Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal Explained — Fexingo History
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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