Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal Explained — Fexingo History
In the winter of 1933, one in four American families had no income at all. Harry Hopkins, a former social worker with a sharp tongue and a relentless work ethic, was put in charge of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration — FERA — the first large-scale federal attempt to put cash directly into the hands of the unemployed. This episode follows Hopkins’s furious five-hundred-million-dollar spending spree, his battles with local politicians who tried to use relief money for patronage, and the creation of the Civil Works Administration, which put four million people on the federal payroll in a matter of weeks. We also explore the forgotten controversy over 'work relief' versus 'the dole', the fight with Louisiana senator Huey Long over control of relief funds, and how FERA's experiments with direct aid laid the groundwork for the Works Progress Administration. Along the way, we meet figures like Lorena Hickok, the journalist who traveled the country as Hopkins's eyes and ears, and we uncover the quiet radicalism of a program that insisted the unemployed had a right to work — not just charity. #NewDeal #FDR #HarryHopkins #FERA #CivilWorksAdministration #GreatDepression #WorkRelief #HueyLong #LorenaHickok #Unemployment #History #FexingoHistory #NorthAmerica #1930s #FederalRelief #Hopkins #PublicWorks #DepressionEra Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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