- Introduction: 1929
- Prosperity and Optimism
- The Stock Market Crash
- The Great Depression
- The Economy in Free-Fall
- The Sources of Disaster
- Weak banking system
- Unequal distribution of wealth and income
- The timing of the downturn
- Economic orthodoxies
- Portraits in Gray
- Uneven impact
- The under- and unemployed
- Farmers
- The Dust Bowl
- Causes
- Consequences
- The Middle and Upper Classes
- Declining standard of living for many
- Taking advantage of the downturn
- Herbert Hoover: The Engineer as President
- Response to the Depression
- Intervention by persuasion
- Embrace of an old orthodoxy
- Rejection of federal relief for the
unemployed
- Declining Popularity
- The Bonus Army
- The Election of 1932
- Rejection of Hoover
- Rejection of Progressive approach to reform
- Franklin D. Roosevelt: The First Term
- FDR: The Politician
- Biography
- Political style and philosophy
- Personality and temperament
- The First Hundred Days
- Inaugural address
- Initial steps
- addressing the banking crisis
- Economy Act
- ending Prohibition
- Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)
- Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
- Banking regulations
- refinancing mortgages
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC)
- Glass-Steagall Act
- Aiding the unemployed
- Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
- Federal Emergency Relief Administration
(FERA)
- National Industrial Recovery Act
- provisions
- political compromise
- Ending the gold standard
- The First Two Years
- Assessing the First Hundred Days
- Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)
- National Recovery Administration (NRA)
- Growing criticism of the New Deal
- conservatives and the American Liberty
League
- progressives
- Elections of 1934
- Democratic gains in Congress
- Upton Sinclair and End Poverty in
California (EPIC)
- Stirrings on the Left
- Socialists
- Communists
- strikes of 1934
- Father Charles Coughlin
- Dr. Francis Townsend
- Huey Long
- public opinion shifts left
- The Second Hundred Days
- Schechter Poultry v. the U.S.
- Aid for the jobless
- inadequacy of early initiatives
- Works Projects Administration (WPA)
- Wagner Act
- Social Security Act
- unemployment insurance
- pensions for the elderly
- relief to mothers of dependent children
- Rural electrification
- Rural Electrification Administration
- major dam projects
- The Election of 1936
- FDR’s campaign strategy
- FDR’s landslide victory
- Reshaping the nation’s political landscape
- Labor Rising
- The emergence of the Congress of Industrial
Organizations (CIO)
- the limitations of craft unions
- John Lewis’s vision
- Initial victory
- targeting General Motors
- the sit-down strike
- public sympathy
- The movement spreads
- measures of success
- reasons for success
- Roosevelt’s Second Term
- Taking Aim at the Supreme Court
- The Court’s threat to the New Deal
- FDR’s Court-packing scheme
- Reaction
- The Court’s shift
- The Ebbing of Reform
- Emergence of conservative opposition in
Congress
- Southern Democrats and New Deal policies on
race
- Midterm elections of 1938
- Economic downturn of 1937
- The Keynesian diagnosis
- The Social Fabric
- Demographics
- Declining birth rate
- Declining death rate
- Immigration slowdown
- Higher rates of education
- Cultural Trends
- Advances in Science and Technology
- Cyclotrons
- Commercial aviation
- Ground transportation
- Agriculture
- Muddling Through
- Achievements of the New Deal
- Role of the federal government
- New constituencies
- The social compact
- Limitations of the New Deal
- Race
- Distribution of economic power
- Charting a "Middle Course"