Title: The Great Depression and the New Deal
1The Great Depression and the New Deal
- 1933-1939
- The country needs anddemands bold, persistent
experimentation. It is common sense to take a
method and try it. If it fails, admit it frankly
and try another. But above all, try something. - Franklin Roosevelt, 1932
2The Election of 1932
- 11 million Americans unemployed (1932)
- Republicans re-nominated Herbert Hoover at
convention in Chicago - Republican Platform- praised Republican
anti-depression policies, sort of promised to
end prohibition - Democrats met in Chicago (June 1932) nominated
Franklin D. Roosevelt - Democrat Platform- end prohibition, linked
depression to Hoover Republicans, balance
budget, social programs economic reforms
3Franklin Roosevelt (FDR)
- Born to a wealthy family- NY
- 5TH cousin to Theodore Roosevelt
- graduated Harvard
- Served NY legislature
- Governor of NY
- Nominated VP (1920 with James Cox) LOST!
- Assistant Sec. of Navy- just like TR!
- 1921- Struck with Polio- wore metal braces on
legs - FDRS WIFE- Eleanor Roosevelt (FDRs distant
cousin!) - Roosevelt commanded public media- deep concern
for the forgotten man seen as a traitor to his
class - Accepted his party nomination in person (a 1st
set a precedent).--- Promised a new deal for
America
4The Election Campaign 1932
- Democrats (FDR)- attacked Republicans
- FDR presented himself as vibrant (Roosevelt is
Robust) - Preached the New Deal for forgotten man
(remained vague on details) - Speeches written by members of the Brain Trust
(young college professors who later developed
new deal programs - Promised bold experimentation
- Theme Song- Happy Days Are Here Again
5Hoovers Campaign
- Remained in the Whitehouse at first- working
through lunch etc. - Supporters- the Worst is Past It Might Have
Been Worse - Hoover took to the stumpfaith in American
enterprise, individual initiative, urged support
for Hawley-Smoot Tariff
6FDR Wins
7How did FDR win?
- Dissatisfaction with Hoover- Change!!!
- The New Deal Coalition- black Americans (esp. in
Northern cities) abandoned the Republican Party
voted for FDR - Black voters joined white working class, farmers
others to elect FDR - Inauguration day- March 4,1933- speech attacked
moneyed interests- vowed war on depression,
the only thing we have to fear is fear itself - Hoover believed that the uncertainty fear
surrounding FDRS victory made the depression
worse!
8FDR THE 3 Rs
- New Deal Programs had 3 goals
- Short-Term (1st 2 years)
- Relief- FDR favored direct relief to individuals
- Recovery- use deficit-spending on public works
to revive economy (short range)-1st 2 years - Long Term
- Reform- (Long Term) reform current past
abuses that had brought on the Depression. - Restructure capitalism not replace it
- The Bank Holiday- FDR closed the banks on his
first full day in office (March 6-10) - Government examiners would inspect banks- banks
reopen if financially sound - when banks reopened- deposits outnumbered
withdrawals (Emergency Banking Relief Act 1933)
9The New Deal- The 1st Hundred Days
- FDR called a joint session of Congress (majority
Democrat) - 1st Hundred Days- members passed a large number
of bills programs (many old progressive ideas) - Old Progressive ideas unemployment insurance,
old age insurance (SS), min. wage, restriction of
child labor, conserve develop natural resources - Congress gave some of its legislative power to
the President- later the SC will rule against New
Deal programs based on this - AP Test writers- want you to know which
programs were not part of New Deal also.
10Banking Monetary Recovery Relief
- Emergency Banking Relief Act (1933)- gave
president power to regulate bank transactions
foreign exchange reopen solvent banks. - Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Act- FDIC
introduced (originally insured deposits up to
5000)- virtually ends chronic bank failures. - 1933- FDR took US off gold standard managed
currency inflation relieve debtors
stimulate new production. (US purchases gold for
35 oz. 1934--- up from 21 in 1933) - Feb. 1934- FDR returned US to gold standard for
international trade only gold coins collectors
items
11Job Creation
- FDR uses fireside chats to encourage inform
the citizens. - FDR urged pump priming government
assistance to encourage industrial recovery. - Civilian Conservation Corp (CCC)- young men hired
by US to help with reforestation, firefighting,
flood control, swamp drainage sent money home. - Helped conserve natural resources human
resources - 2. Federal Emergency Relief Act (FERA)- 3
Billion to states for public works put adults to
work!
12CIVILIAN CONSERVATION CORPS
- Created in April 1933.
- Within 4 months, 1300 CCC camps were in
operation. - 300,000 men in 1933 between ages 18 and 25
- Signed up for 6 months and made 30.00 a month.
- 1933 and 1941 over 3,000,000 men served in the
CCC . - Goal Keep teenage young men off the street and
away from the job market. - Develop job skills and improve environment
CCC
13Planted trees, built public parks, drained swamps
to fight malaria, restocked rivers with fish,
worked on flood control projects and a range of
other work that helped to conserve the
environment.
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17Housing Relief
- Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)- MILLIONS to
farmers to meet mortgages. - Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC)- Refinance
mortgages on non-farm home loans (helped about 1
million). - Job Creation-
- 1933 (late)- Civil Works Administration (CWA)-
under auspices of FERA both HEADED BY HARRY
HOPKINS provided jobs during winter of 1933 to
10s of thousands (leaf raking)- highly
criticized!
18TVA
TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY
- 1933- 1st Hundred Days (13 Billion Dollars)
- Develop a poor section of the Southeast U.S.
- Stimulate the economy and produce cheap
electricity. - Control floods, planting new forests.
- set up to test fairness of utility rates.
- 94 percent of property owners and 98 percent of
tenants did not have electricity. - 30 percent of property owners and 41 percent of
tenants had no toilet facilities whatsoever
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20TVA
TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY
- 65 percent of property owners and 78 percent of
tenants had to travel at least 300 yards to get
their household water. - 8 percent of property owners and 3 percent of
tenants owned radios (usually battery operated).
- 39 percent of property owners and 23 percent of
tenants had phonographs (including record players
that were operated with a hand crank).
21TVA
TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY
- 50 percent of property owners and 25 percent of
tenants read newspapers. - 26 percent of property owners and 16 percent of
tenants owned automobiles. - 7 percent of property owners and 4 percent of
tenants owned trucks.
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24TVA MAP
TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY
25TVA CRITICISM
CRITICISM OF THE TVA
26Critics of the New Deal
- Critics on the right left found the New Deal
lacking - Unemployment was still high after the programs
passed in the 1st 100 days - Father Charles Coughlin- Catholic priest (Mich.)
with a radio show (40 million fans) wanted
social justice. - Senator Huey P. Long (Louisiana)- Share Our
Wealth Program Make Every Man a King every
family would get 5000 (by taking money from
rich) - Threatened to challenge FDR for presidential
nomination in 1936 but was killed by an
assassin.
27Critics of the New Deal
- Dr. Francis Townsend- retired doctor supported
by senior citizens. - Called for old age help- 200 month to citizens
60 years old or older to be spent within a month
later FDR Congress will create Social Security
based on the idea. - 1935-Works Progress Administration (WPA)-
employment for useful projects (brought on by
criticism) headed by Harry Hopkins. - 11 Billion on 1000s of public buildings,
bridges, roads (9 million people employed over 8
years). - Federal Number 1- part of WPA employed actors,
writers, musicians highly criticized program. - Sent writers to collect oral histories slave
narratives!! Etc.
28wpa
WPA
- Works Progress Administration (WPA), the New
Deals main relief agency. - People employed by the WPA at its peak was more
than 3 million - 2,500 hospitals
- 5,900 schools
- 13,000 playgrounds
- 125,000 public buildings
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31WPA
32Women the New Deal
- Secretary of Labor- Francis Perkins 1st woman
cabinet member in the US. - Mary McLeod Bethune- director of Office of
Minority Affairs- highest ranking
African-American woman. - Margaret Meade- (1901-1978) anthropologist
helped popularize cultural anthropology.
33SOCIAL SECURITY ACT
- One of the most important features of the New
Deal. - 1935- Established a retirement for persons over
65 funded by a tax on wages paid equally by
employee and employer. - Old age insurance
- Protect Americans who were unable to support
themselves. - Unemployment compensation
- Compensation to disabled workers and assistance
to widows and children
34Industry Labor
- National Recovery Administration (NRA)- part of
the NIRA combined immediate relief with long
range recovery industries work out fair
competition set wages hours worked. - Unions granted right to organize, collective
bargaining through union reps! - Yellow dog contracts forbidden
- Restrictions on child labor
- blue eagle" program-
- 1935- NRA declared unconstitutional by SC
Schechter sick chicken case.
35NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL RECOVERY ACT
- Also called the National Recovery Act.
- Helped businesses organize codes setting prices
and minimum wage. - Put people back to work at decent jobs, wages and
working conditions. - Businesses were not forced to join this.
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37NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL RECOVERY ACT
38Industry Labor
- 2. Public Works Administration (PWA)- ALSO PART
OF THE NIRA Industrial recovery unemployment
relief. - Headed by Harold Ickes
- 4 Billion spent over 4 years 34,000 projects
(public buildings, highways, parkways) - Grand Coulee Dam
39Repeal of Prohibition
- Gave federal government extra revenue
- 1st 100 days- legalized wine beer
- 1933- officially repealed by 21st Amendment
(1933)
40Paying Farmers not to farm
- Farmers suffered from low prices overproduction
- Mortgages foreclosed corn burned as fuel,
destruction of crops to drive up prices - Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) used artificial
scarcity est. parity prices (same real value
as in 1909-1914). - US govt paid farmers to reduce crop acreage
- To pay for the program- Tax processors of farm
products consumers pay higher prices for
consumers (TAXING ONE GROUP GIVING MONEY TO
ANOTHER) - Effect- raised farm incomes
- Criticized for waste destruction of needed crops
animals - SC declared it unconstitutional 1936- PART ABOUT
COLLECTING TAX FROM PROCESSORS TO PAY FARMERS.
41Paying Farmers not to Farm
- 2. Soil Conservation Domestic Allotment Act
(1936)- caused farmers to withdraw acreage from
production plant soil saving crops like
soybeans. - 3. 1938- Second AAA- continued conservation
payments acreage restrictions on specific crops
parity payments - NO TAXATION OF PROCESSORS TO PAY FARMERS
- Farmers got fairer prices bigger share of
national income
42The Dust Bowl
- Causes over production in the 1920s (over
plowing, dry farming techniques), drought of
1933. - Areas affected- eastern Colorado to western
Missouri Oklahoma Arkansas most affected! - In 5 years- 350,000 Okies Arkies moved to
California - John Steinbeck- The Grapes of Wrath-
- Frazier-Lemke Farm Bankruptcy Bill- suspension of
foreclosures on farms for 3 years. (1935) - 2. Resettlement Administration- remove
near-farmless farmers to better land. - CCC planted more than 200 million trees on
prairies.
43Reforming Bankers Business
- Federal Securities Act Truth in Securities Act
(1st 100 days)- required promoters to swear to
the soundness of stocks bonds. - 1934- Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)-
A watchdog for the stock market. (still exists). - The Public Utility Holding Company Act (1935)-
death sentence for the utility holding company
unless deemed useful economically.
44The New Deal Labor
- After the Supreme Court axed the blue eagle-
Congress wanted to ensure protection of labor. - The Wagner (National) Labor Relations Act
(1935)- asserted the right to labor to organize
bargain collectively (with its own reps). - Unskilled workers began to organize John L.
Lewis (United Mine Workers) formed Committee for
Industrial Organization (CIO) WITHIN THE AFL.
(AFL wanted to organize according to skill
trade) - 1936- AFL suspended CIO UNIONS associated with
AFL - Lewis CIO- moved into the auto industry (used
sit-down strike) General Motors Sit Down
Strike - GM- RECOGNIZED CIO AS SOLE BARGAINING AGENT
- 2. Fair Labor Standards Act (1938)- set up min.
wage (40 cents/hour) max. hours (40 hours per
week) outlawed child labor (under 16 18 if
dangerous) - Excluded blacks, agricultural workers, women,
Mexican-Americans - Labor organization boomed supported FDR DEMS
- 1938- CIO broke with AFL COMPLETELY 1940 4
MILLION STRONG (INCLUDING 200,000 BLACKS) - CIO- FAVORED ORAGNIZATION OF ALL WORKLERS IN A
PARTICULAR INDUSTRY.
45Criticisms of the New Deal
- Waste, incompetence, confusion, cross-purposes,
graft - Employment of Communists, leftist professors
- FDR accused of being too cozy with Jewish
interests (RosenField) (The Jew Deal) - Growth of the national government- Federal
government became the single largest business - Growth of the national debt- to 40,440, 000,000
by 1939. - Class warfare- Why soak the successful?
- FDRs court packing scheme purging of Congress
(one man super government)
461936 Election
- Democrats re-nominated FDR on New Deal Programs
- Republicans nominated Alfred M. Landon
(MODERATE) Platform condemned New Deal deficit
waste - Key Republican backers- Hoover the Liberty
League (wealthy conservatives bound to fight
against New Deal Socialism) - Landon carried only Vermont Maine
- Democrats retained majorities in Congress (2/3 in
House Senate) - Class warfare needy economic groups vs. greedy
economic groups - FDR strong coalition blacks, South, urbanites
poor (New Immigrants- Catholics Jews) - FDR appointed Catholics' to one of every four
federal judgeships
47FDRs Court Packing Scheme
- 7 of 9 cases involving New Deal programs declared
unconstitutional by 1937. - Court was ultra-conservative (6 of 9 SC members
over 70 years old) - FDR asked Congress for a bill- permit him to add
a new justice to the SC for every member over 70
who would not retire (max. membership15). - Congress (both houses parties) condemned the
proposal dictator bill attempting to thwart
checks balances. - Justice Owen Roberts- (conservative) began
voting with liberals - SC upheld other New Deal proposals SS, Wagner
etc. - Congress voted full pay to Justices over 70 who
retired one justice replaced by Hugo Black (New
Dealer) - Court Packing- major political mistake by FDR
ARROUSED CONSERVATIVES OF BOTH PARTIES.
48FDR's COURT PACKING
49The Roosevelt Recession
- 1933-1937 (FDRs 1st Term)- did not end the
Depression. - 1936- unemployment 15 (down from 25 in 1933)
- Recovery modest
- 1937- economy took a downward turn.
- Causes
- Social Security taxes- had begun to take money
from payroll checks less money to spend. - FDR administration cut back on spending (job
creation). - April 1937- FDR adopted theories of John Maynard
Keynes (Keynesianism) US policy for decades.
50The New Deal Comes to a Close
- 1937 FDR urged Congress (more conservative now)-
to reorganize national administration
efficiency failed. - 1939- The Reorganization Act- gave FDR limited
powers to reform the national administration
Executive Office of White House created. - New Dealers accused of having huge war chest-
relief checks often came about election time?? - 2. Hatch Act (1939)- act barred federal
administrative officials from campaigning except
highest policy makers forbade use of government
finds for campaigning. - Forbade collection of campaign funds from people
getting relief checks. - By 1938- the NEW DEAL HAD LOST MOMENTUM
- 1938- Republicans (1st time) made gains in
Congressional elections
51Impact of the New Deal
- A program of Reform-not revolution (restructure
capitalism-not replace it) - New Deal had partially reduced unemployment
reviving the economy - Democratic Party a major party
- Helped African-Americans others survive
Depression - US did not fully emerge from Depression until
massive military expenditures of WWII. - Failures of the New Deal
- Did not directly confront racial prejudice
- Did not integrate armed forces
- Did not contain programs to protect civil rights
- Did not establish Bureau of Indian Affairs
- Did not nationalize basic industries
- Did not recognize unionization of migrant workers
52Brother, Can You Spare a Dime ?
- When Bing recorded this song in October, 1932,
one out of every four Americans who wanted work
could not find work. - The banking system was near collapse.
- Record sales had plummeted because Americans did
not have the money for such luxuries. - No song captures the dark spirit of the Great
Depression more than "Brother, Can You Spare a
Dime?" - Bing recorded the song shortly before President
Roosevelt's election and it went to No. 1 in the
charts.
Bing Crosby
53Brother, Can You Spare a Dime ?
They used to tell me I was building a dream, and
so I followed the mob, When there was earth to
plow, or guns to bear, I was always there right
on the job. They used to tell me I was building
a dream, with peace and glory ahead, Why should
I be standing in line, just waiting for
bread? Once I built a railroad, I made it run,
made it race against time. Once I built a
railroad now it's done. Brother, can you spare
a dime? Once I built a tower, to the sun, brick,
mortar and lime Once I built a tower, now
it's done. Brother, can you spare a dime?
54Brother, Can You Spare a Dime ?
Once in khaki suits, gee we looked swell, Full
of that Yankee Doodly Dum, Half a million boots
went marching through Hell, And I was the kid
with the drum! Say, don't you remember, they
called me Al it was Al all the time. Hey don't
you remember, I'm your pal? Buddy, can you spare
a dime? Once I built a railroad, I made it run,
made it race against time. Once I built a
railroad now it's done. Brother, can you spare
a dime? Once I built a tower, to the sun, brick,
mortar, and lime Once I built a tower, now
it's done. Brother, can you spare a dime?
55Brother, Can You Spare a Dime ?
Once in khaki suits, gee we looked swell, Full
of that Yankee Doodly Dum, Half a million boots
went marching through Hell, And I was the kid
with the drum! Say, don't you remember, they
called me Al it was Al all the time. Say,
don't you remember, I'm your pal? Brother, can
you spare a dime?