The Writing on the Wall: Treasury Section Murals in New Deal Louisiana

Prospects ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 327-345
Author(s):  
Richard B. Megraw

Up in Bienville Parish, through piney hills rolling toward the Ozarks, the road winds down a sweeping curve, rises abruptly, and enters Arcadia, Louisiana. Main Street parallels an abandoned railroad spur and runs along eighty yards of brick-faced storefronts. The usual concerns flourish: a flower shop, an insurance agency, the pharmacy, and a secondhand furniture store. There is also a Baptist revival hall, but people point it out for another reason. Years before it was a house of the Lord, the building was a home for the dead, a funeral parlor, and as such, briefly, the focal point of national attention. That was in 1934 when, shortly after the sheriff sprang his trap, the corpses of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow were fetched back to town and propped on slabs leaning in the undertaker's window. Tellers of the tale usually smile at the irony, but it is not the only one Arcadians can claim. Across the street and down the block from the morguecumrevival hall stands a United States post office built during the Great Depression. It conforms to the standard floor plan then in vogue, and at one end of the main hall, over the postman's door, hangs a mural whose warm pastels depict an abundant cotton harvest. Black pickers dot the field, sacks filled to bursting. A white driver crests the hill in a wagon brimming over with the yield and descends a road leading toward the mill. Surrounding hills stretch beyond (Figure 1).

Author(s):  
Barry B. Witham

The Federal Theatre Project was a government-subsidized program established in 1935 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to provide jobs for theater artists during the Great Depression in the United States. Along with similar programs in art, music, dance, and writing, the project was designed to produce professional theater throughout the country and eventually established companies in thirty-one American states. While the fare of the program was broad, including circuses, vaudeville, musicals, and children’s theater, its offerings were largely progressive, which led to conflicts with Congressional Republicans who viewed the program as propaganda for New Deal politics. Eventually, charges of communism led to an investigation by the House Committee on Un-American Activities and the budgetary elimination of Federal Theatre in 1939.


Author(s):  
Mary-Elizabeth B. Murphy

For African Americans, the Great Depression and the New Deal (1929–1940) marked a transformative era and laid the groundwork for the postwar black freedom struggle in the United States. The outbreak of the Great Depression in 1929 caused widespread suffering and despair in black communities across the country as women and men faced staggering rates of unemployment and poverty. Once Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR), a Democrat, was inaugurated as president in 1933, he launched a “New Deal” of ambitious government programs to lift the United States out of the economic crisis. Most African Americans were skeptical about benefiting from the New Deal, and racial discrimination remained rampant. However, a cohort of black advisors and activists critiqued these government programs for excluding African Americans and enacted some reforms. At the grassroots level, black workers pressed for expanded employment opportunities and joined new labor unions to fight for economic rights. As the New Deal progressed a sea change swept over black politics. Many black voters switched their allegiance from the Republican to the Democratic Party, waged more militant campaigns for racial justice, and joined interracial and leftist coalitions. African Americans also challenged entrenched cultural stereotypes through photography, theater, and oral histories to illuminate the realities of black life in the United States. By 1940, African Americans now wielded an arsenal of protest tactics and were marching on a path toward full citizenship rights, which remains an always evolving process.


2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 176-199

Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal is usually treated as an example of successful government regulation of the economy. After Roosevelt’s death, his image was glorified. Until recently, only a few scholars knew the facts forming a completely different image of the New Deal. In this paper, the New Deal programs (regulating industry, agriculture, labor market and financial markets, started by Herbert Hoover) are investigated as a result of a policy which extended the Great Depression. The main lesson is that any attempts to introduce a “New New Deal” can only create negative consequences for the economy. The article examines the actions of the Administrations created by Roosevelt during the Great Depression, which were regulating minimum wages, prices, and level of production. A special role was played by the National Recovery Administration (NRA), which had unprecedented power, combining the executive, legislative and judicial branches of the government. It was an unusually interventionist policy for the United States, which resulted in very slow and painful recovery of the US economy. The Great Depression began as a usual phase of the economic cycle, caused by the credit expansion by the Federal Reserve System, which increased the money supply by 62% from 1921 to 1929. It would have ended in a year, like the crisis of 1921, had it not been for Hoover’s and Roosevelt’s interventionist policies. The American people agreed to the policy of centralization during the Great Depression, because public opinion was prepared for this by intellectuals of the Progressive Era. They were able to convince the public that the Era of the active role of the State had come to the United States. Intellectuals were using their authority to fuel the destructive programs of the New Deal. The glorification of Roosevelt’s image is largely a result of an alliance between the Big State and intellectuals.


1978 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 136
Author(s):  
Robert K. Murray ◽  
Charles H. Trout

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document