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Depression and New deal

Explore FDR's presidency, the impact of his disability, and the implementation of his New Deal programs to alleviate the Great Depression. Learn about the Civilian Conservation Corps, the Federal Emergency Relief Act, and the visibility of women during this time.

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Depression and New deal

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  1. Chapter 33 Mr. Walters Depression and New deal

  2. Big Idea . . . The Nation wanted and needed a CHANGE. Was bigger government the answer? Did FDR really have a plan? “Bold and Persistent Experimentation . . .”

  3. FDR: Politician in a Wheelchair One of few picts of him in w.c. • Republicans: Hoover re-nominated without much enthusiasm. • Democrats go for FDR: 5th cuz of TR…… • Many similarities on path to White House • Different in style though • Disability’s impact?

  4. Presidential Hopefuls of 1932 • FDR pledges a “New Deal” for “forgotten man” • “Happy Days are Here Again”

  5. Hoover's Humiliation in 1932 • Noteworthy was the transition of the Black vote from the Republican to the Democratic Party.

  6. FDR and the Three R’s: Relief, Recovery, and Reform • “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” • He called for a nationwide bank holiday to eliminate paranoid bank withdrawals, and then he commenced with his Three R’s. • The Democratic-controlled Congress was willing to do as FDR said. • The first Hundred Days of FDR’s administration were filled with more legislative activity than ever before. • Many of the New Deal Reforms had been adopted by European nations a decade before.

  7. Source of New Deal Programs • Many unfinished business from Europe and the Progressives: • Unemploy insurance, old-age insurance, min. wage, child labor laws, etc • Some new ideas: TVA

  8. Map 33-2 p766

  9. Rural ElectricityAid to the Civil Rights Movement in the South? Figure 33-2 p767

  10. Roosevelt Manages the Money • The Emergency Banking Relief Act of 1933 was passed first. FDR declared a one week “bank holiday” just so everyone wouldcalm down and stop running on the banks. • Then, Roosevelt settled down for the first of his thirty famous “Fireside Chats” with America.

  11. Roosevelt Manages the Money • The “Hundred Days Congress” passed the Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Act, that provided the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) which insured individual deposits up to $5000, thereby eliminating the epidemic of bank failure and restoring faith tobanks. • FDR then took the nation off of the gold standard and achieved controlled inflation by ordering Congress to buy gold at increasingly higher prices.

  12. Bank failures before and after FDR’s inauguration

  13. Master of the Press p756

  14. CCC • FDR and Congress created the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), whichprovided employment in fresh-air government camps for about 3 millionuniformed young men. • They reforested areas, fought fires, drained swamps, controlled floods, picked up garbage, etc. • Critics accused FDR of militarizing the youths and acting as dictator.

  15. The CCC only accepted unmarried men, between the ages of 18-25. To qualify for the program their families were required to be on public relief. The men were paid $30 a month. They would send all but $5 of their monthly pay back home to their families. In return, the government would provide room and board, clothing, tools and training.

  16. Impact • Work for desperately poor young Americans • Sense of worth and belonging, order, discipline • Proved invaluable for US when WWII comes • Conserved, preserved, beautified US nature • Was is the best use of Federal Funds?

  17. Federal Emergency Relief Act • Harry Hopkins in charge • Agency handed out $3 billion to help unemployed • Civil Works Administration

  18. Works Progress Administration • Spent $11 Billion on public buildings, roads, bridges, etc.

  19. It also found part-time jobs for needy high school and college students and for actors, musicians, and writers.

  20. WPA Mural, by Victor Arnautoff (1896–1979), 1934 The Pedestrian Scene, painted ona wall of Coit Tower in San Francisco, was one of a series of murals commissioned by thefederal government to employ artists during the Great Depression. p760

  21. A Day for Every Demagogue “microphone messiah” One FDR spokesperson was Father Charles Coughlin, a Catholic priest in Michigan who at first was with FDR then disliked the New Deal and voiced his opinions on radio. Eventually silenced for anti Semitism, fascist rants

  22. A Day for Every Demagogue • Senator Huey P. Long of Louisiana was popular for his “Share the Wealth” program. Proposing “every man a king,” each family was to receive $5000, allegedly from the rich. The math of the plan was ludicrous. • He was later shot by a deranged medical doctor in 1935.

  23. p759

  24. Support for radicals made some people take notice…………….Hitler, Mussolini, Franco…. • Long? Coughlin?

  25. New Visibility for Women • Ballots newly in hand, women struck up new roles. • First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt was the most visible, but other ladies shone as well: Sec. of Labor Frances Perkins was the first femalecabinet member and Mary McLeod Bethune headed the Office of MinorityAffairs.

  26. New Visibility for Women • Anthropologist Ruth Benedict helped develop the “culture and personality movement” and her student Margaret Mead reached even greater heights with Coming of Age in Samoa. • Pearl S. Buck wrote a beautiful and timeless novel, The Good Earth,winning the Nobel Prize for literature in 1938.

  27. Helping Industry and Labor • The National Recovery Administration (NRA), by far the most complicated of the programs, was designed to assist industry, labor, and the unemployed. • There were maximum hours of labor, minimum wages, and more rights for labor union members, including the right to choose their own representatives in bargaining.

  28. Helping Industry and Labor • Prohibition was repealed with 21st Amendment (1933) • The Public Works Administration (PWA) also intended both for industrial recovery and for unemployment relief. • Headed by Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes, it aimed at long-range recovery by spending over $4 billion on some 34,000 projects

  29. Paying Farmers Not to Farm • Congress established the Agricultural AdjustmentAdministration, which paid farmers to reduce their crop acreage and would eliminate price-depressing surpluses. • However, it got off to a rocky start when it killed lots of pigsfor no good reason, and paying farmers not to farm actually increased unemployment. • The Supreme Court killed it in 1936. • The New Deal Congress also passed the Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act of 1936, which paid farmers to plant soil-conserving plants like soybeans or to let their land lie fallow.

  30. Agric. Adjust Act • Helped farmers wth mortgages

  31. XI. Dust Bowls and Black Blizzards

  32. Dust Bowls and Black Blizzards • After the drought of 1933, furious winds whipped up dust into theair, turning parts of Missouri, Texas, Kansas, Arkansas, and Oklahomainto the Dust Bowl and forcing many farmers to migrate west toCalifornia and inspired Steinbeck’s classic The Grapes of Wrath. • The dust was very hazardous to the health and to living, creating further misery. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guTek7ipD4Uv 6min on Burns doc

  33. p764

  34. Map 33-1 p765

  35. Battling Bankers and Big Business • The Federal Securities Act (“Truth in Securities Act”)required promoters to transmit to the investor sworn informationregarding the soundness of their stocks and bonds. • The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) was designed as astock watchdog administrative agency, and stock markets henceforth wereto operate more as trading marts than as casinos. • In 1932, Chicagoan Samuel Insull’s multi-billion dollar financial empire had crashed, and such cases as his resulted in thePublic Utility Holding Company Act of 1935.

  36. Housing Reform and Social Security • To speed recovery and better homes, FDR set up the Federal HousingAdministration (FHA) in 1934 to stimulate the building industry throughsmall loans to householders. • It was one of the “alphabetical” agencies to outlast the age of Roosevelt. • Congress bolstered the program in 1937 by authorizing the U.S.Housing Authority (USHA), designed to lend money to states orcommunities for low-cost construction. • This was the first time in American history that slum areas stopped growing.

  37. Housing Reform and Social Security • The Social Security Act of 1935 was the greatest victory for NewDealers, since it created pension and insurance for the old-aged, the blind, the physically handicapped, delinquent children, and other dependents by taxing employees and employers. • Republicans attacked this bitterly, as such government-knows-bestprograms and policies that were communist leaning and penalized the rich for their success. They also opposed the pioneer spirit of“rugged individualism.”

  38. A New Deal for Labor • A rash of walkouts occurred in the summer of 1934, and after theNRA was axed, the Wagner Act (AKA, National Labor Relations Act) of1935 took its place. The Wagner Act guaranteed the right of unions toorganize and to collectively bargain with management. • Under the encouragement of a highly sympathetic National LaborRelations Board, unskilled laborers began to organize themselves intoeffective unions, one of which was John L. Lewis, the boss of theUnited Mine Workers who also succeeded in forming the Committee forIndustrial Organization (CIO) within the ranks of the AF of L in 1935. • The CIO later left the AF of L and won a victory against General Motors.

  39. p768

  40. p769

  41. Figure 33-3 p769

  42. A New Deal for Labor The CIO also won a victory against the United States Steel Company,but smaller steel companies struck back, resulting in such incidencesas the Memorial Day Massacre of 1937 at the plant of the Republic SteelCompany of South Chicago in which police fired upon workers, leavingscores killed or injured.

  43. Fair Labor Standards Act In 1938, the Fair Labor Standards Act (AKA the “Wages andHours Bill”) was passed, setting up minimum wage and maximumhours standards and forbidding children under the age of sixteen fromworking. Roosevelt enjoyed immense support from the labor unions. In 1938, the CIO broke completely with the AF of L and renamed itself the Congress of Industrial Organizations (the new CIO).

  44. Landon Challenges “the Champ”1936 Presidential Election In 1934, the American Liberty League had been formed byconservative Democrats and wealthy Republicans to fight“socialistic” New Deal schemes. Roosevelt won in a huge landslide, getting 523 electoral votes to Landon’s 8. FDR won primarily because he appealed to the “forgotten man,” whom he never forgot.

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