Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal Explained — Fexingo History

FDR's TVA: Electricity, Dams, and the Transformation of the South

6 min · 27. juni 2026
episode FDR's TVA: Electricity, Dams, and the Transformation of the South cover

Beskrivelse

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), one of the New Deal's most ambitious and controversial projects. They discuss the vision behind the TVA, its creation in 1933, and how it brought electricity, flood control, and economic development to one of the poorest regions in America. The conversation covers the key figure of Arthur E. Morgan, the TVA's first chairman, and his clashes with David Lilienthal over public power vs. regional planning. They delve into the construction of Norris Dam and the Wilson Dam, the political battles with private power companies like Commonwealth & Southern's Wendell Willkie, and the Supreme Court case Ashwander v. TVA that upheld the TVA's constitutionality. Lucas also touches on the TVA's darker side, including the displacement of thousands of families and the environmental costs of coal-fired plants. The episode ends with reflections on the TVA's legacy as both a model for public power and a symbol of federal overreach. #TVA #TennesseeValleyAuthority #NewDeal #FDR #PublicPower #ArthurMorgan #DavidLilienthal #WendellWillkie #NorrisDam #WilsonDam #AshwanderVsTVA #RuralElectrification #FloodControl #GreatDepression #FexingoHistory #History #NorthAmerica #AmericanHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle episoder

146 Episoder

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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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episode FDR's Brain Trust: The Architects of the New Deal cover

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In 1937, a Yale law professor named Thurman Arnold took over the Justice Department's Antitrust Division and turned it into a weapon against corporate power. This episode follows Arnold's crusade against cartels and monopolies — from the aluminum giant Alcoa to the Hollywood studios that controlled movie distribution. We explore why FDR pivoted to antitrust after the early New Deal's corporatist experiments, how Arnold used consent decrees and criminal prosecutions to reshape American business, and the surprising resistance he faced from within the administration itself. Along the way, we meet figures like Robert H. Jackson, Wendell Berge, and the economists who argued that monopoly was strangling recovery. This is the story of the New Deal's most aggressive attack on concentrated economic power — and why it ultimately ran out of steam. #ThurmanArnold #Antitrust #NewDeal #Monopoly #Alcoa #FDR #RobertJackson #JusticeDepartment #ShermanAntitrustAct #ConsentDecree #Corporatism #GreatDepression #Cartels #WendellBerge #EconomicHistory #NorthAmerica #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går9 min
episode FDR's TVA: The Electric Power Battle for the Tennessee Valley cover

FDR's TVA: The Electric Power Battle for the Tennessee Valley

In this episode, we turn our attention to the Tennessee Valley Authority — the New Deal's most ambitious experiment in regional planning, public power, and economic transformation. We follow the TVA from its 1933 founding through the 1930s, as it built a network of dams and hydroelectric plants that brought electricity to millions of rural southerners for the first time. We explore the fierce opposition from private power companies like Wendell Willkie's Commonwealth & Southern, the Supreme Court battle in Ashwander v. TVA, and the controversial Norris Dam. We also confront the TVA's dark side: the displacement of thousands of families, the flooding of ancestral lands, and the agency's role in perpetuating racial inequality in hiring and housing. We discuss the leadership of Arthur Morgan, David Lilienthal, and Harcourt Morgan, and the tensions between their competing visions. This is the story of a revolutionary experiment that reshaped the American landscape — for better and for worse. #TVA #TennesseeValleyAuthority #FranklinRoosevelt #NewDeal #PublicPower #ElectricPower #ArthurMorgan #DavidLilienthal #WendellWillkie #NorrisDam #AshwanderVSTVA #RuralElectrification #MuscleShoals #TennesseeValley #1930s #NewDealHistory #AmericanHistory #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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episode FDR's Bank Holiday and the Emergency Banking Act of 1933 cover

FDR's Bank Holiday and the Emergency Banking Act of 1933

In March 1933, Franklin D. Roosevelt took office amid a banking panic that had shuttered banks across the country. This episode explores the dramatic first days of the New Deal: Roosevelt's decision to declare a national bank holiday, the emergency passage of the Emergency Banking Act, and the fireside chat that reassured millions. We talk about the role of William H. Woodin, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation under Jesse Jones, the distinction between sound and unsound banks, and how the crisis was used to push through the Glass-Steagall Act and create the FDIC. We also touch on the human cost—families who lost their life savings—and the political gamble that paid off, restoring faith in the banking system within a week. #FDR #NewDeal #BankHoliday #EmergencyBankingAct #GreatDepression #FDIC #GlassSteagall #FiresideChat #WilliamHWoodin #JesseJones #ReconstructionFinanceCorporation #BankingCrisis #1933 #NorthAmerica #AmericanHistory #EconomicHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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