Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal Explained — Fexingo History
In the depths of the Great Depression, home foreclosures were running at over a thousand per day. Lucas and Luna explore FDR's creation of the Home Owners Loan Corporation in 1933, a radical federal intervention that refinanced one million mortgages and changed American housing permanently. They discuss the HOLC's controversial practice of 'redlining'—mapping neighborhoods by racial composition to determine loan risk—and how this policy systematically excluded Black Americans from homeownership for decades. The episode also covers the HOLC's successor, the Federal Housing Administration, and the long shadow these New Deal agencies cast on racial wealth inequality and suburban development. Specific figures include HOLC chairman John H. Fahey, FHA administrator Stewart McDonald, and economist Homer Hoyt, whose racialized neighborhood ratings became standard practice. The conversation moves from the 1933 Emergency Relief and Construction Act through the 1934 National Housing Act, ending with the modern legacy of redlining in cities like Detroit and Chicago. #NewDeal #HOLC #Redlining #FDR #GreatDepression #HomeOwnersLoanCorporation #HousingPolicy #Suburbanization #RacialInequality #FederalHousingAdministration #1930s #JohnFahey #HomerHoyt #StewartMcDonald #Greenlining #WealthGap #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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