the Cabinet:
I want to express our great
pleasure at being here this morning and having this opportunity to salute
the State of Wisconsin, the State Legislature of that State, for the action
it took in 1911, 50 years ago, in passing the first State workmen's compensation
law. And the leadership shown in that State on that occasion was followed
in later years by other actions which that State took in the twenties,
which led directly to passage in the thirties of the National Social Security
Act.
This first step, to provide
security for American working men who may have been injured, to provide
security for their families if they may have been fatally injured, represents
one of the great landmarks of social legislation on our books in the long
history of this country. That promising beginning has meant security to
millions of Americans, and it represents the kind of forward-looking action
on State and national level, the need for which faces us in our own day
in 1961.
We look back today, but we also
look forward, and we recognize that in our time, in the States and in the
National Government, there is still a good deal of unfinished business:
to provide more security for our younger people who want jobs and can't
find them; to provide more security for those who are unemployed - for
those particularly who are unemployed chronically and who have families
who depend upon them, who exhaust their unemployment compensation, who
have exhausted in recent weeks the emergency unemployment compensation,
and who now want to work and find themselves having to turn to inadequate
public assistance.
And we also recognize the great
need that lies before us to deal more satisfactorily with the question
of health in our society; most particularly and immediately is the health
of our older citizens, those who are chronically ill, those who come to
the end of their working lives with inadequate resources stored away in
spite of many years of devoted labor - inadequate resources to meet their
medical bills.
I believe it is the national
responsibility in the sixties, and the national opportunity, as it was
the responsibility and opportunity of the Wisconsin State Legislature in
1911, for us to meet this problem of medical care for our older citizens,
and better medical care for all our citizens.
So I want to congratulate the
Post Office for this memorial to progress. I'm delighted that the Governor
- a distinguished Governor and progressive Governor of the State of Wisconsin,
to which we all owe much - that he has come here today and participated
in this ceremony. And I'm sure that his presence here - this stamp - that
when all of us look at this stamp and put it on any letter, or see it on
any letter we receive, that we remember that all of us, in our time and
generation, have as great an opportunity as the State Legislature of 1911,
and we mean to take advantage of that opportunity and meet that responsibility
in the areas I've described. I'm grateful to all of you for coming today.