Impact of the New Deal on Women Flashcards

1
Q

Women in Politics - Suffrage Movement

A
  • A network of influential women, brought together by Eleanor Roosevelt. (She had the ear of the president.)
  • Didn’t make a huge change in the 20’s.
  • Women’s Trade Union board.
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2
Q

Who was Eleanor Roosevelt?

A

She was the wife of President Roosevelt, and held the role of First Lady.

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3
Q

How did she transform the role of the First Lady?

A

She was very independent and at times outspoken,

  • She held 348 press conferences by herself.
  • She wrote a daily newspaper column in 62 newspapers.
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4
Q

What were two of the issues that she campaigned for?

A

Women’s Rights and Civil Liberties (Child refugees).

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5
Q

What did she do during WW2?

A

She visited American troops in Europe but also campaigned for child refugees to be allowed to come to America.

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6
Q

What was her relationship with Roosevelt like?

A

Their personal/emotional relationship was distant, but they had a close political one.
As Roosevelt was ill, she was his ‘eyes and ears’ at events .

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7
Q

How did women’s rights in the 1920s change?

A

Women’s suffrage (right to vote) was allowed in 1920 BUT after this there wasn’t a huge change.

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8
Q

What did Eleanor Roosevelt do to empower women in politics?

A

She created a network of influential women who were given the ear of the President.
- “A cordial interlocking of minds” .

The network was a group of women born in the 1880s, who were college educated and wanted to campaign for social and liberal reform .

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9
Q

What were ‘domestic feminists’?

A

Women who wanted to use their role in the home as an excuse to be in the public sphere - they were issue driven.
Many issues of the 1930s had involved their roles within the home (consumer affairs and social security) - it made sense for them advise .

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10
Q

Who were some of the iconic female cultural icons of the 1920s and what impact did they have ?

A

Coco Chanel, Clara Bow

Very little - they created cultural and social change but not political or long lasting change .

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11
Q

What was the Women’s Trade Union Board?

A

A group who campaigned for women’s working rights.

  • 8 hour workday
  • Minimum wage
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12
Q

Give 3 examples of women who gained prominent political positions during the 1930s.

A

Francis Perkins: ‘Secretary of Labour’, first woman in a political cabinet.
Ruth Bryan Own: ‘Female Ambassador to Denmark’.
Molly Dewson: Leader of the ‘Women’s Division of the Democratic Party’.

(At the outbreak of WW2 many women lost their political positions.)

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13
Q

How did the New Deal have a limited impact on the lives of women during the 1930s?

A

Gender discrimination was the norm.
CCC was just for men, like other public works agencies
Summer 1933: relief spending helped 15,000 women but 300,000 were in need.
The NRA only covered half the female workforce, sanctioned pay differentiation ($525 per year, half of a man’s wage)
1940: 90% of jobs were filled by men.

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14
Q

What did Eleanor Roosevelt do to help improve the lives of women during the 1930s?

A

CWA: 300,000 women put to work in ‘she she she’ camps
Sewing projects: 500 million items of bedding and clothing.
80% of teachers were women.
WPA school lunch programme: 1.2 billion nutritional meals cooked.

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15
Q

Give two examples of African American women who represented progress for women in society.

A

Ella Baker: began her involvement in the NAACP, she went on to work with Martin Luther King.

Mary McLeod Bethune:
1936 she was the highest ranking African American woman in government as the Director of Negro Affairs of the National Youth Administration.
She was the leaders of Roosevelt’s Black Cabinet
1940 she became the Vice President for the NAACP.

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16
Q

What happened to the role of women during WW2?

A

The social welfare women had been calling for was no longer seen as a priority.

  • Women in politics became largely dismissed and ignored.
  • Many women moved and began working in industry, 8.5 million entered the workforce.
  • 44% worked in shipyards and airframe manufacturing.
  • No child care or nursery provision for working women.