Franklin D. Roosevelt and His New Deal - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Franklin D. Roosevelt and His New Deal

Description:

Franklin D. Roosevelt and His New Deal Eighth Grade Georgia History Advanced Mr. Richard White George Washington Middle School Third Semester – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:188
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 21
Provided by: Preferr1489
Learn more at: https://stu.westga.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Franklin D. Roosevelt and His New Deal


1
Franklin D. Roosevelt and His New Deal
  • Eighth Grade Georgia History
  • Advanced
  • Mr. Richard White
  • George Washington Middle School
  • Third Semester

2
Georgia Performance Standard
  • SS8H8 The student will analyze the important
    events that occurred after World War I and their
    impact on Georgia.
  • Describe the impact of the boll weevil and
    drought on Georgia.
  • b. Explain economic factors that resulted in the
    Great Depression.
  • c. Discuss the impact of the political career of
    Eugene Talmadge.
  • d. Discuss the effect of the New Deal in terms of
    the impact of the Civilian Conservation Corps,
    Agricultural Adjustment Act, rural
    electrification, and Social Security.
  • A full copy of these standards can be found at
  • http//www.georgiastandards.org/socialstudies.aspx

3
The New Deal and President Roosevelt
  • How did the Civilian Conservation Corps motivate
    citizens?
  • What impact did the Agricultural Adjustment Act
    have?
  • How did Roosevelt bring about rural
    electrification?
  • How did social security develop from the New Deal?

4
The Civilian Conservation Corps
  • Most popular of New Deal Programs and first one
    passed.
  • Bill introduced March 27, 1933 and passed by both
    houses of Congress.
  • Signed into law March 31, 1933.

5
The Civilian Conservation Corps
  • Recruited unemployed young men to reforest the
    nations declining woodlands, and help fight the
    soil erosion brought on by deforestation.
  • First man enrolled on April 7, 1933. That was
    only 37 days after the passage of the bill.
  • Robert Fechner was appointed director on April 5,
    1933.
  • By April of 1934 the Corps was on a firm
    foundation, enjoying almost universal approval.

6
The Civilian Conservation Corps
  • Workers were paid 30 per month, while their
    families received a 25 per month allotment
    check.
  • More than 72 million was poured into towns
    across the country, and this helped boost local
    economies and save many small businesses.
  • Towns close to the camps housing the workers
    enjoyed 5000 per month boosts to their economies
    and many small family owned business were saved.

7
Civilian Conservation Corps
  • Men were recruited and lived in camps around the
    country at one time there were over 900 of these
    camps.
  • They were provided uniforms and tents for living
    quarters.
  • The men built roads, strung telephone cable, and
    planted trees to stave off soil erosion.
  • At one point there were over 600,000 men enrolled
    in the program.

8
Civilian Conservation Corps
  • In the beginning education and job training were
    not available, however, during later years it was
    included and over 40,000 illiterates were taught
    to read and write.
  • In 1933 leaders decided that the program should
    include Native Americans, and through the CCC
    approximately 80,000 American Indians were paid
    to save the lands they once occupied.
  • Program grew through the 1930s and early into
    the 1940s, however, by June of 1942 the program
    was dying. After Pearl Harbor and the improving
    economy, people were working and going off to
    war.
  • In June of 1942, Congress agreed to cut funding
    for the program.

9
Agricultural Adjustment Act
  • Passed May 12, 1933 it restricted crop production
    during the New Deal.
  • Paid farmers not to plant and grow crops on their
    property.
  • This would lower the amount of surplus on the
    market and thus raise crop prices stabilizing a
    volatile market place.

10
Agricultural Adjustment Act
  • Many farmers plowed under crops in accordance
    with the act many people complained about this
    because their were hungry Americans who could
    have been fed.
  • A lawsuit was filed over the taxation funding of
    the program and on January 6, 1936 the act was
    found unconstitutional because it unfairly taxed
    one group to pay another.
  • On February 16, 1938 a second AAA was passed and
    funded from the general taxation fund.

11
Agricultural Adjustment Act
  • The Thomas Amendment to the Act was approved May
    12, 1933.
  • This allowed the President to accept silver on
    the war debt account and to issue silver
    certificates that could be redeemed for silver
    coinage.
  • Up to 200 million in silver could be received
    and reissued.
  • Over 7 million pieces of silver currency were
    minted and issued through this act.
  • This reduced the amount of silver being held by
    citizens and served as a hedge for the government
    against inflation.

12
Agricultural Adjustment Act
  • In 1933 paid out over 100 million to cotton
    farmers to plow under crops.
  • The government slaughtered 6 million piglets,
    canned the meat, and used it to feed the poor.
  • In the end the program worked evictions from
    farms were down, crop prices were rising, and
    farm incomes were on the rise.
  • Sharecroppers, who were mostly poor black
    families, were not helped by the AAA. As they
    were told to destroy crops by the farmers who
    hired them, their income was lost. Eventually
    most of them ended up in the inner city ghettos.

13
Rural Electrification
  • Rural Electrification Act of 1936 was passed to
    provide funding for electrical distribution
    services to rural areas of the United States.
  • At the time the act was passed electricity was
    readily available in cities but farms, rural
    areas, and ranches rarely had electric power.

14
Rural Electrification
  • Funding to generate the power was provided
    through local member-owned co-operatives. Many of
    these still exist today.
  • These co-ops purchased the power at a wholesale
    price, and distributed it using their own lines a
    transformers. This saved their members money on
    electricity costs.
  • REA crews traveled the countryside with teams of
    electricians they would install a fuse panel
    with range and kitchen panels, as well as two to
    three lighting panels.

15
Rural Electrification
  • They would also install one ceiling mounted light
    fixture in each room, controlled by a switch, and
    one outlet in each room. Electric appliances were
    expensive and few had them, so more outlets were
    not necessary.
  • Many of these installations still exist today,
    however, most have been augmented or upgraded to
    support the abundance of electrical appliances
    available today.
  • The REA is considered one of the most successful
    government projects ever. By the end of 1938 the
    REA had 350 co-op projects in 45 states and was
    delivering electricity to over 1.5 million farms.
  • This success spawned growth in the manufacture of
    appliances, and allowed television and radio to
    expand to rural areas.

16
Social Security
  • The Social Security Act of 1935 was signed on
    August 14, 1935.
  • Designed to insure that older retired Americans
    would have a pension or death benefit once they
    were unemployed or no longer working.
  • Benefit would be paid from tax collect from those
    currently working, half paid by the employee and
    half paid by the employer.
  • One of the most popular government programs ever.

17
Social Security
  • Originally only covered primary worker, and
    excluded farmers, the self-employed, and anyone
    who employed less than 10 people.
  • Even with these limitations Social Security
    covered over half of the United States civilian
    work force.
  • The 1935 Act contained the first
    unemployment-compensation program, aid to states
    for health and welfare programs, and the first
    Aid to Dependant Children Program.
  • The initial tax rate was 2 of the first 3000 of
    earnings, shared equally between employer and
    employee.
  • This tax known as FICA or the Federal Insurance
    Contributions Act tax was amended in 1939.

18
Social Security
  • The FICA Tax was amended to include
  • The widowed, nonworking spouse of a someone
    entitled to an old-age benefit.
  • Survivors (widows and orphans) became eligible
    for a benefit.
  • Retirees who had never paid any FICA taxes became
    eligible for old-age benefits.

19
Social Security
The program has undergone many changes since its
inception, and is currently threatened by a
shortfall in funding. Questions have arisen in
recent years over the cost of the program. Some
advocate privatization, allowing workers to
choose how their withholdings are invested, while
others want to do away with the program all
together. The question that remains to be
answered is will todays workers be financing
tomorrows retirees?
20
For More Information on These Topics Please Visit
http//www.cccalumni.org/history1.html http//en.
wikipedia.org/wiki/Civilian_Conservation_Corps ht
tp//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_Adjustment
_Act http//www.historylearningsite.co.uk/New_Dea
l_farmers.htm http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rural_
Electrification_Act http//eh.net/encyclopedia/ar
ticle/malone.electrification.administration.rural
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Security_(Uni
ted_States) http//www.ssa.gov/history/35actinx.h
tml
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com