Chapter 226.
282 words·~1 min read·
/statutes-at-large/vol-43/chapter-226-3924166·A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
CHAP. 226.— Joint Resolution Granting permission to the Roosevelt Memorial Association to procure plans and designs for a memorial to Theodore Roosevelt. February 13, 1925.[[S. J. Res. 135](/us/bill/68/sjres/135).][[Pub. Res., No. 49](/us/pubres/68/49).] Whereas the Roosevelt Memorial Association, a corporation of the District of Columbia.District of Columbia, has petitioned the Congress in relation to the proposal of the association to erect an enduring monument to the memory of Theodore Roosevelt in the city of Washington:
Therefore be it *Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled*, That permission is Roosevelt Memorial Association.Plans, etc., for monument to Theodore Roosevelt may be procured by.Vol. 41, p. 692.Site.hereby given to the Roosevelt Memorial Association to procure at its own expense plans and designs for the erection of a permanent memorial to Theodore Roosevelt upon a site within the following-described area: That portion of the territory included in the Park Commission Plan of 1901 lying in general between the Washington Monument and the Potomac River and bounded by Fifteenth and Seventeenth Streets projected southward, including the waters of Twining Lake.
Sec. 2. That the plan and design procured or selected by Considerations affecting plans, etc.the Roosevelt Memorial Association shall take into account the requirements of traffic circulation and of recreational facilities and shall be submitted to the Congress before the first day of January, 1926. Sec. 3. That no authority to proceed with the execution of such Subject to approval by Congress.plan or with the erection of the memorial shall be deemed to be conferred upon the Roosevelt Memorial Association unless or until the plan and design shall first have been approved by the Congress.
Approved, February 13, 1925.