The Great Depression in America, 1929–1939
"This nation asks for action, and action now."
On March 4, 1933, Franklin Roosevelt was sworn in as President of the United States. He inherited a paralyzed country: the banking system had collapsed, a quarter of the workforce was unemployed, and agricultural prices had hit rock bottom.
He had only one choice — to act. And to act in ways America had never seen before.
Chapter One: The Hundred Days
The Bank Holiday
Three days into his presidency, Roosevelt did something without precedent: he declared a national "bank holiday," shutting every bank in the country.
It was a gamble. If people resumed their panicked withdrawals when the banks reopened, it would all be over. But Roosevelt was betting on something specific: confidence.
Congress swiftly passed the Emergency Banking Act. Only banks that passed Treasury inspection — the "healthy" ones — would be allowed to reopen. The Federal Reserve would provide emergency loans. The diseased limbs would be cut; the body might survive.
The Fireside Chat
On the evening of March 12, 1933 — the night before the banks were set to reopen — Roosevelt sat before a microphone and spoke directly to the American people over the radio. An estimated sixty million people listened. He called it a "fireside chat," as if he were sitting beside your hearth, talking things over.
He used no complicated economic language. He explained, in plain words, how banks work, why runs happen, and what the government had done to protect depositors' savings.
"I can assure you, my friends, that it is safer to keep your money in a reopened bank than it is to keep it under the mattress."
A miracle followed. After the banks reopened, people pulled cash from under mattresses and out of tin cans and buried jars, and brought it back to deposit. A flood of money returned to the banking system.
This was not a triumph of economics. It was a triumph of psychology. Roosevelt understood a fundamental truth: in a crisis, confidence itself is a currency.
The Legislative Storm
From March 9 to June 16, 1933 — the sprint known as the "Hundred Days."
In that span, Roosevelt pushed through a wave of major legislation: the Emergency Banking Act to stabilize the banks; the CCC statute to put young men to work in the wilderness; the Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) to stabilize farm prices; the Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) for immediate relief; the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) to develop an entire river basin; the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) to revive industry; and the Glass-Steagall Act, which separated commercial banking from investment banking and laid the groundwork for federal deposit insurance.
These laws reached every corner of American society. They shared a single underlying logic:
Government would no longer stand aside. Government would become an active participant in the economy — a regulator, a rescuer, an employer of last resort.
In the context of American history, this was revolutionary.
Later historians would summarize the New Deal as the "three Rs": Relief — keeping the unemployed and hungry alive; Recovery — getting the economy moving again; Reform — preventing the catastrophe from ever happening again.
Chapter Two: The Blue Eagle
A Bird, and Its Moment
In the summer of 1933, shop windows across New York City displayed a poster: a blue eagle, wings spread wide, beneath the words "WE DO OUR PART."
This was the symbol of the National Recovery Administration — the NRA — the most recognizable icon of the New Deal.
The NRA's core idea was simple: bring businesses, workers, and government together to write "codes of fair competition." Companies agreed not to cut wages, not to lengthen hours, not to employ child labor. In exchange, the government temporarily relaxed antitrust enforcement.
In September 1933, New York City hosted a "Blue Eagle Parade." Some 250,000 people took to Fifth Avenue to celebrate what felt like a turning of the tide. At that moment, Americans believed the worst was behind them.
The CCC: An Army in the Forest
The Civilian Conservation Corps recruited unemployed young men between 18 and 25 and sent them to forests, parks, and wastelands across the country — planting trees, building roads, constructing firebreaks, protecting wildlife habitat.
They earned $30 a month, of which $25 was sent home to their families.
A former CCC member later recalled: "The CCC saved my life. Not because of that thirty dollars — but because it made me feel useful. I wasn't a man waiting for charity. I was a man working for his country."
Between 1933 and 1942, roughly three million young men passed through the CCC. They planted more than two billion trees.
The WPA: The Dignity of Work
In 1935, the larger Works Progress Administration took the stage. The logic was straightforward: rather than handing out relief checks and letting people sit idle, pay them to work. Work doesn't just provide income — it provides dignity.
The WPA didn't only hire manual laborers. It established the Federal Art Project, the Federal Writers' Project, and the Federal Theatre Project. Painters, sculptors, writers, actors — they too were unemployed, and they too needed work.
When WPA director Harry Hopkins was challenged on why the government should hire artists, his answer was one sentence: "Hell, they've got to eat just like other people."
The WPA's legacy is still visible today. The bridges you cross, the books you read, the museums you visit — many of them were built by the hands of the unemployed during those years.
Social Security: A Line of Defense
On August 14, 1935, Roosevelt signed the Social Security Act.
Before this, the United States was the only major industrial nation without a national social insurance system. Old age, unemployment, disability — these were considered personal problems, not the government's business.
The Social Security Act changed everything. It declared that government bears responsibility for the basic welfare of its citizens.
Frances Perkins — the principal architect of the Act, and the first woman ever to serve in an American cabinet — stood behind Roosevelt as he signed it and said: "We are building in this country a line of defense for the ordinary American citizen, so that when the storms of life break over him, he will not be left naked."
The New Deal's Shadow
Yet the New Deal was not sunlight falling equally on everyone.
The Agricultural Adjustment Act paid farmers to reduce production — but the payments went to landowners, not to sharecroppers. Landlords used their AAA checks to buy tractors, further reducing their need for human labor. Hundreds of thousands of Black sharecroppers were pushed off the land.
The Social Security Act initially excluded agricultural and domestic workers — the two occupations where Black workers were most concentrated. This was not an accident. It was the price of a political bargain with Southern Democratic senators. Without that concession, the bill would not have passed.
A Black sharecropper in Alabama put it plainly: "They say the New Deal is for the forgotten man. Well, we got forgotten twice — first by the economy, then by the New Deal."
The New Deal changed America. But it did not change racial segregation. In some respects, it reinforced it.
Chapter Three: The Sit-Down
Flint, Winter 1936
Flint, Michigan. The heart of General Motors.
What was it like to work on the assembly line? One worker remembered: "You're not a person, you're part of the machine. You can't stop for a drink of water. You can't stop to use the bathroom. Your hands keep moving, but your mind is already dead."
Workers had no union. Anyone caught trying to organize was violently expelled by the company's "Service Department" — in practice, a corps of enforcers.
But in 1935, the Wagner Act gave workers the legal right to form unions and bargain collectively. Under the protection of the law, the United Auto Workers (UAW) began quietly organizing in Flint.
Forty-Four Days
On the evening of December 30, 1936, workers at Fisher Body Plant No. 1 in Flint put down their tools. But they did not walk out the door. They sat down.
This was the sit-down strike, and it was a work of genius. If workers simply walked off the job, the company could hire replacements. But if workers occupied the plant, the machines couldn't run — and any attempt to forcibly remove them risked destroying millions of dollars' worth of equipment. The workers turned their own bodies into bargaining chips.
Inside, they settled in — playing cards, talking, singing. They slept on car seats and lived on the production line.
Outside, police and National Guardsmen encircled the building. On January 11 came what workers sardonically called the "Battle of the Running Bulls" — police tried to force their way in; workers fought back with fire hoses, hinges, and auto parts. Police opened fire, wounding fourteen workers. The workers didn't retreat. The police fled.
The standoff lasted roughly forty-four days. General Motors was losing millions every day. Michigan's governor refused to send in the National Guard to clear the plant by force.
On February 11, 1937, General Motors — the largest corporation in the world — reached an agreement with the UAW, recognizing the union as the bargaining representative for its members.
It was a turning point in American labor history.
The workers marched out singing "Solidarity Forever." In the months that followed, sit-down strikes swept through steel, rubber, and textiles. The balance of power between American workers and their employers was permanently altered.
Chapter Four: The Recession Within the Depression
The Mistake of 1937
By the spring of 1937, the American economy seemed finally to have emerged from the abyss. Industrial output had recovered to 1929 levels. Unemployment, which had peaked at roughly one in four workers, had fallen back into the low-to-mid teens.
Roosevelt and his advisors grew worried about inflation and budget deficits. They decided it was time to "return to normal" — cut government spending, balance the budget.
The charts turned downward. Industrial output fell by roughly 32% in thirteen months. Unemployment climbed back from around 14% to around 19%.
People called it the "Roosevelt Recession."
It was a painful lesson: recovery is fragile. Pull government support too soon and the economy collapses again. In 1938, Roosevelt reversed course and expanded spending. The economy began slowly to recover.
But by 1939, unemployment was still in the double digits.
The New Deal had stabilized the economy, reformed the system, and saved countless lives. But it had not — and could not — fully end the Great Depression.
What ended it was something else entirely.
Chapter Five: The Guns
September 1, 1939. Germany invaded Poland. World War II had begun.
Europe needed weapons, aircraft, ships — and America was the only nation capable of producing them at scale. Roosevelt declared that America would be the "Arsenal of Democracy."
On December 7, 1941, Japan attacked Pearl Harbor. About 2,400 Americans died. The next day, the United States declared war. The age of the Depression was formally over.
War accomplished what the New Deal could not: it created unlimited demand.
Federal spending rose from $9 billion in 1939 to $93 billion in 1945 — ten times the peak of the New Deal. By 1944, unemployment had fallen to roughly 1%, the lowest in American history. Not because the economy had naturally healed, but because millions of men had put on uniforms and millions more had walked into war factories.
War proved one thing: extreme government demand can eliminate unemployment entirely.
The cost? Hundreds of billions of dollars in debt, and roughly 400,000 American lives. No economist would recommend this as a "policy." But it worked.
On August 15, 1945, Japan announced its surrender. The Great Depression had become history at last.
Chapter Six: Echoes
Chicago, 2002.
Economist Ben Bernanke — later to become Chairman of the Federal Reserve — gave a now-famous speech at Milton Friedman's 90th birthday celebration. His words, addressed to Friedman, were essentially this:
"Regarding the Great Depression — you're right, we did it. We're very sorry. But thanks to you, we won't do it again."
Six years later, that promise would be tested.
In September 2008, Lehman Brothers collapsed and the global financial system tipped into panic. For a moment, the ghost of 1929 seemed to be back.
This time, the Federal Reserve did not stand aside. Bernanke immediately injected liquidity into the banking system, purchased toxic assets, and cut interest rates to near zero. The 2008 crisis was severe — but it did not become another Great Depression. Deposit insurance kept banks from failing en masse. Unemployment insurance and Social Security kept consumer spending from completely collapsing.
The lessons of the Depression had been written into institutions, and at the critical moment, those institutions held.
What is the deepest lesson of the Great Depression?
Between 1929 and 1939, America had no deposit insurance, no unemployment relief, no Social Security. The Federal Reserve watched banks fail and even raised interest rates in the middle of the crisis. Hoover was paralyzed by his orthodoxy about balanced budgets. Roosevelt's premature retreat in 1937 created a recession within the Depression. Their errors were paid for by tens of millions of people, in ten years of suffering.
And yet some things have not changed. Wealth inequality has risen sharply in recent decades. Financial leverage has rebuilt itself in new forms — shadow banking, cryptocurrency, leveraged ETFs. The specter of trade protectionism, reminiscent of the Smoot-Hawley tariffs of 1930, is never far from the headlines.
Epilogue: What Happened to Her
Florence Owens Thompson — the thirty-two-year-old woman in the photograph known as Migrant Mother — what became of her?
She moved from farm to farm and factory to factory across California, raising her children. She died of cancer in 1983, at the age of eighty.
When a reporter tracked her down in her later years, she said: "I wish she hadn't taken my picture. She didn't even ask my name."
She never received a single cent from that photograph.
But to the world, her endurance — raising seven children, never giving up — had become the enduring human face of an entire era.
The Great Depression is not a story about numbers. It is a story about people.
About those who struggled, resisted, and survived in the depths of the abyss. About those who built institutions, changed the rules, and worked to ensure the tragedy would not happen again.
The institutions born from that suffering — deposit insurance, Social Security, labor rights — still protect us today.
Their story is our inheritance. Their lessons are our responsibility.
"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." — George Santayana
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