Franklin Delano Roosevelt and his impact on the Great Depression Lyric Rosser May 15, 2017 Franklin Delano Roosevelt and his impact on the Great Depression The Great Depression is remember for its hardships and the struggles that everyone went through trying to get the economy back together. Many people felt deserted by their former president, Herbert Hoover as he looked at the economic decline as just something that happens and will run its course. Some say he even blamed the American people themselves for the crash of the economy. (www.history/us-presidents/herbert-hoover#) However they looked to Franklin Delano to drag the economy back from the slumps and he was elected president for the first time in November of …show more content…
He attended Columbia University, a law school and worked as a clerk at a Wall Street law firm (www.history.com/topics/us-presidents/franklin-d-roosevelt). He married Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, niece of Theodore Roosevelt and distant cousin to Franklin in March of 1905. Roosevelt first entered politics in 1910 around the age of 28, when he won a state senate seat in Dutchess County. He suffered a setback of polio, a virus that was very contagious and even caused some cases of paralysis, when he emerged from World War I as Assistant Secretary of the Navy. Though this disease faltered him he didn’t let the public know of his disease, using supportive braces in public to walk and a wheel chair in private, as told in http://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/ap-us-history/period… Franklin served as the 44th governor of New York in 1929, just before the start of the Great Depression era, and he was determined to make the lives of New Yorkers during this time …show more content…
Within his first 100 days in office there was a bill passed and enacted to pay farmers to not generate certain types of produce. This was to eliminate the surplus, or excess amount,this played a part in the coming about of the Great Depression. This act went by the name the Agriculture Adjustment Act as adjusted what commodities farmers had to stop making. (www.shmoop.com/franklin-d-roosevelt-fdr-/first-100-days.html) With the unemployment rate still in the double digits Roosevelt’s focus turned to creating new jobs. The Civilian Conservation Corps was founded to help make these new jobs. They mainly provided jobs for single white males and they were responsible for a lot of community service type of work. Things such as reforestation of public places, the building of wildlife reserves and shelters restore historic battlefields just to name a few. President Roosevelt also made it possible for workers to organize together and protest for better working conditions and higher wages.