Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal Explained — Fexingo History

FDR's Rural Electrification Administration: Lighting Up the Countryside

7 min · 5 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio FDR's Rural Electrification Administration: Lighting Up the Countryside

Descripción

In this episode of FDR and the New Deal Explained, Lucas and Luna explore the story of the Rural Electrification Administration — a New Deal program that brought electric power to millions of farm families who had been living in the dark. Before the REA, fewer than 10 percent of American farms had electricity. Private utility companies considered rural areas unprofitable and refused to extend power lines. The REA, created by executive order in 1935 and later strengthened by the Rural Electrification Act of 1936, provided low-cost loans for cooperatives to build their own power systems. Lucas tells the story of the struggle for rural electrification, from the early efforts of Morris Llewellyn Cooke, the REA's first administrator, to the grassroots organizing that led to the formation of thousands of electric cooperatives. Along the way, the episode examines the impact on rural life — how electricity transformed farm work, education, and leisure. It also touches on the political battles with private utilities like Commonwealth & Southern and the role of Senator George W. Norris, the 'father of the TVA'. This is a story of infrastructure, democracy, and the power of collective action. #RuralElectrificationAdministration #NewDeal #FDR #MorrisLlewellynCooke #GeorgeNorris #ElectricCooperatives #RuralAmerica #Electrification #Infrastructure #TennesseeValleyAuthority #CommonwealthAndSouthern #FarmLife #1930s #PublicPower #Cooperative #History #FexingoHistory #NorthAmerica Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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157 episodios

Portada del episodio FDR's Soil Soldiers: The Civilian Conservation Corps

FDR's Soil Soldiers: The Civilian Conservation Corps

In the spring of 1933, with unemployment at 25% and millions of young men wandering the country, Franklin Roosevelt launched one of the most popular New Deal programs: the Civilian Conservation Corps. This episode traces the CCC from its breakneck creation—within 37 days of FDR's inauguration—to the work camps that dotted the American landscape. We follow the 'soil soldiers' into the national forests and parks, where they planted over 2 billion trees, built trails and fire towers, and fought soil erosion. But the CCC was more than a reforestation army. It was a social experiment: remaking unemployed, often malnourished boys into disciplined workers, while sending $25 of their $30 monthly pay home to families. We look at the program's quasi-military structure, the role of the Army and the Forest Service, and the unexpected cultural encounters when city kids from the Northeast bunked alongside rural southerners. We also confront the program's limits: segregation of Black enrollees, exclusion of women, and the quiet tension between conservation goals and the speed demanded by economic crisis. By 1942, the CCC had enrolled 3 million men. It shaped a generation's relationship with the land—and left physical traces we still walk on today. #FDR #NewDeal #CivilianConservationCorps #CCC #RobertFechner #GreatDepression #Conservation #NationalParks #TreePlanting #SoilErosion #GreenNewDeal #FiresideChats #AmericanHistory #NorthAmerica #20thCentury #PublicWorks #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

15 de jul de 20268 min
Portada del episodio FDR's Court-Packing Plan: The Inside Story of 1937

FDR's Court-Packing Plan: The Inside Story of 1937

In February 1937, FDR proposed a bombshell bill to expand the Supreme Court — adding up to six new justices. To his critics, it was a power grab; to his allies, a necessary check on judicial obstruction. But the so-called 'court-packing' plan backfired spectacularly, fracturing the New Deal coalition and handing ammunition to opponents. Roosevelt never got his extra seats. Yet in a stunning twist, the Court itself began upholding New Deal laws anyway — in the 'switch in time that saved nine.' This episode unpacks the political drama inside the White House, Congress, and the marble halls of the Court. We follow the secret negotiations, the defiant opposition from Democrats like Burton Wheeler, the strategic silence of Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, and the unexpected retirement of Justice Willis Van Devanter. Learn how FDR's biggest political blunder inadvertently secured the New Deal's future — and why the episode still haunts debates over judicial reform today. #NewDeal #SupremeCourt #FDR #CourtPacking1937 #JudicialReform #CharlesEvansHughes #BurtonWheeler #WillisVanDevanter #SwitchInTime #FranklinDRoosevelt #USHistory #GreatDepression #FexingoHistory #NewDealCoalition #JudicialProceduralReformBill #DemocraticParty #1930s #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

15 de jul de 20266 min
Portada del episodio FDR's Good Neighbor: Latin America and the New Deal

FDR's Good Neighbor: Latin America and the New Deal

In episode 155 of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore a lesser-known dimension of Franklin Roosevelt's presidency: the Good Neighbor Policy. While the New Deal reshaped America's domestic landscape, FDR simultaneously pursued a radical shift in U.S. foreign relations with Latin America. This episode focuses on the 1933 Montevideo Conference, the abrogation of the Platt Amendment, and the 1936 Buenos Aires Conference for the Maintenance of Peace. It also examines the tension between rhetoric and reality—particularly during the 1938 Mexican oil expropriation and the subsequent U.S. response under Secretary of State Cordell Hull. Learn about the roles of Sumner Welles, Nelson Rockefeller, and the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs. Did the Good Neighbor Policy truly mark a new era of cooperation, or was it a strategic move to secure hemispheric stability amid rising fascism? This episode unpacks the contradictions and lasting legacy of FDR's vision for the Americas. #FDR #GoodNeighborPolicy #LatinAmerica #MontevideoConference #PlattAmendment #BuenosAiresConference #MexicanOilExpropriation #CordellHull #SumnerWelles #NelsonRockefeller #PanAmericanism #1930s #NewDeal #USForeignPolicy #NonIntervention #History #FexingoHistory #FranklinRoosevelt Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer5 min
Portada del episodio FDR's Labor Battles: The Wagner Act and the Birth of the NLRB

FDR's Labor Battles: The Wagner Act and the Birth of the NLRB

Before the National Labor Relations Board, American workers had no federally protected right to organize. This episode traces the fight for the Wagner Act of 1935 — from the bloody 1934 strikes that shocked the nation, to the Senate testimony of a young Robert F. Wagner, to the Supreme Court's dramatic 1937 validation in NLRB v. Jones & Laughlin. We explore the role of Senator Wagner's labor allies, the opposition from the American Liberty League, and how the act reshaped the balance of power between capital and labor. Lucas and Luna also discuss the act's limits — who was excluded and why — and the early challenges the NLRB faced in enforcing its mandate. A story of collective action, legal ingenuity, and the messy birth of modern labor law. #WagnerAct #NLRB #RobertFWagner #NationalLaborRelationsAct #NLRA #NewDeal #LaborHistory #FDR #1930s #FranklinRoosevelt #AmericanHistory #SenatorWagner #LaborStrikes #1934Strikes #SupremeCourt #JonesAndLaughlin #CollectiveBargaining #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
Portada del episodio Inside FDRs Resettlement Administration Greenbelt Towns

Inside FDRs Resettlement Administration Greenbelt Towns

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna dive into one of the New Deal's most ambitious experiments: the Greenbelt Towns program, run by the Resettlement Administration under Rexford Tugwell. They explore how the RA planned three model suburbs—Greenbelt, Maryland; Greenhills, Ohio; and Greendale, Wisconsin—designed to combine the best of city and country living while providing affordable housing for low-income families. Lucas explains the visionary but controversial ideas behind the program, including the use of greenbelts, limited-access roads, and cooperative stores. He also discusses the fierce opposition from real estate lobbies and conservative politicians, who labeled the towns 'socialistic.' The episode covers the challenges of construction, the strict tenant selection process, and the eventual fate of the towns after Tugwell left the RA and Congress defunded further development. Luna asks about the daily lives of residents and the legacy of these planned communities. The conversation also touches on the broader context of the Resettlement Administration's other programs, including rural resettlement and the famous documentary photography of the Farm Security Administration. This is a detailed look at how the New Deal tried to reshape American living. #NewDeal #FDR #ResettlementAdministration #GreenbeltTowns #GreenbeltMaryland #GreenhillsOhio #GreendaleWisconsin #RexfordTugwell #PlannedCommunities #PublicHousing #NewDealHistory #GreatDepression #UrbanPlanning #CooperativeMovement #WPA #Architecture #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

13 de jul de 202611 min