Coronado Exposition Commission Act of 1939 explained

Shorttitle:Coronado Exposition Commission Act of 1939
Othershorttitles:Coronado Cuatro Centennial Commission, 1939
Longtitle:An Act authorizing Federal participation in the commemoration and observance of the four-hundredth anniversary of the explorations of Francisco Vasquez de Coronado.
Nickname:United States Coronado Exposition Commission, 1939
Enacted By:76th
Effective Date:July 17, 1939
Cite Statutes At Large:, Chap. 314
Introducedin:Senate
Signedpresident:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Signeddate:July 17, 1939

Coronado Exposition Commission Act of 1939 or United States Coronado Exposition Commission, 1939 is a United States statute establishing a federal exposition commission for national observance purposes. The commission provided representation of the United States by a commemoration and observance as related to the entrada of North America by Francisco Vázquez de Coronado in 1540. The commemorative exposition was a 400th anniversary regarding the exploration of the States of Arizona, Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas reasonably considering the Age of Discovery by the Spanish Empire's conquistadors.

The United States public law authorized the erection of a monument as stated in section five of the United States statute. The monument was to be located nearest the international boundary between the United States and Mexico where the Coronado expedition first crossed into modern day North America. The monument was established on August 18, 1941, as the Coronado International Memorial ― Coronado National Memorial ― located within the vicinity of Sierra Vista, Arizona.

The act of Congress was authored as House bill 6852 and Senate bill 2197.[1] The S. 2197 legislation was passed by the 76th United States Congress and enacted into law by Franklin Roosevelt on July 17, 1939.[2]

See also

Congressional Acts for Coronado Exposition and National Memorial

Date of enactmentPublic Law No.U.S. CitationU.S. Bill No.U.S. Presidential Administration
June 11, 1940P.L. 76-587Franklin D. Roosevelt
August 18, 1941P.L. 77-216Franklin D. Roosevelt
July 9, 1952P.L. 82-478Harry S. Truman

Antiques and art of 1540–1940 Coronado Cuarto Centennial

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Four Hundredth Anniversary of the Explorations of Francisco Vasquez De Coronado . 76th Congress – 1st Session ~ Vol. 84, Part 8 – U.S. House of Representatives Congressional Record . July 5, 1939 . Congress.gov . Washington, D.C. . United States Government Printing Office . 8625–8634.
  2. Web site: Franklin D. Roosevelt: "Executive Order 8273 – Excepting Appointments in the United States Coronado Exposition Commission from the Requirements of the Civil Service Act and Rules" – September 21, 1939 . Peters,Gerhard . Woolley, John T . The American Presidency Project . University of California – Santa Barbara.