Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal Explained — Fexingo History
In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore an often-overlooked New Deal agency: the Resettlement Administration. Created in 1935, it aimed to move struggling rural and urban families to planned communities with modern amenities. We focus on the Greenbelt Towns program—three experimental suburbs built from scratch: Greenbelt, Maryland; Greenhills, Ohio; and Greendale, Wisconsin. We meet Rexford Tugwell, the RA's head, who envisioned these as a middle ground between city and country. We discuss the radical ideas behind them: public housing, cooperative stores, and integrated green spaces. The towns were intended to be self-sustaining, with rental income covering costs after initial federal investment. But they faced fierce opposition from private developers and conservative politicians who saw them as socialist. By 1937, Congress cut funding, halting expansion. Today, these towns survive as thriving communities, but their original vision was scaled back. We also touch on the RA's broader work: rural rehabilitation loans, migrant camps (documented by Dorothea Lange), and the infamous attempt to buy up worn-out farmland—critics called it 'planned poverty.' Tugwell resigned in 1936, but his ideas influenced later public housing and urban planning. This episode reveals a bold experiment that almost reshaped American suburbs. #NewDeal #GreenbeltTowns #RexfordTugwell #ResettlementAdministration #PublicHousing #FDR #GreatDepression #SuburbanHistory #GreenbeltMD #GreenhillsOH #GreendaleWI #PlannedCommunities #DorotheaLange #CooperativeMovement #RuralRehabilitation #History #FexingoHistory #UrbanPlanning Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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