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The Great Depression & The New Deal Chapter 33 Pg. 783-788

The Great Depression & The New Deal Chapter 33 Pg. 783-788. Paying Farmers Not to Farm

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The Great Depression & The New Deal Chapter 33 Pg. 783-788

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  1. The Great Depression & The New Deal Chapter 33 Pg. 783-788

  2. Paying Farmers Not to Farm • To help the farmers, who had been suffering ever since the end of World War I, Congress established the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA), which paid farmers to reduce their crop acreage and would eliminate price-depressing surpluses. • However, it got off to a rocky start as it was realized that paying farmers not to farm actually increased unemployment. • The Supreme Court killed it in 1936 (though it will be revived shortly thereafter).

  3. The New Deal Congress also passed the Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act of 1936, which paid farmers to plant soil-conserving plants like soybeans or to let their land lie fallow. The Second Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938 was a more comprehensive substitute that continued conservation payments and was accepted by the Supreme Court this time.

  4. Farm fields plowed for erosion prevention, Mount Vernon, Ohio.

  5. Dust Bowls and Black Blizzards • After the drought of 1933, furious winds whipped up dust into the air, turning parts of Missouri, Texas, Kansas, Arkansas, and Oklahoma into the “Dust Bowl” and forcing many farmers to migrate west to California This disaster inspired Steinbeck’s classic The Grapes of Wrath. The following factors contributed to the Dust Bowl: • Dry farming techniques 2. drought 3. soil erosion 4. the cultivation of marginal farmlands on the Great Plains.

  6. John Steinbeck

  7. A wall of dust approaching a town in Kansas, 1935 A buried South Dakota house, about 1934

  8. The Migrant Mother

  9. The Frazier-Lemke Farm Bankruptcy Act, passed in 1934, made possible a suspension of mortgage foreclosure for five years, but it was voided in 1935 by the Supreme Court. • In 1935, FDR set up the Resettlement Administration, charged with the task of removing near-farmless farmers to better land.

  10. Commissioner of Indian Affairs was headed by John Collier who sought to reverse the forced-assimilation policies in place since the Dawes Act of 1887. • John Collier promoted the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 (the Indian “New Deal”), which attempted to reverse the forced assimilation of Native Americans into white society by encouraging tribes to preserve their culture and traditions and establish tribal self-government. • Not all Indians liked it though, saying if they followed this “back-to-the-blanket” plan, they’d just become museum exhibits. 77 tribes refused to organize under its provisions (200 did).

  11. J O H N C O L L I E R

  12. Battling Bankers and Big Business • The Federal Securities Act (“Truth in Securities Act”) required promoters to transmit to the investor sworn information (“full disclosure”) regarding the soundness of their stocks and bonds. • The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) was designed as a stock watchdog administrative agency to prevent insider trading and other fraudulent practices. • Stock markets were to henceforth operate more as trading marts than as casinos. • In 1932, Chicagoan Samuel Insull’s multi-billion dollar financial empire had crashed, and such cases as his resulted in the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935.

  13. The TVA Harnesses the Tennessee River • The sprawling electric-power industry attracted the fire of New Deal reformers. • New Dealers accused it of gouging the public with excessive rates. • Thus, the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) (1933) sought to discover exactly how much money it took to produce electricity and then keep rates reasonable. • It constructed dams on the Tennessee River and helped the 2.5 million extremely poor citizens of the area improve their lives and their conditions. • The hydroelectric power of the Tennessee Valley would give rise to a similar plan throughout the West. • The strongest argument leveled against the TVA drew criticism that it represented the first stage of “creeping socialism” in a government takeover of public utilities (electricity, water supplies).

  14. Random TVA workers

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