Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal Explained — Fexingo History

FDR's Soil Conservation Service and the Fight Against the Dust Bowl

7 min · 13. juni 2026
episode FDR's Soil Conservation Service and the Fight Against the Dust Bowl cover

Description

The Dust Bowl of the 1930s wasn't just a natural disaster—it was a man-made ecological crisis that forced the New Deal to rethink how Americans used the land. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the work of the Soil Conservation Service, created in 1935 under the leadership of Hugh Hammond Bennett. They trace the roots of the catastrophe to the plowing of the Southern Plains during World War I, the collapse of wheat prices, and the brutal drought that followed. Bennett, a lifelong soil scientist, had warned for decades that American farming was destroying its own foundation. The SCS introduced contour plowing, terracing, and shelterbelts, but faced resistance from farmers and politicians who saw federal conservation as government overreach. The episode also covers the work of the Civilian Conservation Corps in planting millions of trees, the role of the Taylor Grazing Act in managing public lands, and the long-term legacy of New Deal conservation in shaping the modern environmental movement. A story of disaster, resistance, and the slow work of restoring the land. #NewDeal #DustBowl #SoilConservation #HughBennett #FDR #GreatDepression #CCC #Shelterbelt #TaylorGrazingAct #1930s #Agriculture #Conservation #ClimateHistory #USHistory #GreatPlains #EnvironmentalHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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136 episodes

episode FDR's Rural Electrification Administration: Lighting Up the Countryside artwork

FDR's Rural Electrification Administration: Lighting Up the Countryside

In this episode of FDR and the New Deal Explained, Lucas and Luna explore the story of the Rural Electrification Administration — a New Deal program that brought electric power to millions of farm families who had been living in the dark. Before the REA, fewer than 10 percent of American farms had electricity. Private utility companies considered rural areas unprofitable and refused to extend power lines. The REA, created by executive order in 1935 and later strengthened by the Rural Electrification Act of 1936, provided low-cost loans for cooperatives to build their own power systems. Lucas tells the story of the struggle for rural electrification, from the early efforts of Morris Llewellyn Cooke, the REA's first administrator, to the grassroots organizing that led to the formation of thousands of electric cooperatives. Along the way, the episode examines the impact on rural life — how electricity transformed farm work, education, and leisure. It also touches on the political battles with private utilities like Commonwealth & Southern and the role of Senator George W. Norris, the 'father of the TVA'. This is a story of infrastructure, democracy, and the power of collective action. #RuralElectrificationAdministration #NewDeal #FDR #MorrisLlewellynCooke #GeorgeNorris #ElectricCooperatives #RuralAmerica #Electrification #Infrastructure #TennesseeValleyAuthority #CommonwealthAndSouthern #FarmLife #1930s #PublicPower #Cooperative #History #FexingoHistory #NorthAmerica Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

5. juli 20267 min
episode FDR's Food Stamp Plan: The Fight Over the First Food Stamps artwork

FDR's Food Stamp Plan: The Fight Over the First Food Stamps

In 1939, the United States launched its first federal food assistance program — a bold experiment born from the paradox of farm surpluses and urban hunger. In episode 135 of FDR and the New Deal Explained, Lucas and Luna unpack the story of the Food Stamp Program, from its improbable architect, Milo Perkins, to the colorful stamps themselves — orange for surplus foods, blue for items deemed in surplus. They explore how the program navigated political minefields: conservative opposition, the Department of Agriculture's turf wars, and the tricky alliance between farmers and the urban poor. Along the way, they touch on the role of Henry Wallace, the Federal Surplus Commodities Corporation, and the program's quiet end as the wartime economy absorbed both surpluses and labor. How did a scheme meant to stabilize farm prices also feed millions? And what does its brief, successful run reveal about the possibilities and limits of New Deal food policy? #FoodStampProgram #MiloPerkins #HenryWallace #FederalSurplusCommoditiesCorporation #NewDeal #FDR #GreatDepression #FexingoHistory #NorthAmerica #1930s #FoodPolicy #Agriculture #Hunger #OrangeStamps #BlueStamps #USDA #RexfordTugwell #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday4 min
episode FDR and the Army Corps of Engineers: Floods, Dams, and the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 artwork

FDR and the Army Corps of Engineers: Floods, Dams, and the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927

Before the New Deal, the Mississippi River was a national crisis. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 — the deadliest riverine flood in US history — and how it reshaped American politics and disaster response. They discuss the role of the Army Corps of Engineers, the levee-only policy that failed catastrophically, Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover's relief efforts, the racial disparities in aid that spurred the Great Migration, and how the flood set the stage for FDR's flood control programs like the Flood Control Act of 1928 and the Tennessee Valley Authority. They also touch on the political fallout for the Coolidge administration and how the disaster changed the relationship between the federal government and natural catastrophes — a shift that would define the New Deal era. A story of engineering hubris, racial injustice, and the birth of modern federal disaster policy. #GreatMississippiFlood1927 #ArmyCorpsOfEngineers #MississippiRiver #HerbertHoover #FDR #NewDeal #FloodControlAct1928 #TennesseeValleyAuthority #GreenvilleMississippi #GreatMigration #RacialInjustice #DisasterRelief #Levees #CoolidgeAdministration #History #FexingoHistory #NorthAmerica #20thCentury Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday9 min
episode FDR's National Youth Administration and the Fight for a Generation artwork

FDR's National Youth Administration and the Fight for a Generation

Before the GI Bill, there was the National Youth Administration—a New Deal program that kept millions of young Americans in school and out of breadlines during the Great Depression. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the NYA's unlikely origins inside the Works Progress Administration, its pioneering student work-study program, and the quiet revolution it sparked in American education. They follow the career of Aubrey Williams, the NYA's fiery director, and his battles with Congress over federal youth policy. They also trace how the NYA became a launching pad for future civil rights leaders, including Lyndon B. Johnson, who ran the Texas NYA and discovered his political calling. Along the way, the hosts unpack the NYA's forgotten legacy: a generation of artists, scientists, and blue-collar workers who owed their first job—and often their future—to a government check. How did a Depression-era program shape postwar America? And why does almost nobody remember it? #NationalYouthAdministration #AubreyWilliams #LyndonJohnson #WorksProgressAdministration #FranklinRoosevelt #NewDeal #GreatDepression #StudentWorkStudy #YouthPolicy #CivilRights #EleanorRoosevelt #MaryMcLeodBethune #FederalEducation #NorthAmerica #AmericanHistory #1930s #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

3. juli 20267 min
episode FDR's Court Packing Plan and the Fight for the New Deal artwork

FDR's Court Packing Plan and the Fight for the New Deal

In 1937, at the height of his political power after winning 46 of 48 states, Franklin D. Roosevelt faced a surprising obstacle: the conservative majority on the Supreme Court, which had already struck down several New Deal programs. FDR responded with a bold and controversial proposal to expand the Court by adding up to six new justices, one for each sitting justice over age 70 who refused to retire. This episode explores the political battle that followed — the fireside chat where FDR made his case, the bipartisan backlash that united Democrats and Republicans against the plan, and the infamous 'switch in time that saved nine,' where Justice Owen Roberts changed his vote to uphold New Deal legislation. We also discuss the deeper implications: did the Court fight actually weaken FDR's momentum, and what does the episode reveal about the limits of presidential power even in a crisis? #NewDeal #FDR #SupremeCourt #CourtPacking #JudicialProceduresReformBill #FiresideChat #OwenRoberts #SwitchInTimeThatSavedNine #HueyLong #CharlesEvansHughes #History #FexingoHistory #1937 #Politics #ChecksAndBalances #NewDealCoalition #SenateDebate #ConstitutionalCrisis Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

3. juli 20266 min