Feb 28 Great Depression and Early New Deal
·
Please Help Us Mr. Roosevelt:
African-Americans letters to FDR another version of this document
View in
class: Mean Things Happenin’
What do
you think of the major policies of the early New Deal? What were the main
criticisms of these policies? Be able to discuss specific alternatives to Roosevelt’s
policies discussed by these critics. Pay special attention to the policies
toward farmers. Who benefited the most from the policies? How did challenges to
the New Deal arise? Discuss the views on freedom in the document, and the
challenges these writers are presenting to the government.
Indians and the New
Deal
·
A Taos Pueblo Tries to Sell the
Indian New Deal
·
A Sioux Leader Praises the Indian
Reorganization Act of 1934
·
“It Didn’t Pan Out as We Thought It
Was Going To”Amos Owen on the Indian Reorganization Act
·
A Sioux Attorney Criticizes the
Indian Reorganization Act
The Great Mass
Organizing Drives of the era
·
"The Wagner Bill is behind
you!"
·
“Right After That They Walked Out”:
Alice Wolfson Recalls the Origins of the CIO
·
“We Are Americans!”: The Homestead
Workers Issue a Declaration of Independence in 1936
·
“Susie Steno”: A Union’s View of Clerical
Workers
·
Cartoonists on the Picket Line:
The Walt Disney Studio Strike
New Deal
issues/politics
·
How did we
really get the 40 hour work week? http://www.timesizing.com/404040.htm
·
Please Help Us Mr. Roosevelt:
African-Americans letters to FDR
·
“Share the Wealth”: Huey Long
Talks to the Nation
·
“It Was a Wildly Exciting Time”:
Milton Meltzer Remembers the New Deal’s Federal Theatre Project
·
Suspicion of Subversion:
Congressional Conservatives Attack the Federal Theater Project
·
Fascist tendencies in the
1930s U.S. –“chapter 5” of this site; Note: I have not thoroughly checked
this site for accuracy.
·
Father
Coughlin speech on FDR
·
Catholic Liberal John Ryan
Denounces Father Charles Coughlin
·
FDR’s
Court Packing plan-extensive documents and lesson plan
·
The
Fair Labor Standards Act and Migratory Agricultural Workers The effects of leaving out migratory workers
from the child labor and hours provisions of the New Deal
CULTURE OF THE GREAT
DEPRESSION
·
Culture/films: -
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~1930s/home_1.html
Terrific,
loaded with materials; see excerpts of key films of the 1930s
·
Charlie Chaplin in
Historical Context =exposition of Modern Times
·
Farm Security Administration-photos
of 1930s poverty and courage -
·
American Life
Stories http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/wpaintro/wpahome.html
-- follow links to particular states, and find Chicago Life Histories:
Select from 73 Oral Histories of Chicagoans taken by the Federal Writers
Project During the Great Depression, at http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/S?ammem/wpa:@field(DOCID(@range(07020105+08050405)))
·
Every picture
tells a story: documentary photography during the Great Depression http://chnm.gmu.edu/fsa/
·
A
New Deal for the Arts –the New Deal’s contribution to national culture
·
Joe Louis Fight Against Schmelling
·
New Deal Cultural Programs:
Experiments in Cultural Democracy
Songs
·
Songs of Woody
Guthrie Songs of the Dust Bowl, labor struggles, unemployment.
·
This Land is Your
Land, original lyrics (including those you won’t sing in grade school)
·
Pretty Boy Floyd (comparing bankers to robbers)
·
Tom Joad (Ode to famous protagonist in The Grapes
of Wrath by John Steinbeck)
·
Hispano Music and Culture
of the Northern Rio Grande
·
Songs from the
Great Depression 100s of songs, including:
·
I Don’t Want Your Millions Mister by Jim
Garland
·
I Hate the Company
Bosses Sarah Ogun Gunning – a different type of “country” music
·
Northern California
Folk Songs from the 1930s
General/Reference
·
Over 400
Documents on many subjects of the Great Depression, organized by Subjects
(includes Chicago), and authors and dates
Example:
Meridel LeSeuer describes
the farm troubles of the midwest in 1934
Black Cotton Farmers and the AAA
Tillie Lerner on the 1934 Longshoremen’s
strike
Carey McWilliams on migrant workers
·
House Hearings
on the Social Security Act of 1935 http://www.ssa.gov/history/35house.html