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THE NEW DEAL

            AMERICA
           GETS BACK
            TO WORK
SECTION 1: A NEW DEAL
    FIGHTS THE DEPRESSION
• The 1932 presidential
  election showed that
  Americans were clearly
  ready for a change
• Republicans re-
  nominated Hoover
  despite his low approval
  rating
• The Democrats
  nominated Franklin
  Delano Roosevelt
ROOSEVELT WINS
 OVERWHELMING VICTORY
                                   • Democrat Roosevelt,
                                     known popularly as FDR,
                                     was a 2-term governor of
                                     New York
                                   • FDR was a distant cousin
                                     of Teddy Roosevelt
                                   • The Democrats also won
                                     huge victories in the house
                                     and senate
                                   • Greatest Democratic
                                     victory in 80 years
FDR easily won the 1932 election
FDR LAUNCHES NEW
                DEAL
• FDR promised a “new
  deal” for the American
  people
• He took office with a
  flurry of activity known
  as “The Hundred
  Days”
• The 100 Days lasted
  from March to June
  1933
CONGRESS
                                   GETS BUSY
• FDR’s philosophy was to
  get people help and work
  through “deficit” spending
• During the 100 Days,
  Congress passed more
  than 15 major pieces of
  legislation that significantly
  expanded government’s
  role in the nation’s
  economy and welfare
TO DO LIST: #1-
 HELP BANKS
           • First order of business was to get
             the banking system in order
           • On March 5, one day after taking
             office, FDR declared a bank
             holiday
           • He persuaded Congress to pass
             the Emergency Relief Act, which
             authorized the Treasury
             Department to inspect the
             nation’s banks
AMERICANS GAIN
       CONFIDENCE IN BANKS
• Next, FDR passed the
  Glass-Steagall Act which
  established the Federal
  Deposit Insurance
  Corporation
• The FDIC insured
  account holders up to
  $5,000 and set strict
  standards for banks to
  follow (today = $100,000)
MORE 100 DAYS ACTIVITY
            • Federal Securities Act:
              Required stock info to be
              accurate and truthful
            • Agricultural Adjustment
              Act: (AAA) Raised crop
              prices by lowering
              production
            • Tennessee Valley
              Authority: (TVA) Focused
              on direct relief to hard hit
              area– created ambitious
              dam projects
T
V
A
ALPHABET AGENCIES

• CCC – Civilian
  Conservation Corps put
  young men to work
• Men ages 18 to 25 worked
  building roads, parks,
  planting trees (200 million
  trees in Dust Bowl areas)
• By 1942 three million men
  worked for the CCC
ALPHABET
    AGENCIES
                                    • PWA – Public Works
                                      Administration was
                                      part of the NIRA
                                      (National Industrial
                                      Recovery Act)
                                    • The PWA provided
                                      money to states to
                                      construct schools and
PWA workers construct a public
building in Hartford, Connecticut     community buildings
ALPHABET
                             AGENCIES

• CWA – Civil Works
  Administration built
  40,000 schools and
  provided salaries for
  50,000 teachers in rural
  America
• Also built 500,000
  miles of roads             CWA School in Woodville, CA
ALPHABET
          AGENCIES
                                             • FHA – Federal
                                               Housing
                                               Administration
                                               provided home
                                               loans, home
                                               mortgages and
Repaired business in Childersburg, Alabama
                                               repairs
ALPHABET AGENCIES


• FERA – Federal
  Emergency Relief
  Agency provided
  $500 million in
  direct relief to the
  neediest               Citizens wait outside a FERA in
  Americans              Calipatria, CA for relief checks
CRITICS EMERGE
       • Despite the renewed
         confidence of many
         Americans, critics from
         both political spectrums
         emerged
       • Liberals (left) felt FDR’s
         program was NOT doing
         enough
       • Conservatives (right) felt
         that government
         intervention was TOO
         much and interfered with
         our free market economy
WINSTON CHURCHILL
“Any man who is under 30,
and is not a liberal, has no
heart; and any man who is
   over 30, and is not a
   conservative, has no
         brains.”
SUPREME COURT REACTS
                            • By the mid-1930s, the
                              Supreme Court struck
                              down the NIRA as
                              unconstitutional (citing too
                              much government control
                              over industry)
                            • The Court also struck
                              down the AAA on the
                              grounds that agricultural
The Supreme Court -- 1935     was a local matter -- not a
                              federal matter
FDR REGAINS CONTROL OVER
SUPREME COURT
• From the mid to late
  1930s, FDR was able
  to appoint 7 new
  judges to the
  Supreme Court, thus
  assuring that his
  programs would
  carry on unabated
MORE CRITICS
           • Every Sunday, Father Charles
             Coughlin broadcast radio sermons
             slamming FDR
           • He called for a guaranteed annual
             income and nationalized banks
           • At his height of popularity,
             Coughlin had 45 million listeners
           • His increasingly anti-Semitic
Coughlin
             remarks ultimately cost him
             support
ANOTHER CRITIC

• Huey Long was a
  Senator from Louisiana
  who was a constant (and
  effective) critic of FDR
• Long was setting up a
  run for president
• A lone gunman
  assassinated Long at the
  height of his popularity   Huey Long made effective use
  in 1935                    of radio to promote his views
FDR EASILY WINS 2                    ND

         TERM
• The Republicans nominated Alfred Landon, Governor
  of Kansas, while the Democrats (of course) nominated
  Franklin Delano Roosevelt
• Again the Dems and FDR won an overwhelming victory
  in the presidential election and in both houses

                           FDR wins 1936
                          FDR wins in 1936
                           election
SECTION 2: THE SECOND
      NEW DEAL
          • Although the economy
            had improved during
            FDR’s first term
            (1932-1936), the gains
            were not as great as
            expected
          • Unemployment
            remained high and
            production still lagged
THE SECOND
                         HUNDRED DAYS


• FDR launches the “Second New Deal”
  also called the “Second Hundred Days”
• First priority was the farmers – FDR reinvigorated the
  AAA which provided aid for migrants, sharecroppers,
  and poor farmers
• FDR authorized more than $1 billion to help tenant
  farmers become landowners
Arkansas Tenant
Farmers,1936
WORKS PROGRESS
                            ADMINISTRATION

• Helping urban workers was
  critical to the success of the
  Second Hundred Days
• The WPA set out to create as
  many jobs as possible as
  quickly as possible
• Between 1935-1943, the WPA
  spent $11 billion to give jobs to
  8 million workers
WPA BUILDS AMERICA
                                                     • WPA
                                                       workers
                                                       built 850 airports,
                                                       651,000 miles of
                                                       roads and streets,
                                                       and 125,000 public
                                                       buildings
                                                     • The WPA also hired
                                                       artists, writers and
The Davis Street School Extension in Atlanta under     photographers to
   construction as part of the Works Progress
    Administration Program, November 2, 1936           create art
NATIONAL YOUTH
             ADMINISTRATION
• The National Youth
  Administration (NYA) was
  created to provide
  education, jobs and
  recreation for young
  people
• Getting young people off
  the streets and into
  schools and jobs was a
  high priority for the NYA
IMPROVING LABOR
   RELATIONS

                           • In the Second New Deal
                             FDR helped pass the
                             National Labor
                             Relations Act (NLRA)
                           • This legislation
                             protected workers,
                             ensured collective
                             bargaining, and
                             preserved the right to
The NLRA was also called     unionize
     the Wagner Act
CONGRESS PROTECTS
          WORKERS
• In 1938, Congress
  passed the Fair
  Labor Standards
  Act which set
  maximum hours at
  44 per week and
  minimum wage at
  25 cents per hour
SOCIAL SECURITY
      ACT •
              One of the most important
              achievements of the New
              Deal era was the creation of
              the Social Security System
          •   The Social Security Act,
              passed in 1935, had 3 parts:
             Old-Age Pension
             Unemployment
              compensation
             Aid to families with
              dependent children &
              disabled (welfare)
NEW DEAL AFFECTS
                        MANY GROUPS
• First Lady Eleanor
  Roosevelt helped women
  gain higher political        Eleanor &
                               Franklin
  positions during the New
  Deal
• Eleanor was influential in
  her role as advisor to the
  president
• Frances Perkins became
  America’s first female
  cabinet member (Labor)
AFRICAN AMERICANS
DURING THE NEW DEAL
            • The 1930s
              witnessed a
              growth of activism for
              black Americans
            • A. Philip Randolph
              became head of the
              nation’s first all-black
              union – the Brotherhood
              of Sleeping Car Porters
AFRICAN AMERICANS GAIN
                POLITICAL POSITIONS

              FDR appointed
           over 100 African
  Americans to positions
  within the government
• Mary McLeod Bethune
  headed the division of
  Negro Affairs of the NYA
• Despite these gains, FDR
  was never fully committed
  to Civil Rights             Bethune
NATIVE AMERICANS MAKE
        GAINS
           • Native Americans made
             advances during the 1920s
             & 1930s
           • Full citizenship granted in
             1924
           • The Reorganization Act of
             1934 gave Natives more
             ownership of reservations
           • Policy was moving away
             from assimilation towards
             autonomy
Current locations of
 Native American
   reservations
FDR WINS IN
                    1936 . . . AGAIN
• FDR had wide appeal in
  the United States,
  especially in urban
  areas
• African Americans,
  Jews, Catholics and
  immigrants all
  supported the popular
                           FDR & Eleanor campaign by
  president                       rail in 1936
ROOSEVELT (RED) VS. LANDON (BLUE) 1936 ELECTION
SECTION 4: CULTURE IN THE
          1930s
                                  MOVIES:
                                  • By the late 1930s, 65% of
                                    Americans were attending
                                    the movies at least once
                                    per week at one of the
                                    nation’s 15,000 movie
                                    theaters
                                  • Comedies, lavish
                                    musicals, love stories and
 Movies provided an escape from     gangster films dominated
  the hardships of the Great        the movie industry
         Depression
MOVIE
                         STARS
• A new era of
  glamour in
  Hollywood was
                                 1930s
  launched with stars
  like Clark Gable,
  Marlene Dietrich and
  James Cagney
FAMOUS FILMS OF
    THE 30s
      • One of the most famous
        films of the era was Gone
        with the Wind (1939)
      • Other notable movies of
        the era included The
        Wizard of Oz (1939) and
        Snow White and the
        Seven Dwarfs (1937)
RADIO: THE
               ORIGINAL
            ENTERTAINMENT
• Sales of radios greatly
  increased in the 1930s,
  from 13 million in 1930
  to 28 million by 1940
• Nearly 90% of
  American homes
  owned a radio             Families spent hours listening to the radio
ROOSEVELT’S
FIRESIDE CHATS
            • FDR communicated
              to Americans via
              radio
            • His frequent
              “Fireside Chats” kept
              Americans abreast of
              the government’s
              efforts during the
              Depression
POPULAR RADIO
                        SHOWS
                                                Benny
                            H
• Popular radio shows       o
  included comedies with    p
  Bob Hope, Jack Benny,     e
  and the duo of Burns
  and Allen
• Soap operas (named
  because they were             Burns   Allen
  sponsored by soap
  companies) ran in the
  mornings, kids shows in
  the afternoon and
  entertainment at night
FAMOUS RADIO
  MOMENTS

          • Orson Wells created a
            radio special called War of
            the Worlds
          • It was an epic drama about
            aliens landing in America
          • Unfortunately, many
            thought it was a news
            broadcast and panicked
LIVE NEWS
                                  COVERAGE
• Radio captured news as
  well as providing
  entertainment
• One of the first
  worldwide broadcasts
  was the horrific crash of
  the Hindenburg, a
  German Zeppelin (blimp),
  in New Jersey on May 6,
  1937
• Such immediate news          The Hindenburg caught fire and was utterly
  coverage became a           destroyed within a minute Of the 97 people on
  staple in society            board, 13 passengers and 22 crew-members
                                               were killed
ART DURING THE GREAT
              DEPRESSION
                                    • The Federal Art Project
                                      (branch of the WPA) paid
                                      artists a living wage to
                                      produce art
                                    • Projects included murals,
                                      posters and books
                                    • Much of the art, music and
                                      literature was sober and
                                      serious
  WPA Art – “Democracy . . .a
Challenge” – artist, date unknown
ARTISTS
   HERALDED
• Painters like Edward
  Hopper, Thomas Hart
  Benton, and Iowa’s Grant
  Wood were all made
  famous by their work in
  the WPA program
• Photographer Dorothea
  Lange gained fame from
  her photos during this era
  (featured throughout this
  presentation)                Wood’s American Gothic is perhaps the most
                                     famous piece of the era (1930)
Grant Wood’s Fall Plowing, 1931
Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks (1942)
Edward Hopper, Railroad Sunset (1929)
Mabel Dwight, In the Crowd (1931)
Thomas Hart
Benton, Mine
Strike
Thomas
Hart
Benton,
Lord,
Heal the
Child
(1934)
Nicolai
Cikovsky,
On the
East River
   (c.
1934)
GUTHRIE’S MUSIC
              CAPTURES ERA
     Singer Woody         Guthrie
  Guthrie used music
  to capture the
  hardship of the
  Great Depression
• Guthrie traveled the
  country singing
  about America
WRITERS DEPICT
AMERICAN LIFE


         • The Federal Writers’
           Project (branch of WPA)
           paid writers to write
         • Richard Wright’s
           acclaimed Native Son
           was written for the
           project
JOHN STEINBECK
             RECEIVES ACCLAIM
• American writer John
  Steinbeck received
  assistance from the
  Federal Writers’
  Project
• He published his most
  famous book, Grapes
  of Wrath (1939), as
  part of the program
SECTION 5: THE IMPACT OF
     THE NEW DEAL
           • Over time, opinions about
             the merits of the New Deal
             and FDR have ranged from
             harsh criticism to high praise
             – usually along partisan lines
           • Conservatives felt FDR made
             government too large and
             too powerful
           • Liberals countered that FDR
             socialized the economy
             because Americans needed
             help
LEGACIES OF THE NEW
            DEAL
• FDIC – banking insurance
  critical to sound economy
• Deficit spending has
  became a normal feature
  of government
• Social Security is a key
  legacy of the New Deal in
  that the Feds have
  assumed a greater
  responsibility for the
  social welfare of citizens
  since 1935
FDR's New Deal Gets America Back to Work

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IndiaWest: Your Trusted Source for Today's Global News
 
Global Terrorism and its types and prevention ppt.
Global Terrorism and its types and prevention ppt.Global Terrorism and its types and prevention ppt.
Global Terrorism and its types and prevention ppt.
 

FDR's New Deal Gets America Back to Work

  • 1. THE NEW DEAL AMERICA GETS BACK TO WORK
  • 2. SECTION 1: A NEW DEAL FIGHTS THE DEPRESSION • The 1932 presidential election showed that Americans were clearly ready for a change • Republicans re- nominated Hoover despite his low approval rating • The Democrats nominated Franklin Delano Roosevelt
  • 3. ROOSEVELT WINS OVERWHELMING VICTORY • Democrat Roosevelt, known popularly as FDR, was a 2-term governor of New York • FDR was a distant cousin of Teddy Roosevelt • The Democrats also won huge victories in the house and senate • Greatest Democratic victory in 80 years FDR easily won the 1932 election
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  • 5. FDR LAUNCHES NEW DEAL • FDR promised a “new deal” for the American people • He took office with a flurry of activity known as “The Hundred Days” • The 100 Days lasted from March to June 1933
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  • 7. CONGRESS GETS BUSY • FDR’s philosophy was to get people help and work through “deficit” spending • During the 100 Days, Congress passed more than 15 major pieces of legislation that significantly expanded government’s role in the nation’s economy and welfare
  • 8. TO DO LIST: #1- HELP BANKS • First order of business was to get the banking system in order • On March 5, one day after taking office, FDR declared a bank holiday • He persuaded Congress to pass the Emergency Relief Act, which authorized the Treasury Department to inspect the nation’s banks
  • 9. AMERICANS GAIN CONFIDENCE IN BANKS • Next, FDR passed the Glass-Steagall Act which established the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation • The FDIC insured account holders up to $5,000 and set strict standards for banks to follow (today = $100,000)
  • 10. MORE 100 DAYS ACTIVITY • Federal Securities Act: Required stock info to be accurate and truthful • Agricultural Adjustment Act: (AAA) Raised crop prices by lowering production • Tennessee Valley Authority: (TVA) Focused on direct relief to hard hit area– created ambitious dam projects
  • 11. T V A
  • 12. ALPHABET AGENCIES • CCC – Civilian Conservation Corps put young men to work • Men ages 18 to 25 worked building roads, parks, planting trees (200 million trees in Dust Bowl areas) • By 1942 three million men worked for the CCC
  • 13. ALPHABET AGENCIES • PWA – Public Works Administration was part of the NIRA (National Industrial Recovery Act) • The PWA provided money to states to construct schools and PWA workers construct a public building in Hartford, Connecticut community buildings
  • 14. ALPHABET AGENCIES • CWA – Civil Works Administration built 40,000 schools and provided salaries for 50,000 teachers in rural America • Also built 500,000 miles of roads CWA School in Woodville, CA
  • 15. ALPHABET AGENCIES • FHA – Federal Housing Administration provided home loans, home mortgages and Repaired business in Childersburg, Alabama repairs
  • 16. ALPHABET AGENCIES • FERA – Federal Emergency Relief Agency provided $500 million in direct relief to the neediest Citizens wait outside a FERA in Americans Calipatria, CA for relief checks
  • 17. CRITICS EMERGE • Despite the renewed confidence of many Americans, critics from both political spectrums emerged • Liberals (left) felt FDR’s program was NOT doing enough • Conservatives (right) felt that government intervention was TOO much and interfered with our free market economy
  • 18. WINSTON CHURCHILL “Any man who is under 30, and is not a liberal, has no heart; and any man who is over 30, and is not a conservative, has no brains.”
  • 19. SUPREME COURT REACTS • By the mid-1930s, the Supreme Court struck down the NIRA as unconstitutional (citing too much government control over industry) • The Court also struck down the AAA on the grounds that agricultural The Supreme Court -- 1935 was a local matter -- not a federal matter
  • 20. FDR REGAINS CONTROL OVER SUPREME COURT • From the mid to late 1930s, FDR was able to appoint 7 new judges to the Supreme Court, thus assuring that his programs would carry on unabated
  • 21. MORE CRITICS • Every Sunday, Father Charles Coughlin broadcast radio sermons slamming FDR • He called for a guaranteed annual income and nationalized banks • At his height of popularity, Coughlin had 45 million listeners • His increasingly anti-Semitic Coughlin remarks ultimately cost him support
  • 22. ANOTHER CRITIC • Huey Long was a Senator from Louisiana who was a constant (and effective) critic of FDR • Long was setting up a run for president • A lone gunman assassinated Long at the height of his popularity Huey Long made effective use in 1935 of radio to promote his views
  • 23. FDR EASILY WINS 2 ND TERM • The Republicans nominated Alfred Landon, Governor of Kansas, while the Democrats (of course) nominated Franklin Delano Roosevelt • Again the Dems and FDR won an overwhelming victory in the presidential election and in both houses FDR wins 1936 FDR wins in 1936 election
  • 24. SECTION 2: THE SECOND NEW DEAL • Although the economy had improved during FDR’s first term (1932-1936), the gains were not as great as expected • Unemployment remained high and production still lagged
  • 25. THE SECOND HUNDRED DAYS • FDR launches the “Second New Deal” also called the “Second Hundred Days” • First priority was the farmers – FDR reinvigorated the AAA which provided aid for migrants, sharecroppers, and poor farmers • FDR authorized more than $1 billion to help tenant farmers become landowners
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  • 28. WORKS PROGRESS ADMINISTRATION • Helping urban workers was critical to the success of the Second Hundred Days • The WPA set out to create as many jobs as possible as quickly as possible • Between 1935-1943, the WPA spent $11 billion to give jobs to 8 million workers
  • 29. WPA BUILDS AMERICA • WPA workers built 850 airports, 651,000 miles of roads and streets, and 125,000 public buildings • The WPA also hired artists, writers and The Davis Street School Extension in Atlanta under photographers to construction as part of the Works Progress Administration Program, November 2, 1936 create art
  • 30. NATIONAL YOUTH ADMINISTRATION • The National Youth Administration (NYA) was created to provide education, jobs and recreation for young people • Getting young people off the streets and into schools and jobs was a high priority for the NYA
  • 31. IMPROVING LABOR RELATIONS • In the Second New Deal FDR helped pass the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) • This legislation protected workers, ensured collective bargaining, and preserved the right to The NLRA was also called unionize the Wagner Act
  • 32. CONGRESS PROTECTS WORKERS • In 1938, Congress passed the Fair Labor Standards Act which set maximum hours at 44 per week and minimum wage at 25 cents per hour
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  • 34. SOCIAL SECURITY ACT • One of the most important achievements of the New Deal era was the creation of the Social Security System • The Social Security Act, passed in 1935, had 3 parts:  Old-Age Pension  Unemployment compensation  Aid to families with dependent children & disabled (welfare)
  • 35. NEW DEAL AFFECTS MANY GROUPS • First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt helped women gain higher political Eleanor & Franklin positions during the New Deal • Eleanor was influential in her role as advisor to the president • Frances Perkins became America’s first female cabinet member (Labor)
  • 36. AFRICAN AMERICANS DURING THE NEW DEAL • The 1930s witnessed a growth of activism for black Americans • A. Philip Randolph became head of the nation’s first all-black union – the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters
  • 37. AFRICAN AMERICANS GAIN POLITICAL POSITIONS FDR appointed over 100 African Americans to positions within the government • Mary McLeod Bethune headed the division of Negro Affairs of the NYA • Despite these gains, FDR was never fully committed to Civil Rights Bethune
  • 38. NATIVE AMERICANS MAKE GAINS • Native Americans made advances during the 1920s & 1930s • Full citizenship granted in 1924 • The Reorganization Act of 1934 gave Natives more ownership of reservations • Policy was moving away from assimilation towards autonomy
  • 39. Current locations of Native American reservations
  • 40. FDR WINS IN 1936 . . . AGAIN • FDR had wide appeal in the United States, especially in urban areas • African Americans, Jews, Catholics and immigrants all supported the popular FDR & Eleanor campaign by president rail in 1936
  • 41. ROOSEVELT (RED) VS. LANDON (BLUE) 1936 ELECTION
  • 42. SECTION 4: CULTURE IN THE 1930s MOVIES: • By the late 1930s, 65% of Americans were attending the movies at least once per week at one of the nation’s 15,000 movie theaters • Comedies, lavish musicals, love stories and Movies provided an escape from gangster films dominated the hardships of the Great the movie industry Depression
  • 43. MOVIE STARS • A new era of glamour in Hollywood was 1930s launched with stars like Clark Gable, Marlene Dietrich and James Cagney
  • 44. FAMOUS FILMS OF THE 30s • One of the most famous films of the era was Gone with the Wind (1939) • Other notable movies of the era included The Wizard of Oz (1939) and Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937)
  • 45. RADIO: THE ORIGINAL ENTERTAINMENT • Sales of radios greatly increased in the 1930s, from 13 million in 1930 to 28 million by 1940 • Nearly 90% of American homes owned a radio Families spent hours listening to the radio
  • 46. ROOSEVELT’S FIRESIDE CHATS • FDR communicated to Americans via radio • His frequent “Fireside Chats” kept Americans abreast of the government’s efforts during the Depression
  • 47. POPULAR RADIO SHOWS Benny H • Popular radio shows o included comedies with p Bob Hope, Jack Benny, e and the duo of Burns and Allen • Soap operas (named because they were Burns Allen sponsored by soap companies) ran in the mornings, kids shows in the afternoon and entertainment at night
  • 48. FAMOUS RADIO MOMENTS • Orson Wells created a radio special called War of the Worlds • It was an epic drama about aliens landing in America • Unfortunately, many thought it was a news broadcast and panicked
  • 49. LIVE NEWS COVERAGE • Radio captured news as well as providing entertainment • One of the first worldwide broadcasts was the horrific crash of the Hindenburg, a German Zeppelin (blimp), in New Jersey on May 6, 1937 • Such immediate news The Hindenburg caught fire and was utterly coverage became a destroyed within a minute Of the 97 people on staple in society board, 13 passengers and 22 crew-members were killed
  • 50. ART DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION • The Federal Art Project (branch of the WPA) paid artists a living wage to produce art • Projects included murals, posters and books • Much of the art, music and literature was sober and serious WPA Art – “Democracy . . .a Challenge” – artist, date unknown
  • 51. ARTISTS HERALDED • Painters like Edward Hopper, Thomas Hart Benton, and Iowa’s Grant Wood were all made famous by their work in the WPA program • Photographer Dorothea Lange gained fame from her photos during this era (featured throughout this presentation) Wood’s American Gothic is perhaps the most famous piece of the era (1930)
  • 52. Grant Wood’s Fall Plowing, 1931
  • 54. Edward Hopper, Railroad Sunset (1929)
  • 55. Mabel Dwight, In the Crowd (1931)
  • 59. GUTHRIE’S MUSIC CAPTURES ERA Singer Woody Guthrie Guthrie used music to capture the hardship of the Great Depression • Guthrie traveled the country singing about America
  • 60. WRITERS DEPICT AMERICAN LIFE • The Federal Writers’ Project (branch of WPA) paid writers to write • Richard Wright’s acclaimed Native Son was written for the project
  • 61. JOHN STEINBECK RECEIVES ACCLAIM • American writer John Steinbeck received assistance from the Federal Writers’ Project • He published his most famous book, Grapes of Wrath (1939), as part of the program
  • 62. SECTION 5: THE IMPACT OF THE NEW DEAL • Over time, opinions about the merits of the New Deal and FDR have ranged from harsh criticism to high praise – usually along partisan lines • Conservatives felt FDR made government too large and too powerful • Liberals countered that FDR socialized the economy because Americans needed help
  • 63. LEGACIES OF THE NEW DEAL • FDIC – banking insurance critical to sound economy • Deficit spending has became a normal feature of government • Social Security is a key legacy of the New Deal in that the Feds have assumed a greater responsibility for the social welfare of citizens since 1935