Unit 8 Freedom from Fear Flashcards
Labor and civil rights leader in the 1940s who led the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; he demanded that FDR create a Fair Employment Practices Commission to investigate job discrimination in war industries. FDR agreed only after Randolph threatened a march on Washington by African Americans.
A. Philip Randolph
New Deal program that paid farmers not to produce crops, it provided farmers with income while reducing crop surpluses and helped stabilize farm production. The Supreme Court declared major parts of this law unconstitutional in 1936, helping lead FDR to his court-packing plan.
Agricultural Adjustment Administration (1933)
First Catholic ever nominated for president; he lost in 1928 because of the nation’s prosperity, but his religion, urban background, and views on Prohibition (he was a “wet”) cost him votes as well.
Alfred (Al) Smith
A conservative anti-New Deal organization; members included Alfred Smith, John W. Davis, and the Du Pont family. It criticized the “dictatorial” policies of Roosevelt and what it perceived to be his attacks on the free enterprise system.
American Liberty League
Joint statement issued by President Roosevelt and Britain’s Prime Minister Winston Churchill of principals and goals for an Allied victory in World War II; it provided for self-determination for all conquered nations, freedom of seas, economic security, and free trade. Later, it became the embodiment of the United Nations Charter.
Atlantic Charter (1941)
An informal network of black officeholders in the federal government; led by Mary McLeod Bethune, William Hastie, and Robert Weaver, they pushed for economic and political opportunities for African Americans in the 1930s and 1940s.
Black Cabinet
Group of jobless World War I veterans who came to Washington to lobby Congress for immediate payment of money promised them in 1945; Hoover opposed payment, and when he used the U.S. Army to drive the veterans out of the capital, he was portrayed as cruel and cold-hearted.
Bonus Army (1932)
Name applied to college professors from Columbia University such as Rexford Tugwell, Adolf Berle, and Raymond Moley who advised Roosevelt on economic matters early in the New Deal; the Brain Trust took on the role of an “unofficial Cabinet” in the Roosevelt Administration.
Brain Trust
Catholic priest who used his popular radio program to criticize the New Deal; he grew increasingly anti-Roosevelt and anti-Semitic until the Catholic Church pulled him off the air.
Charles Coughlin
Roosevelt’s proposal in 1937 to “reform” the Supreme Court by appointing an additional justice for every justice over age 70; following the Court’s actions in striking down major New Deal laws, FDR came to believe that some justices were out of touch with the nation’s needs. Congress believed Roosevelt’s proposal endangered the Court’s independence and said no.
Court-packing plan
Roosevelt’s informal radio addresses throughout his presidency; they gave the people a sense of confidence that he understood their problems and was trying to help solve them. With these “chats,” FDR was the first president to use the electronic media to spread his message.
Fireside chats
Roosevelt’s secretary of labor (1933–1945); the first woman to serve as a federal Cabinet officer, she had a great influence on many New Deal programs, most significantly the Social Security Act.
Frances Perkins
Retired physician who proposed an Old Age Revolving Pension Plan to give every retiree over age 60 $200 per month, provided that the person spend the money each month in order to receive their next payment; the object of Townsend’s plan was to help retired workers as well as stimulate spending in order to boost production and end the Depression.
Francis Townsend
President (1933–1945); elected four times, he led the country’s recovery from the Depression and to victory in World War II. He died in office, however, just weeks before Germany’s surrender. He is generally considered the greatest president since Abraham Lincoln.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Vice President who became president when FDR died in April 1945; he was elected on his own in 1948. Truman ordered the use of atomic bombs on Japan to end World War II, set the course of postwar containment of Communism in the Cold War, and created a Fair Deal program to carry on the New Deal’s domestic agenda.
Harry S. Truman
Raised the duties on imported foreign goods to all-time highs; intended to boost American industry and employment, it actually deepened the Depression when European countries could not repay their loans (World War I war debts) and retaliated against American exports.
Hawley-Smoot Tariff (1930)
President (1929-1933) who is blamed for the Great Depression; although he tried to use government power to bring on recovery, his inflexibility and refusal to give direct relief doomed his programs and his presidency.
Herbert Hoover
Camps and shantytowns of unemployed and homeless on the outskirts of major cities during the early days of the Depression; they were symbols of the failure of Hoover’s program and the way the nation held him responsible for the hard times.
Hoovervilles
Flamboyant Louisiana governor and U.S. senator; he challenged FDR to do more for the poor and needy and proposed a popular “Share-Our-Wealth” program to tax the wealthy in order to provide a guaranteed income for the poor. He was assassinated in 1935.
Huey Long
Term applied to the first weeks of the Roosevelt Administration, during which Congress passed 13 emergency relief and reform measures that were the backbone of the early New Deal; these included the Civilian Conservation Corp, The Glass Stegal Act (FDIC), Agricultural Adjustment Act, Federal Emergency Relief Act, and the National Industrial Recovery Act.
Hundred Days