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Roosevelt and the Farmers

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Roosevelt and the Farmers The impact of the New Deal on agriculture Background Farmers had failed to share in the prosperity of the pre-1929 boom. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Roosevelt and the Farmers


1
Roosevelt and the Farmers
  • The impact of the New Deal on agriculture

2
Background
  • Farmers had failed to share in the prosperity of
    the pre-1929 boom.
  • In an attempt to keep profits up many had
    increased production and had exhausted the
    productivity of their land in the process.
  • This was particularly true in the Mid-Western
    States.

3
The Great Dust Bowl
  • Between 1933 1934 there was a long drought
    following what had been a scorching summer.
  • Linked to the over-production this turned a large
    area of the mid-west into a huge dust bowl of
    light, sandy top soil.
  • When the autumn winds came they blew the soil
    away into massive dust storms.

4
The dust storms
5
The worst effected areas were Oklahoma and
Arkansas
6
Life was disrupted during the storms
7
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8
Large numbers of Farmers lost their land and had
to go on the road
  • As John Steinbeck wrote in his 1939 novel The
    Grapes of Wrath"And then the dispossessed were
    drawn west- from Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New
    Mexico from Nevada and Arkansas, families,
    tribes, dusted out, tractored out. Car-loads,
    caravans, homeless and hungry twenty thousand
    and fifty thousand and a hundred thousand and two
    hundred thousand. They streamed over the
    mountains, hungry and restless - restless as
    ants, scurrying to find work to do - to lift, to
    push, to pull, to pick, to cut - anything, any
    burden to bear, for food. The kids are hungry. We
    got no place to live. Like ants scurrying for
    work, for food, and most of all for land."

9
These new migrants faced terrible hardships
  • Over 350,000 Okies and Arkies travelled to
    find food and work.
  • Many died of neglect or from casual violence
  • Few found the sympathy and help they had hoped
    for.
  • They formed a new, desperate underclass in
    American society.

10
Roosevelt saw helping the Farmers as a top
priority of the New Deal
  • The Agricultural Adjustment Act helped deal with
    low prices and over-production.
  • The Farm Credit Administration (FCA) re-financed
    20 of farmers mortgages.
  • The Farm Security Administration (FSA) helped
    evicted tenant farmers (sharecroppers) find homes
    and loans
  • The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) provided
    help and work for thousands over a vast area.

11
The TVA
12
The TVA.
  • Built dams to provide employment, control the
    Tennessee River and produce massive quantities of
    electricity for industry and homes.
  • 1000 km of river was made navigable to allow
    materials to be brought in and produce taken out.
  • Farmers were shown how to use modern fertilisers
    and prevent soil erosion.

13
Some people criticised the TVA
  • Roosevelts critics said that the Federal
    Government should not interfere in the problems
    of individual states (laissez-faire rides again!)
  • Others said that private companies, not the
    Government should have done the work (although it
    is unlikely that private companies would have
    taken the risk)

14
So, did Roosevelt save the farmers?
  • They seemed to think so they gave him massive
    electoral support in the Presidential Elections
    of 1936, 1940, and 1944.
  • Opponents felt that Roosevelt had deluded the
    farmers and that things would have got better
    naturally.
  • What do you think?
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