Title: THE NEW DEAL: 1933-1941
1THE NEW DEAL 1933-1941
2THE HUNDRED DAYS
- VIDEO FDRs Inauguration
- As Roosevelts inauguration approached, the
banking system collapsed many states declared a
bank holiday to avoid a total panic - Prohibition ended with the 21st Amendment
- The Economy Act cut federal salaries by 15 and
cut some veterans benefits - A new banking plan was devised, which Roosevelt
explained during several fireside chats
people loved him - The FDIC was formed to guarantee bank deposits,
and more control was given the Federal Reserve
Board over investment and commercial banking - The Federal Securities Act required full
financial disclosure
3THE NATIONAL RECOVERY ADMINISTRATION
- To help solve unemployment, the Civilian
Conservation Corps (CCC) was formed to give jobs
to men 18-25 in reforestation and other
conservation projects - To stimulate industry, the National Industrial
Recovery Act was passed this allowed
manufacturers to create fair business practices,
raise prices and limit production, and protected
workers with minimum wages and maximum hours and
guaranteed them the right to organize - This had the effect of increasing the size of
unions, but many large manufacturers raised
prices and limited production without hiring more
workers
4THE AGRICULTURAL ADJUSTMENT ADMINISTRATION
- Designed to stimulate agriculture, these laws
provided government subsidies to not grow or
raise anything initially millions of acres of
cotton were plowed up and millions of pigs were
slaughtered eventually prices did go up for
most farmers but cattlemen, dairy farmers and
railroads were all hurt, as well as consumers - It also hurt many sharecroppers an tenant farmers
who lost their livelihoods when lands were taken
out of production
5THE DUST BOWL
- Midwestern farmers had perfected dry farming
techniques dragging, plowing deeply, and
constantly raking to remove weeds in order to
absorb more water quickly - In 1933-34 heavy storms and winds blew away
much of the loosened topsoil many died of dust
pneumonia - Over 30 of crops in N Dakota, S Dakota, Kansas,
Nebraska, and Oklahoma failed - 2 years later another drought came tens of
thousands abandoned their farms
6(No Transcript)
7THE NEW DEAL SPIRIT
- Most labeled the New Deal a solid success
- Roosevelt brought new energy and optimism to the
White House and the administration - Roosevelt was willing to try just about anything
and his New Deal agencies were full of bright
minds with many ideas - Populist tradition, nationalism, progressivism,
Wilsonianism, FDR used it all
8THE UNEMPLOYED
- In 1934, at least 9 million Americans were out of
work many were in real trouble - 1933 (FERA) Federal Emergency Relief
Administration gets 500 million - (CWA) Civil Works Administration puts 4 million
people to work building and repairing roads and
public buildings, teaching, and many other tasks
thousands of these were refurbished - 1935 (WPA) Works Progress Administration found
jobs for 8.5 million people by 1943
9DEPRESSION LITERATURE
- John Dos Passos - USA
- John Steinbeck Grapes of Wrath
- William Faulkner The Sound and the Fury
- Depression era writers were pessimistic
10THREE EXTREMISTSLONG, COUGHLIN, TOWNSEND
- Huey Long Louisiana Senator
- Share our Wealth confiscate family fortunes
over 5 million, 100 tax incomes over 1
million, all to buy each family a homestead and
provide an small income, provide veterans
pensions, and educational benefits
11THREE EXTREMISTSLONG, COUGHLIN, TOWNSEND
- Father Charles E. Coughlin the Radio Priest
- National Union for Social Justice
- Wanted to inflate the currency
- Attacked bankers, New Deal planners, FDRs farm
programs, and alleged sympathy for communists and
Jews
12THREE EXTREMISTSLONG, COUGHLIN, TOWNSEND
- Dr. Francis E. Townsend
- old-age revolving pensions
- Pay every person 60 and over 200 per month
which they were required to spend (stimulating
the economy) and they could not work
13THE SECOND NEW DEAL
- The Depression was not over conservatives began
denouncing Roosevelt and extremists were taking
some of his support yet many saw the partial
success and wanted more reforms even though some
of them had been declared unconstitutional - National Labor Relations Act restored labor
guarantees and the right of collective bargaining - National Labor Relations Board supervised plant
elections and enforced good faith bargaining
14THE SECOND NEW DEAL
- Social Security Act set up old-age insurance
financed partly by employers and employees - Rural Electrification Administration lent low
cost money to farmers and rural areas wanting
electricity only 1 farm in 10 had it - Wealth Tax Act raised taxes on large incomes,
increased estate taxes and corporate taxes - John Maynard Keynes British economist who
believed that government should deliberately
unbalance their budgets and spend heavily to
stimulate consumption Roosevelt disagreed but
essentially did exactly that - Roosevelt swept back into office in 1936 46
states
15ROOSEVELT TRIES TO UNDERMINE THE SUPREME COURT
- During his first term, the Supreme Court refused
to increase the scope of federal authority to
deal with the crisis only 3 of the 9 justices
were for Roosevelts New Deal policies and many
of the original New Deal policies were overturned
The Wagner Act and Social Security Act seemed
about to be - Roosevelt tried to manipulate the court by
proposing that at age 70 they could retire with
full pay if they chose not to, then he could
appoint additional justices, up to 6,to help
lighten their burden this was a clear case of
court packing and it met serious resistance in
Congress, the press and the justices themselves
16(No Transcript)
17THE NEW DEAL WINDS DOWN
- A series of social and economic changes affected
the New Deal policies - Several sit-down strikes got the attention of
business and wages rose and a 40 hour work week
was agreed to - On the other hand, the aggressive union behavior
caused many people to lose their taste for
immediate reform
18THE NEW DEAL WINDS DOWN
- As the economic situation improved, in 1937
Roosevelt cut back sharply on government
spending, sending the economy spiraling down
again stock prices plummeted, unemployment rose
by 2 million, and production slumped - Finally after several months he agreed to deficit
spend and the economy began to recover but his
reputation took a big hit - While new AAA programs and the Fair Labor
Standards Act passed, many were now backing away
from Roosevelt Republicans gained several seats
in the 1938 elections
19SIGNIFICANCE OF THE NEW DEAL
- Government was now larger than ever
- Trends were set in motion that seemed to threaten
the balance of power - Citizens began recognizing that the government
should accept responsibility for the national
welfare - Many areas previously unregulated came under the
government eye the stock exchange, agriculture,
labor relations, old-age pensions, relief for the
needy - Precedent was established for the government to
act swiftly to prevent future depression of this
magnitude
20WOMEN AS NEW DEALERSTHE NETWORK
- Partly due to the influence of Eleanor Roosevelt,
the administration employed far more women in
important positions than any earlier one the
first female cabinet member was Secretary of
Labor Frances Perkins - Eleanor headed an informal network of key women
who were seeking to place reform minded women in
important government posts - Eleanor was an important civil rights activist
particularly for the cause blacks obtaining
better treatment
21(No Transcript)
22BLACKS DURING THE NEW DEAL
- Many blacks became Democrats during the
Depression - Roosevelt did nothing about civil rights before
1941 and little after - However, New Deal efforts brought them some
relief and hope as well even as segregation
continued and many were excluded because they
were farm workers - There were several high ranking blacks in the
administration Charles Foreman, special
assistant to the Secretary of the Interior, Mary
Bethune, head of the Division of Negro Affairs in
the National Youth Administration, William Hastie
these formed a black cabinet that lobbied on
behalf of blacks
23(No Transcript)
24A NEW DEAL FOR INDIANS
- In 1924 Indians had finally been granted
citizenship but they were still treated as wards
of the state Indians still resisted
assimilation - John Collier was named commissioner of Indian
Affairs and immediately tried to help the
Indians were affected by the Depression too - Congress passed the Indian Reorganization Act
which did away with the allotment system and
encouraged the Indians to reform tribal
governments some of the land lost by the Dawes
allotment system returned to tribal control
25THE TRIUMPH OF ISOLATIONISM
- Roosevelt was an internationalist, but like most
leaders, internal problems dominated politics
during the 30s - Secretary of State Stimson worked for an arms
embargo law to be applied by the president to
aggressor nations it was jumped by
isolationists and modified to embargo al
belligerents the measure died in congress - The Nye investigation into WWI arms manufacturers
revealed that their profits soared during the war
though they made far more during neutrality
than actual war Nye convinced many Americans
that the bankers and merchants of death forced
us to war and that mistake should never happen
again
26THE TRIUMPH OF ISOLATIONISM
- Walter Millis published The Road to War America,
1914-1917 and convinced readers that British
propaganda, heavy supply purchases from the
Allies, and Wilsons reactions to violations by
Great Britain and Germany caused us to go to war - As Germany, Italy, and Japan were resorting to
force to expand their influence, Congress passes
a series of neutrality acts designed to keep the
United States out of another war - Americans were overwhelmingly in favor of such
acts
27WAR AGAIN IN EUROPE
- Roosevelt increasingly felt that resisting
aggression was more important than keeping out of
the war, though many didnt agree - March 1938 Germany annexed Austria Jews were
being persecuted but the America public refused
to change immigration laws - September 1938 Hitler demands the Sudetenland
from Czechoslovakia Britain and France agree - March 1939 Hitler seizes the rest of
Czechoslovakia Roosevelt speaks out a calls for
methods short of war to check the fascists - Spring 1939 Hitler demanded parts of Poland and
Italy invaded Albania, Roosevelt called for the
repeal of the neutrality acts so we could sell
arms to Britain and France - August 1939 Germany and the Soviet Union sign a
nonaggression pact, Hitler invades Poland,
Britain and France Declare war
28(No Transcript)
29(No Transcript)
30WAR AGAIN IN EUROPE
- Cash and Carry Congress allows the sale of arms
to the allies on a cash only basis, in their own
ships - After the attack on Poland, preventing a Nazi
victory became the objective of many citizens
finally coming in line with Roosevelts thinking - By June 22, 1939, Germany had used blitzkrieg
tactics and had control of Belgium, The
Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, and France
Britain stood alone against Hitler
31WAR AGAIN IN EUROPE
- The Manhattan Project reacting to reports about
Hitler working on an atomic bomb, Roosevelt
appropriated money to begin a project here in the
US - He sold surplus arms to Britain and France
- In 1940 he asked Congress to appropriate 4
billion for national defense - When Britain asked to buy older American
destroyers, Roosevelt traded them for bases in
the Caribbean (He could not sell them or he would
violate various laws) - September 1940 Congress drafted 1.2 million for
1 year of service and 800,000 reservists were
called up - That same month, Japan signed a mutual assistance
treaty with Germany and Italy and together they
became the Axis Powers now it was a true global
war
32A THIRD TERM FOR FDR
- Breaking tradition because of such extreme
circumstances, and because there was really no
other Democratic candidate, he ran again - Roosevelt raised the ire of Republicans and
isolationists alike however, their candidate
had trouble finding issues to fight Roosevelt
with the economy was beginning to come to life,
and he seemed to have a grip on the war situation - FDR won easily 449-82
33THE UNDECLARED WAR
- Roosevelts election caused him to act even more
boldly - As the British were running out of money and cash
and carry would no longer work, he decided to
provide whatever they needed and devised the
lend-lease program and went on the radio in more
fireside chats explaining the need for the war
effort and that supporting Britain was a form of
self-defense - In 1941 the Lend-Lease Act gave Roosevelt 7
billion worth of war materials the he could sell,
lend, lease, exchange, or transfer to any country
whose defense he deemed important
34THE UNDECLARED WAR
- The US Navy began patrolling the North Atlantic
reporting the positions of German submarines to
the British - April 1941 US forces occupied Greenland and
Roosevelt declared an unlimited national
emergency - When Hitler invaded Russia in June, 1 billion of
lend-lease aid was provided the them - August 1941 the draft was extended by 1 vote
- After the Greer was attacked Roosevelt declared
German U-Boats as the rattlesnakes of the
Atlantic and ordered them shot on sight - September, Congress allowed the arming of
merchant vessels and the carrying of cargoes to
allied ports