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Franklin D Roosevelt & the New Deal

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Franklin D Roosevelt&

the New Deal

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The New Deal: Big Picture• FDR promised America a ‘New Deal’

– It was not clear what new measures might be

– It was clear that FDR intended to use the full power of the gov’t to get US out of depression

• FDR’s priorities:– Get Americans back to work

– Protect their savings and property

– Provide relief for sick, old & unemployed

– Get American industry & agriculture back on their feet

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Tackling the Banks First• FDR gets to work

– FDR & advisors (later known as the ‘Brains Trust’) produced enormous range of sweeping measures, starting w/ the ‘Bank Holiday’

• March 5: FDR’s ‘Bank Holiday’– Day after inauguration

– Ordered all banks closed for inspection of books by federal officials

– Sound banks (about 5000) allowed to reopen

– They were supported by gov’t money

– Rules & regulations set up to prevent reckless speculation like that leading to Wall Street Crash

– These two measures were the Emergency Banking Act and the Securities Exchange Commission

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The ‘Hundred Days’ Begins• ‘Bank Holiday’ start of ‘Hundred Days’

– FDR sent 15 proposals to Congress

– Congress passed all 15

– ‘During the whole Hundred Days Congress, people didn’t know what was going on, but they knew something was happening, something good for them.’

• FDR advisor

– Every Sunday FDR used radio to broadcast his ‘fire-side chats’ explaining his programs

– March 12, 1933: first chat focused on banking

– Over 60 million Americans tuned in

– First time an American president used mass media in this way

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Fact File: The ‘Hundred Days’– 4 March: Roosevelt inaugurated

– 5 March: closed banks

– 9 March: Selected banks reopened

– 12 March: Roosevelt’s first radio ‘fire-side chat’. Encouraged Americans to put their money back into the banks. Many did so.

– 31 March: The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) set up

– 12 May: The Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) passed

– 18 May: The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) created

– 18 June The National Industrial Recovery (NIR) Act passed

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Some New Deals• Federal Emergency Relief Administration

– Tried to meet immediate needs of the poor– $500 million for soup kitchens, blankets,

nursery schools, employment schemes

• Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)– Sought to employ young men– Men signed up for six month tours of duty– Environmental projects in national parks– Most $$$ went to men’s families– Employed 2.5 million men

• Agricultural Adjustment Admin. (AAA)– Set quotas for cereals to slowly increase prices– Also helped farmers modernize, conserve soil– Extreme cases received mortgage help– Overall, very good for farmers, though

modernization had unforeseen consequence of putting more farm laborers out of work!

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Some New Deals• National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA)

set up two organizations:– Public Works Administration (PWA)

• Used gov’t $$$ to build schools, roads, dams, bridges, airports

• Vital to future growth

• Employed millions of jobs in the short term

– National Recovery Administration (NRA)• Improved industrial working conditions

• Outlawed child labor

• Defined fair wages & sensible production levels

• Sought to get $$$ in hands of workers w/o overproducing goods & causing a slump

• Voluntary, w/ incentive (display NRA symbol)

• Over 2 million employers joined

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The Tennessee Valley• Tennessee Valley touched seven states

• Great physical problems– Wet season: Tennessee River flooded

– Dry season: river reduced to trickle

– Farmland in valley was dust bowl

– Soil erosion turning valley to desert

• Great social problems– T V folks lived in poverty

– Most had no electricity

– No one state could fix problems & coordinating seven states was difficult

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FDR Signs TVA Into Law• FDR set up Tennessee Valley Authority

– Independent of states

– First goal to build dams to harness river

– Dams irrigated lands & produced electricity

– Created thousands of new jobs

• TVA still operates, producing electricity at rates below the national average

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Fact File: Achievements of the Hundred Days

• Above all, it restored confidence and stopped investors pulling money out of the banks

• Banking measures saved 20% of home owners and farmers from repossession

• Farmers were 50% better off under AAA by 1936

• TVA brought electrical power to underdeveloped areas

• Public Works Administration created 600,000 jobs and built landmarks like San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge

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A New Spirit• The Hundred Days had an immediate effect

– Restored confidence in gov’t

– Reporters traveled the country, reported new spirit seen around the country

– Historians agree that FDR’s bold & decisive action did have a marked effect on the American people

Frances PerkinsSecretary of Labor