Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal Explained — Fexingo History
In 1933, as the Great Depression gripped America and the New Deal took shape, a bold proposal emerged: a national 30-hour workweek. This episode dives into the battle over the Black-Connery Bill, a bill that would have banned labor by anyone under 16 and capped the workweek at 30 hours. We follow the bill's champion, Senator Hugo Black of Alabama, who would later become a Supreme Court justice, and his unlikely ally, Congressman William Connery. We explore the fierce opposition from business groups, the cautious stance of FDR, and the bill's ultimate transformation into the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938. Along the way, we meet figures like labor leader William Green, Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins, and the NRA's 'blanket code' of maximum hours. The episode reveals how the 30-hour workweek became a rallying cry for labor, a headache for the White House, and a forgotten turning point in American labor history. #30HourWorkWeek #BlackConneryBill #HugoBlack #NewDeal #FairLaborStandardsAct #WilliamConnery #FrancesPerkins #WilliamGreen #GreatDepression #LaborHistory #FDR #WPA #NRA #Senate #HouseOfRepresentatives #ChildLabor #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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