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The Great Depression and the New Deal, 1929–1940
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Introduction
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What were the causes and consequences of the Great Depression? What characterized the politics of hard times? Who was Franklin D. Roosevelt and what were the two New Deals? How did the federal sphere expand in the West? What characterized American cultural life during the 1930s? What were the legacies and limits of New Deal reform?
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Sit-Down Strike at Flint: Automobile Workers Organize a New Union
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Flint/GM strike. Depression hard. GM resists UAW. Strikers seized plants. Community support. GM gave in. UAW recognized.
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Hard Times
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Stock prices rose. Easy credit. Market peaked, eased down. Worth 1/2. Margin buyers pay cash. Depression unseen. Chart: The Stock Market 1921–1932 Chart: The Stock Market 1921–1932
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Crash not cause. Economic flaws seen Industrial growth Up, wages static. Rich-poor gap widened.
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Manufacturers spend less Workers laid off. Bank runs No consumer demand 33% idle in ‘33. Social male role overturned. Chart: Unemployment, 1929–1945 Chart: Unemployment, 1929–1945
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Relief sources overwhelmed. Hoover vetoed aid. Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Banks saved, but no growth.
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Map: The Election of 1932 Map: The Election of 1932 Bonus Army. FDR wins.
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FDR and the First New Deal
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FDR privileged. Polio. 2-term governor: reformer “brain trust”
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Four-day “bank holiday.” Fireside chats. Congress passed bank laws.
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“Hundred days” session. Revive industry. Revive agriculture. Emergency relief.
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Left Turn and the Second New Deal
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Socialistic. Too timid including: Upton Sinclair. Francis Townsend. Huey Long. Strikes demonstrations
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FDR shifted leftward.
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Committee for Industrial Organization. John Lewis organizes. Flint GM success led to victories. Reinvigorated labor movement.
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FDR reelected 1936. His supporters included: traditional white southern Democrats big-city political machines trade unionists depression-hit farmers ethnic voters
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The New Deal in the South and West
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1930, Southern land ownership. The Agricultural Adjustment Administration. Subsidies helped owners/hurt workers. Migration.
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Map: The Dust Bowl Map: The Dust Bowl The Dust Bowl.
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Soil Conservation Service. AAA. “Okies.” Aggressive deportation.
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Map: The New Deal and Water Map: The New Deal and Water Water projects. urban growth , agricultural expansion massive irrigation. Flood control. Low-cost electricity. Consequence: a few farmers rich. Mexicans got low wages. Environment declined..
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Harmful practices reformed. Indian Reorganization Act. Some tribes rejected IRA. Bureau of Indian Affairs: restore tribal rights. Restore cultural rights.
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Depression-Era Culture
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American culture. New Deal’s Federal Project No. 1: artists and intellectuals. The Federal Writers Project theatrical performances orchestra tours new compositions new art
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“Documentary impulse”. Farm Security Administration photographers. John Steinbeck portrayed Okies.
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Marxist analysis influenced writers. Communists’ “popular front”.
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Movies an enjoyable escape. Hollywood social issues. Walt Disney’s cartoons. Frank Capra’s comedies.
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Vaudeville, minstrel comedy shows. Soap operas. Network news.
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Radio popularized jazz. Benny Goodman. Popularized African-American music. Swing era.
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The Limits of Reform
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1937, New Deal in retreat. SCOTUS overturned key New Deal programs. FDR asked for judges. New Dealers feared FDRs motives. FDR gets judges—at a cost.
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New Deal affected women. Women gain influence. Eleanor Roosevelt. Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins. Women gain roles in society.
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No new deal for minorities. Lower wages for black. Blacks unprotected. FDR banned WPA discrimination. 1936, black voters supported Democrats. Little help to Mexicans and Mexican Americans.
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1937, FDR federal deficit too large. Spending cut. Severe recession. Increased unemployment. Weakened New Deal support. 1938 elections increased GOP. Further reforms nearly impossible.
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