Public Works- New Programs
Public Works-New Programs pt. 2
Public Works- Expansion of Existing Programs
Arts & Culture Programs
Arts& Culture Programs pt.2
100

Created under Emergency Conservation Act.
Put unemployed, unskilled young men to work on rural and park improvements.

Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) (1933)

100

renamed Work Projects Administration (1939)
Created by Executive Order to fund state and local public works projects.
Hired the unemployed directly and became the largest of all public works programs.

Works Progress Administration (WPA) (1935)

100

renamed Public Roads Administration (1939)
Built roads in national parks & forests, assisted states with road construction, helped beautify highways, and conducted various transportation studies.

Bureau of Public Roads (BPR) (1918)

100

Paid for by the CWA and operated by the U.S. Treasury.

Public Works of Art Project (PWAP) (1933)

100

Created by the WPA to employ artists, writers, historians and other professionals

Federal Project Number One (Federal One) (1935)

200

Created under the Tennessee Valley Authority Act.
Planned river basin development based on dams and hydroelectricity.

Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) (1933)

200

Created by Executive Order as a subdivision of the WPA.
Hired young men and women, both in and out of school, for works programs.

National Youth Administration (NYA) (1935)

200

Worked with the U.S. Treasury, and later the Public Buildings Administration (PBA), to create new post office buildings and artworks in post offices.

U.S. Post Office Department (1792)

200

Plays, concerts, and artwork.

Art & Culture Projects of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) (1934)

200

An offshoot of the Federal Theatre Project, created to provide special opportunities for unemployed dancers.

Federal Dance Project (1936)

300

Created under the National Industrial Recovery Act.
Paid private contractors to build large-scale projects proposed by states.

Public Works Administration (PWA) (1933)

300

Created by Executive Order to bring electricity to isolated rural areas.
Made permanent by Rural Electrification Act (1936).

Rural Electrification Administration (REA) (1935)

300

Built dams and irrigation projects in the western states and major river basin projects on the Columbia, Colorado & Sacramento River systems.

Bureau of Reclamation (1902)

300

originally called Treasury Section of Painting and Sculpture (TSPS) from 1934 to 1938, then Treasury Section of Fine Arts (TSFA)from 1938 to 1939, and then finally just Section of Fine Arts (SFA, located in the newly-created Public Buildings Administration, from 1939 to 1943 .
Oversaw artworks created to enhance public buildings, notably post offices.

Treasury Section of Fine Arts (TSFA) (1934)

300

A small performing arts division within the NYA.

National Youth Administration Dance Group (1936)

400

Created by Executive Order as temporary work relief under FERA.
Hired unemployed directly to work on local projects; became model for WPA.

Civil Works Administration (CWA) (1933)

400

Improvements to military bases, funding for Naval & Coast Guard vessels, jobs for defense industry workers & tradesmen, energy for airplane production, job training for young unemployed men & women, discipline & leadership skills in the CCC.

U.S. Armed Forces and National Defense Industries

400

Built levees, dams and canals across the country, built the Missouri river basin project and made levee improvements along the Mississippi, Ohio and Sacramento Rivers.

Army Corps of Engineers (1802)

400

The smallest of the programs to hire unemployed artists to create public artworks.

Treasury Relief Art Project (TRAP) (1935)

400

—Federal Art Project (FAP) (1935)
—Federal Music Project (FMP) (1935)
—Federal Writers’ Project (FWP) (1935)

WPA Music Programs

500

Created under the Federal Emergency Relief Act to award grants to states for works programs to hire the unemployed and provide direct relief payments to the indigent.

Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) (1933)

500

Created by Soil Conservation Act (1935) to continue work of Soil Erosion Service (SES) created under Emergency Conservation Act (1933).

Soil Conservation Service (SCS) (1935)

500

Responsible for the movement of supplies, food, and services to support American troops. During the New Deal, the Quartermaster Corps received substantial funding from both the Public Works Administration (PWA) and emergency relief appropriation acts.

Quartermaster Corps (1775)

500

Created to promote and protect Indian arts and crafts.

Indian Arts and Crafts Board (1935)

500

Last 2 largest of the art programs 

—Federal Theatre Project (FTP) (1935)
—Historical Records Survey (HRS) (1935)

M
e
n
u