Episode 197 - The Federal Writers Project episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 3, 2023 · 12 MIN

Episode 197 - The Federal Writers Project

from The Natural Curiosity Project · host Dr. Steven Shepard

When the Great Depression hit in 1929, jobs disappeared by the millions. Unemployment lines and bread lines became common; the economy was badly wounded, and without jobs, without the machinery that made money move through the economy, its chances of recovery were slim. So, as part of the Second New Deal, and driven by a presidential order from Franklin Roosevelt, the Works Progress Administration, or WPA, was signed into law on May 6, 1935. But there’s another part of the Works Progress Administration that most people have never heard of, and it’s kind of important in its own right. It was called Federal Project Number One, and it had one goal: To protect and preserve the artistic and cultural elements of American society. It had five divisions, one of which was the Federal Writers Project. This episode is about the extraordinary content that the program made possible.

When the Great Depression hit in 1929, jobs disappeared by the millions. Unemployment lines and bread lines became common; the economy was badly wounded, and without jobs, without the machinery that made money move through the economy, its chances of recovery were slim. So, as part of the Second New Deal, and driven by a presidential order from Franklin Roosevelt, the Works Progress Administration, or WPA, was signed into law on May 6, 1935. But there’s another part of the Works Progress Administration that most people have never heard of, and it’s kind of important in its own right. It was called Federal Project Number One, and it had one goal: To protect and preserve the artistic and cultural elements of American society. It had five divisions, one of which was the Federal Writers Project. This episode is about the extraordinary content that the program made possible.

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Episode 197 - The Federal Writers Project

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When the Great Depression hit in 1929, jobs disappeared by the millions. Unemployment lines and bread lines became common; the economy was badly wounded, and without jobs, without the machinery that made money move through the economy, its chances...

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