Alphabet Soup
Who's Who?
The Arts
Friend of Labor
Relief/Recovery/Reform
100

This program, the Civilian Conservation Corps, hired young men ages 18-25 who, among other things, planted more than 200 million trees.

CCC

100

He won his first presidential election in 1932, and would go on to win again in 1936, 1940, and 1944.

Franklin Roosevelt

100

His novel, The Grapes of Wrath, depicts the lives of Oklahomans who left the Dust Bowl and ended up in California, where their struggles continued.

John Steinbeck

100

Workers stay inside their factory during this kind of strike, in order to prevent their company from hiring replacement workers.

Sit-down strike

100

This agency was created to reform the financial system by regulating the stock market and preventing insider trading. 

Securities and Exchange Commission

200

It paid farmers to produce less food in an effort to raise agricultural prices.

AAA

200

She used her position as First Lady to advocate for the rights of women, minorities, and blue-collar workers. She also tried to push her husband in this direction.   

Eleanor Roosevelt

200

This folk singer from the Great Plains' most famous song is called 'This Land is Your Land.'

Woody Guthrie

200

Passed as part of the Second New Deal, this law protected the rights of workers to join unions and engage in collective bargaining with employers. 

Wagner Act

200

It established an old age pension, unemployment insurance, and relief for people with disabilities.

Social Security

300

It provided money to states to construct public works such as schools and other community buildings. 

PWA

300

She served as secretary of labor during the New Deal and was also the first female cabinet member.

She changed her name in order to be taken more seriously. 

Frances Perkins

300

His painting American Gothic is one of the most famous Depression-era paintings about rural Midwestern life.

Grant Wood

300

A New Deal program which still exists, it helps to settle disputes between unions and employers.

National Labor Relations Board

300

This act created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation which guarantees people's bank deposits up to $250,000.

Glass-Steagall Act

400

Daily Double

It built twenty new dams and renovated five existing ones that would provide flood control and hydroelectric power to an impoverished river valley.  

400

She helped organize a "Black Cabinet" to advise President Roosevelt on racial issues. She also headed the Division of Negro Affairs as part of the National Youth Administration. 

Mary McLeod Bethune

400

His novel Native Son is about a young African American man trying to survive in a racist world. 

Richard Wright

400

It created a forty-hour work week and twenty-cents an hour minimum wage. It also set rules for workers under sixteen years old.

Fair Labor Standards Act

400

Its main goal to relieve the unemployed by creating as many jobs as possible as quickly as possible. In the process it built more than 125,000 public buildings. 

Works Progress Administration

500

It helped tenant farmers to buy their own farms, set up camps for migrant workers, and hired photographers to take pictures of life in rural America. 

FSA

500

He was the commissioner of Indian Affairs and helped create the Indian Reorganization Act which, among other things, allowed Native American children to attend pubic school on their reservation.

John Collier

500

Her 1937 novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, is about a young woman growing up in rural Florida.

Zora Neale Hurston

500

He organized the first all-African American trade union, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.

A. Philip Randolph

500

The purpose of this act was to promote economic recovery by building public works and establishing codes of fair practice in individual industries. 

National Industrial Recovery Act 

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