During the Great Depression, American people faced a lot of challenges but there were programs that somewhat helped them. The Great Depression began once there was a huge collapse of many of the stock markets. This made people have a lot of fear and face many challenges with the economy. Many businesses and people failed completely. Those who were rich were so lucky because they had enough money to survive. The New Deal was a series of social programs created between 1933 and 1938. Many of those programs included laws passed by the Congress and the presidential orders. The New Deal was justified because many programs helped families by applying jobs for them, but it was somewhat unjustified because it wasn’t able to end the Great Depression. …show more content…
The Works Progress Administration open up to many of the families during the Great Depression. Document 4, A Letter Supporting the W.P.A. , is a letter written for President Roosevelt to talk about the Works Progress Administration program. Workers of Battle Creek were very thankful for having this program because they were able to work and receive income. They wanted to continue with this program because it helped them improve a lot by working hard and not just receiving money without doing anything. People were also feeling positive because they were earning money for their own living. Document 4 also states, “ Please continue this W.P.A. program. It makes us feel like an American citizen to earn our own living.” People have notice how the W.P.A. program has helped them and want to continue working with it. It has helped many people survive. People would rather be doing something, such as working for their families, than just being home not doing anything. They have noticed how helpful this program is and are very thankful and hope to continue working with it. New Deal programs helped society by providing things that they needed to make their lives easier.
Document 8, The New Deal in Review, by The New Republic talks about how the New Deal has helped them in many ways. It has helped them in many ways because it was able to expand jobs for people who couldn’t work for many reasons. Giving out jobs maintain the nation in good hands because they build schools for children. The New Deal was able to develop many programs for those who needed them. It was such a good idea to have these programs because it helped many families and gave them opportunities. The opportunities that they had were having a job, insurance, and having schools. Document 8, also states, “It work projects have added immeasurably to the nation’s wealth; in some regions the school, health and recreation facilities it has called into existence have fairly revolutionized communal life”.The New Deal programs had made people’s lives easier. They have improved a lot by building schools for children. Families helped the nation by making it better with the economy because of the jobs they had. Those who didn’t have a job were able to survive after suffering a lot. People are very thankful and the programs have become very common to
them. Even though, the New Deal helped most of the people many African Americans still found their lives complicated. Document 9, African Americans and the New Deal, explains how African Americans were feeling unworthy.White men seem to have more power than the African Americans just because of the type of person they were. The white people had the right to have a higher minimum wage while those who were colored people had a lower minimum wage. Having a lower minimum wage didn’t help them improve in anything. The program NRA was supposed to protect workers against the rapacity of unscrupulous industrialists but it wasn’t actually helping anyone. Document 9, also states, “ The Industrial wage earners are overwhelmingly white”. This quote is saying how those who receive a higher wage are mostly white people. African Americans didn’t find this fair because everyone was working hard but weren’t earning the same amount of money. White people seemed to have more power than them. The New Deal was able to open up to many people but didn’t fully help them out. The programs that were created were able to make people’s lives easier by offering jobs to them but it wasn’t that helpful because they weren’t able to get over the Great Depression.The programs that were created offered many resources and jobs. It was very important to have these types of programs because it helped families and also the nation. Building schools and have health insurance for unemployment people was such a good opportunity for the society. People began to feel more comfortable and happy by having these things. Having these programs helped them survive and actually feel like they had an easier life than before. Even though, they had all these programs African Americans were still feeling less. The white people manage to have more power by having a higher minimum wage. It is very important to have equal minimum wages for everyone because everyone works hard and have responsibilities.Till today, we still live in a society feel of discrimination based on race and who they are. We have many programs opened for everyone but also have programs and resources that do not provide for everyone in the world. Many of the programs that we have today have improved a lot by creating more opportunities for those who actually need it.
The era of the Great Depression was by far the worst shape the United States had ever been in, both economically and physically. Franklin Roosevelt was elected in 1932 and began to bring relief with his New Deal. In his first 100 days as President, sixteen pieces of legislation were passed by Congress, the most to be passed in a short amount of time. Roosevelt was re-elected twice, and quickly gained the trust of the American people. Many of the New Deal policies helped the United States economy greatly, but some did not. One particularly contradictory act was the Agricultural Adjustment Act, which was later declared unconstitutional by Congress. Many things also stayed very consistent in the New Deal. For example, the Civilian Conservation Corps, and Social Security, since Americans were looking for any help they could get, these acts weren't seen as a detrimental at first. Overall, Roosevelt's New Deal was a success, but it also hit its stumbling points.
In 1929, the stock market crashed, bringing great ruin to our country. The result, the Great Depression, was a time of hardship for everyone around the world. The economy in the US was lower than ever and people were suffering immensely. During these trying times, two presidents served- Herbert Hoover and Franklin Delano Roosevelt (F.D.R.) Both had different views on how the depression should be handled, with Hoover believing that the people could solve the issue themselves with no government involvement, and with F.D.R. believing that the government should work for their people in such difficult times.
Coming into the 1930’s, the United States underwent a severe economic recession, referred to as the Great Depression. Resulting in high unemployment and poverty rates, deflation, and an unstable economy, the Great Depression considerably hindered American society. In 1932, Franklin Roosevelt was nominated to succeed the spot of presidency, making his main priority to revamp and rebuild the United States, telling American citizens “I pledge you, I pledge myself, to a new deal for the American people," (“New” 2). The purpose of the New Deal was to expand the Federal Government, implementing authority over big businesses, the banking system, the stock market, and agricultural production. Through the New Deal, acts were passed to stimulate the economy, aid banks, alleviate environmental problems, eliminate poverty, and create a stronger central government (“New”1).
this was not to be the case, as he would find out in the oncoming
The Great Depression of 1929 to 1940 began and centered in the United States, but spread quickly throughout the industrial world. The economic catastrophe and its impact defied the description of the grim words that described the Great Depression. This was a severe blow to the United States economy. President Roosevelt’s New Deal is what helped reshape the economy and even the structure of the United States. The programs that the New Deal had helped employ and gave financial security to several Americans. The New Deals programs would prove to be effective and beneficial to the American society.
In his presidential acceptance speech in 1932, Franklin D. Roosevelt addressed to the citizens of the United States, “I pledge you, I pledge myself, to a new deal for the American people.” The New Deal, beginning in 1933, was a series of federal programs designed to provide relief, recovery, and reform to the fragile nation. The U.S. had been both economically and psychologically buffeted by the Great Depression. Many citizens looked up to FDR and his New Deal for help. However, there is much skepticism and controversy on whether these work projects significantly abated the dangerously high employment rates and pulled the U.S. out of the Great Depression. The New Deal was a bad deal for America because it only provided opportunities for a few and required too much government spending.
The Great Depression was one of America’s most trying times. It was the dark time following the good times of the Roaring Twenties. The Great Depression lasted from 1929 to the United States entry into World War II in 1941. The cause of the Depression was the panicked rush to get money out of the banks when the market crashed. When President Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected he created the New Deals to fight the Depression. It focused on relief, recovery and reform, setting out to fix the damage. Many people lost their jobs after the crash and were quickly losing their homes. Both of the New Deals had different programs to help America get back on its feet. Even though it wasn't a complete success, the New Deal did more good than bad because it significantly lowered unemployment rates, helped the Native Americans and helped feed millions of undernourished children. (Woodward, 4)
After the depression America was in a state mass hysteria as the Wall Street crash had caused a massive crisis among the American public because the impact of the wall street crash caused 12 million people out of work, it also caused 20,000 companies to go bankrupt and there were 23,000 suicides in one year because of the wall street crash this was the highest amount of suicides in a year ever. The main aims of the new deal were Relief, Recovery and Reform, Relief was for the Homeless and Unemployed, recovery was for Industry, Agriculture and Banks and Reform was to prevent the depression form happening again. The structure of The New Deal was the First Hundred Days (1933) where he would focus on relief by helping the homeless and unemployed and recovery by helping industry, agriculture and banks, there was also the Second New Deal where he would focus on Reform, preventing the depression from happening again. Roosevelt believed that the government should help those people worst affected by the depression, this is why he created over 50 alphabet agencies to deal with the problems caused by the depression, this is why he introduced the new deal because he wanted to ease the pressure
The New Deal was a set of acts that effectively gave Americans a new sense of hope after the Great Depression. The New Deal advocated for women’s rights, worked towards ending discrimination in the workplace, offered various jobs to African Americans, and employed millions through new relief programs. Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) made it his duty to ensure that something was being done. This helped restore the public's confidence and showed that relief was possible. The New Deal helped serve America’s interests, specifically helping women, African Americans, and the unemployed and proved to them that something was being done to help them.
Essentially, the New Deal did not work to include and employ as many people as it could or should have, even excluding major population types from any possible benefit from the programs. It failed to provide hard-working citizens with a steady job and food to eat. This question of whether or not the New Deal was a success has a substantial significance. If any country goes into a economic collapse like one of the Great Depression, one could use America’s experience as an example as to what steps should or should not be taken though such a time. Afterall, the importance of studying history is to learn from mistakes made in the
In response to the Great Depression, the New Deal was a series of efforts put forth by Franklin D. Roosevelt during his first term as United States’ President. The Great Depression was a cataclysmic economic event starting in the late 1920s that had an international effect. Starting in 1929 the economy started to contract, but it wasn’t until Wall Street started to crash that the pace quickened and its effects were being felt worldwide. What followed was nearly a decade of high unemployment, extreme poverty, and an uncertainty that the economy would ever recover.
In 1932, after Franklin Delano Roosevelt accepted the Democratic nomination for presidency, running against Republican president, Herbert Hoover, he promised a “New Deal” to the American people. This New Deal’s sole purpose was to deal with the economic hardships caused by the Great Depression, as well as to help and improve the lives of the millions of Americans who had been affected. Roosevelt was swept into office in a landslide. In his inaugural address, Roosevelt brought a sense of hope to a vast majority of dispirited Americans, assuring them that they had “nothing to fear, but fear itself.” On March 5, 1933, just one day after his inauguration, Roosevelt began to implement his New Deal, beginning his focus on the failing banking
...onger had any savings left to live off of. The New Deal program enhanced the lives of Americans during the Great Depression and changed the role of the federal government. Most historians agree that the New Deal was what helped alleviate many of the problems during the Great Depression and has been said to have ended the Great Depression.
The most benefited policies created through the New Deal for employment, one, the Social Security Act (1935), provides “old-aged pensions and unemployment insurance. A payroll tax on workers and their employers were created a fund from which retirees received monthly pensions after age sixty-five.” (pg 470 Out of Many) Second, National Labor Relations Act (1935), also known as the Wagner Act, gave Americans the right to form a union and bargain with their employers for better pay and working conditions. Third, and the most important one of all Fair Labor Standard Act (1938), it established a minimum wage and maximum hours for an employee.
In the 1930’s, the United States fell into a great depression because of a major stock market crash that destroyed the economy for many years. When the 1933 election came, a new president was elected; Franklin Delano Roosevelt. His plan was to create a New Deal to solve the Nation’s problems. This New Deal relieved much economic troubles in the country, gave faith to American citizens in the United States’ banking system, and gave jobs to millions of people unemployed by the crash. Without President Roosevelt’s actions, the road to the nation’s recovery would be much longer.