Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal Explained — Fexingo History

FDR's Dust Bowl: The Great Plains and the New Deal Response

6 min · 6 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio FDR's Dust Bowl: The Great Plains and the New Deal Response

Descripción

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal response to the Dust Bowl, the worst environmental disaster in American history. They focus on the Shelterbelt Project, a massive tree-planting program initiated in 1934 to combat soil erosion and wind on the Great Plains. Learn about the vision of foresters like Raphael Zon and the practical challenges of planting 220 million trees across the Plains from Canada to Texas. The episode also covers the creation of the Soil Conservation Service under Hugh Hammond Bennett, the passage of the Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act of 1936, and the controversial Resettlement Administration's efforts to buy out failing farms and relocate families, including the creation of the Woodlake project in Texas. Lucas and Luna discuss how the New Deal attempted to heal both the land and its people, the limitations of these programs, and the legacy of environmental conservation in federal policy. The conversation touches on the politics of conservation, the role of state and local resistance, and the long-term ecological changes that reshaped the Plains. #DustBowl #NewDeal #FDR #ShelterbeltProject #SoilConservationService #HughHammondBennett #RaphaelZon #GreatPlains #ResettlementAdministration #Woodlake #EnvironmentalHistory #SoilConservation #1930s #Farmers #Drought #History #FexingoHistory #NorthAmerica Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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160 episodios

episode FDR's Unsung Hero: Marriner Eccles and the New Deal Economy artwork

FDR's Unsung Hero: Marriner Eccles and the New Deal Economy

In this episode of Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal Explained, hosts Lucas and Luna explore the overlooked but crucial role of Marriner Eccles in shaping New Deal economic policy. From his early days as a Utah banker during the Great Depression to his appointment as Federal Reserve Board chairman in 1934, Eccles challenged laissez-faire orthodoxy and championed deficit spending, wage growth, and consumer purchasing power as keys to recovery. Lucas recounts how Eccles' radical ideas influenced the Banking Act of 1935, which restructured the Federal Reserve and centralized power in Washington. The episode also delves into Eccles' bitter feud with Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau Jr. over fiscal policy, and his ultimate vindication as Keynesian economics gained traction. Listeners will gain a fresh perspective on the internal battles within FDR's administration and the intellectual foundations of the modern American economy. #MarrinerEccles #NewDeal #FranklinRoosevelt #FederalReserve #BankingAct1935 #KeynesianEconomics #DeficitSpending #GreatDepression #UtahBanker #HenryMorgenthau #FiscalPolicy #CentralBanking #USHistory #EconomicHistory #FDRAdministration #FexingoHistory #Podcast #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17 de jul de 20266 min
episode FDR's Dust Bowl Resettlement and the Nation's Refugee Crisis artwork

FDR's Dust Bowl Resettlement and the Nation's Refugee Crisis

In episode 159, Lucas and Luna explore one of the most overlooked crises of the New Deal: the Dust Bowl refugee crisis and the federal government's halting efforts to resettle displaced farmers. They focus on the Resettlement Administration's controversial camps for migrants in California, the rivalry with the Farm Security Administration, and the role of figures like Dorothea Lange and John Steinbeck in documenting the exodus. The episode also delves into the political backlash against resettlement, the fight over land use policy, and the long-term impact on American agriculture. Specific topics include the drought of 1934, the Taylor Grazing Act, the Klamath River dam controversy, and the legacy of the 'Okie' migration. #DustBowl #ResettlementAdministration #FarmSecurityAdministration #DorotheaLange #JohnSteinbeck #OkieMigration #TaylorGrazingAct #California #NewDeal #FDR #MigrantCamps #SoilErosion #Drought #GreatDepression #AgriculturalPolicy #KlamathRiver #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
episode FDR's National Housing Act and the FHA Revolution artwork

FDR's National Housing Act and the FHA Revolution

In 1934, the US housing market was in shambles—half of all home mortgages were in default, and homeownership was a dream out of reach for most Americans. Enter the National Housing Act, which created the Federal Housing Administration and transformed how Americans buy homes. But the FHA didn't just insure loans; it redlined entire neighborhoods, codified racial segregation in housing, and set the stage for the white suburban exodus. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the FHA's origins, its bold mortgage insurance program, the creation of Fannie Mae, and the darker legacy of redlining that persists today. They discuss key figures like FDR, Senator Robert F. Wagner, and the appraisers who drew the color-coded maps. It's a story of innovation and injustice—the New Deal's gamble on homeownership. #FDR #NewDeal #FederalHousingAdministration #NationalHousingAct1934 #FHA #Redlining #FannieMae #HomeOwnership #GreatDepression #HousingPolicy #Segregation #Suburbia #RobertFWagner #StewartMcDonald #NorthAmerica #History #FexingoHistory #USHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer9 min
episode FDR's Soil Soldiers: The Civilian Conservation Corps artwork

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

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