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The Stock Market Crash
First New Deal The Stock Market Crash set the stage for the great depression, by the year of 1933 half of Americas banks had failed and the unemployment rate for people was approaching about 15 million people, 30 percent of which were of the working man. -
The Pecora Investigation
The first new deal This investigation was led by U.S senator Peter Norbeck, and Ferdinand Pecora. It exposed wide scale fraud and greed, in Americas hard financial times. -
Emergency Banking Relief Act
The First new deal President Roosevelt decided to make the Emergency Banking Relief Act into a law. This meant that the law would aim to shorten the nations troubled banks, examining the financial health of each individual bank. -
Fireside chat
The First New deal The fireside chat was a radio broadcast of Roosevelt, he was telling the American people that the government doesn't want the US to go through what they had just been through with all of the banks shutting down and stuff. -
Civil Works Administration
The CWA spent a little over 800 million dollars to employ men, to try to get rid of the whole idea of the poor men, who couldn't even provide for their families -
Treasury Relief Art Project
This relief act was to provide struggling artists with jobs, painting and doing their art on public places, it created about 10,000 easel paintings, 83 murals, and 43 sculptures. -
Soil conservation Act
The new agency helps preserve America’s agricultural land from erosion and overuse. The SCS remains active for the next fifty years and helps facilitate the creation of thousands of state-level soil conservation districts, which still operate today. -
Resettlement Administration
The resettlement administration is created to resettle Americans, address problems about the environment, and to help the farmers, by allowing them to have loans. -
National Youth Administration
Under authority of the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act of 1935. The program is designed to provide work, education, and job training for unemployed young men and women. It employs 4.7 million young Americans over its eight year life. -
The federal emergency relief administration
Federal Project Number One ended in June 1939, but its component units (except for the FTP) would last another few years under a different organizational framework within the WPA. Collectively, these programs created hundreds of thousands of artworks, performances, books, plays, historical inventories, and more.