Americans in all walks of life encountered New Deal measures in their daily lives. In 1938 and 1939, the Federal Writers Project, a part of the WPA, interviewed thousands of ordinary citizens throughout the nation, and many expressed their opinions about the New Deal. A sample of their views of the depression, Franklin Roosevelt, the WPA, the CIO, as well as political and economic power can be found in the following excerpts from three interviews.
DOCUMENT 1
Charles Fusco, On the Value of Relief Work during the Depression, December 6, 1938
An Italian American machinist in a munitions plant in Hampden, Connecticut, explained the value of the relief work provided by the WPA.
I can get a job today even if we got a depression. I don’t mean that I wasn’t on relief when things got tough because there was a time when everything was shut down and I had to get on relief for a job. It isn’t so long ago I was working on WPA. Believe me it was a big help. But it wasn’t the kind of a job I should have had because this town is Republican and I am a Republican and I was a good worker for the party—
Source: Interview with Charles Fusco, Manuscript. U.S. Work Projects Administration, Federal Writers Project. From Library of Congress, Folklore Project, Life Histories, 1936–
DOCUMENT 2
Myron Buxton, The Benefits of WPA Projects, July 25, 1939
A native-
One reason people here don’t like WPA is because they don’t understand it’s not all bums and drunks and aliens! Nobody ever explains to them that they’d never have had the new High School they’re so goddam proud of if it hadn’t been for WPA. They don’t stop to figure that new brick sidewalks wouldn’t be there, the shade trees wouldn’t be all dressed up to look at along High Street and all around town, if it weren’t for WPA projects. To most in this town, and I guess it’s not much different in this, than any other New England place, WPA’s just a racket, we set up to give a bunch of loafers and drunks steady pay to indulge in their vices! They don’t stop to consider that on WPA are men and women who have traveled places and seen things, been educated and found their jobs folded up and nothing to replace them with. . . .
Source: Seymour D. Buck. Interview with Myron Buxton. Manuscript. U.S. Work Projects Administration, Federal Writers Project. From Library of Congress, Folklore Project, Life Histories, 1936–
DOCUMENT 3
Jim Cole, Overcoming Racism in the Unions, May 18, 1939
An African American packing house worker near Chicago, Illinois, explained how the CIO united workers from different racial and ethnic backgrounds when other unions turned them away.
I’m working in the Beef Kill section. Butcher on the chain. Been in the place twenty years, I believe. You got to have a certain amount of skill to do the job I’m doing. Long ago, I wanted to join the AFL union, the Amalgamated Butchers and Meat Cutters, they called it and wouldn’t take me. Wouldn’t let me in the union. Never said it to my face, but reason of it was plain. Negro. That’s it. Just didn’t want a Negro man to have what he should. That’s wrong. You know that’s wrong. Long about 1937 the CIO come. Well, I tell you, we Negroes was glad to see it come. Well, you know, sometimes the bosses, or either the company stooges try to keep the white boys from joining the union. They say, “you don’t want to belong to a black man’s organization. That’s all the CIO is.” Don’t fool nobody, but they got to lie, spread lyin’ words around. There’s a many different people, talkin’ different speech, can’t understand English very well, we have to have us union interpreters for lots of our members, but that don’t make no mind, they all friends in the union, even if they can’t say nothin’ except ‘Brother’, an’ shake hands. Well, my own local, we elected our officers and it’s the same all over. We try to get every people represented. President of the local, he’s Negro. First V. President, he’s Polish. Second V[ice] President, he’s Irish. Other officers, Scotchman, Lithuanian, Negro, German. . . .
Source: Betty Burke. Interview with Jim Cole. Manuscript. U.S. Work Projects Administration, Federal Writers Project. From Library of Congress, Folklore Project, Life Histories, 1936–
Questions for Analysis and Debate
Connect to the Big Idea
How did the New Deal programs influence the lives of ordinary American citizens?