Franklin D. Roosevelt

Executive Order 7700—Excusing Federal Employees from Duty on September 17, 1937

August 31, 1937

By virtue of the authority vested in me as President of the United States, it is hereby ordered as follows:

1. On Friday, September 17, 1937, the one hundred fiftieth anniversary of the signing of the Constitution of the United States, the several executive departments, independent establishments, and other governmental agencies in the District of Columbia, including the Government Printing Office and the Navy Yard and naval stations, shall be closed at 1 o'clock pm. or at such other hour as they, under their regulations, regularly close on Saturdays; and all employees in the Federal service in the District of Columbia and in the field service of the executive departments, independent establishments, and other agencies of the Government, except those who may for special public reasons be excluded from the provisions of this order by the heads of their respective departments, establishments, or agencies, or those whose absence from duty would be inconsistent with the provisions of existing law, shall be excused from duty on that day after the hour at which the departments, establishments, or agencies in which they work are closed in accordance with this order.

2. For the purpose of this order, in establishments or agencies in which the employees work in shifts such employees shall, subject to the foregoing provisions, be excused from duty after four hours of work on the said day.

Signature of Franklin D. Roosevelt
FRANKLIN D ROOSEVELT

The White House,
August 31, 1937.

Franklin D. Roosevelt, Executive Order 7700—Excusing Federal Employees from Duty on September 17, 1937 Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/369012

Simple Search of Our Archives