20192960 In a time when America was ending time of imperialism and beginning the Progressive Era, While World War I was ending and America was thriving through the roaring 20s. Suddenly, the stock market crash put the United States in a great depression that led the people through the end of World War II. It is in this context that the New Deal gave the federal government more control in America. The New Deal had a great impact on the federal government by setting a stronger appearance in business practices and the overall economy along with direct involvement in personal lives. Admittedly, one significant continuity of the role of the US federal government by the New Deal was the treatment and discrimination towards African Americans. …show more content…
The New Deal started programs such as the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), Public Works Administration (PWA), and Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) to directly benefit the lives of struggling Americans and provide employment. The Civilian Conservation Corps started jobs for young men developing natural resources on new federal land. The Tennessee Valley Authority was a series of projects to combat the flood issue of the Tennessee Valley region. President Roosevelt decided to begin building a series of dams along the Tennessee river which would not only fix the problem for the people living in the Tennessee Valley, but provide an abundance of jobs to build the dams, work the new power plants and factories. The Public Works Administration contributed employment through projects like building roads, airports, schools, hospitals, etc. The Public Works Administration offered these projects to privately owned contractors to do by hiring unemployed people. In ‘The New Deal, Then and Now,’ Alan Brinkley points out that the New Deal creates the Works Progress Administration, which was “the most extensive federal work-relief program ever created”. Brinkley adds that the WPA kept about two million people employed in it’s eight-year time period. In addition, The New Deal created financial support programs such as Social Security. Social Security was a support system created to provide welfare to the elderly, disabled, orphaned, and widowed. Before the New Deal, many conservatives often found the idea of social security to be frowned upon because of the misuse of hard working tax money going to waste. This was a significant change because throughout the great depression, the federal government was not heavily relied on for support within the workforce until after the New Deal programs were put into effect. In times of need,