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The Era of Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1933-1945 by Richard D. Polenberg - First Edition, 2000 from Macmillan Student Store
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The Era of Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1933-1945

First  Edition|©2000  Richard D. Polenberg

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About

Covering issues of race and ethnicity, and exploring the New Deal's transformative agencies for economic and social ramifications as well as the constitutional revolution they triggered, The Era of Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1933-1945 provides you with a rich context to understand the multifaceted role FDR had as president, reformer, policymaker, and commander-in-chief. Forty-five primary sources, arranged topically, provide you with an engaging historical and biographical overview of FDR and the New Deal.

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Contents

Table of Contents

Table of Contents
Foreword  
Preface
   
PART ONE
Introduction: Franklin D. Roosevelt and American Liberalism
   
PART TWO
The Documents
   
  1. FDR as President
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1933
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, First Press Conference, March 8, 1933
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, Annual Message to the Congress, January 4, 1935
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, Campaign Address at Madison Square Garden, October 31, 1936
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, Fireside Chat on Reorganization of the Judiciary, March 9, 1937
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, Speeches on Conservation and the Environment, 1936-1937
   
  2. The New Deal
    Robert F. Wagner, The National Labor Relations Act, February 21, 1935
    Frances Perkins, The Social Security Act, September 2, 1935
    John Steinbeck, The Crisis in Agriculture, September 12, 1936
    Harry Hopkins, Federal Relief, September 19, 1936
    Hallie Flanagan, The Federal Theatre Project, May 11, 1938
   
  3. Eleanor Roosevelt and American Women
    Eleanor Roosevelt, Women in the Labor Force, June 16, 1938
    Molly Dewson, Women and the New Deal, April 8, 1936
    Eleanor Roosevelt, Women in Politics, March-April, 1940
   
  4. Documenting the Depression: The Photographs of Dorothea Lange
    Plantation Overseer and His Field Hands, Mississippi Delta, 1936
    Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California, 1936
    Mexican Migratory Field Worker's Home on the Edge of a Frozen Pea Field, Imperial Valley, California, 1937
    Small Independent Gas Station during Cotton Strike, Kern City, California, November 1938
   
  5. Right. . .and Left. . .Face
    Herbert Hoover, The Challenge to Liberty, 1934
    American Liberty League, The New Deal vs. Democracy, July 15, 1936
    Upton Sinclair, The EPIC Plan, 1934
    Father Charles E. Coughlin, The National Union for Social Justice, November 11, 1934
    Huey P. Long, Share Our Wealth, May 23, 1935
   
  6. Race, Ethnicity, and Reform
    Songs of the Mexican Migration: Deported [Deportados], 1933
    Selden Menefee and Orin C. Cassmore, The Pecan Shellers of San Antonio, 1940
    W. E. B. Du Bois and Walter White: The NAACP and Segregation, January-February 1934
    A. Phillip Randolph, The March on Washington, November 1942
    John Collier, A New Deal for American Indians, 1938
    J. C. Morgan, The Voice of a Navajo Indian, April 10, 1934
   
  7. The Constitutional Revolution
    Owen Roberts and Harlan Fiske Stone, United States v. Butler, January 6, 1936
    Robert M. La Follette Jr., Unpacking the Court, February 13, 1937
    Herbert H. Lehman, A Greatly Dangerous Precedent, July 19, 1937
    Charles Evans Hughes and George Sutherland, West Coast Hotel v. Parrish, March 29, 1937
    Benjamin N. Cardozo, Helvering v. Davis, May 24, 1937
   
  8. Morale in Wartime: A Portfolio of Propaganda Posters
    U.S. War Manpower Commission, United We WIn, 1943
    Employment Service, Do the Job HE Left Behind, 1943[?]
    Packer Aircraft, Lookout Monks! Here's Your Plane Warning! 1942
    U.S. Treasury Department, Buy Victory Bonds, 1945
   
  9. The "Good War"?
    Western Defense Command, Instructions to All Persons of Japanese Ancestry, April 30, 1942
    Footprints: Poetry of the American Relocation Camp Experience, ca. 1942-1944
    Hugo Black and Frank Murphy, Korematsu v. United States, December 18, 1944
    Pearl S. Buck and A. Leonard Allen, Debate about the Repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Acts, May 20, 1943
    Robert Jackson and Felix Frankfurter, West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, June 14, 1943
    Randolph Paul, Report to the Secretary [of the Treasury] on the Acquiescence of This Government in the Murder of the Jews, January 13, 1944
    John W. Pehle and John J. McCloy, Debate about the Bombing of Auschwitz, July-November, 1944
    Eleanor Roosevelt, Race, Religion and Prejudice, May 11, 1942
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, An Economic Bill of Rights, January 11, 1944
   
APPENDICES
   
  Chronology of Events during the Era Franklin D. Roosevelt (1933-1945)
  Questions for Consideration
  Selected Bibliography
   
  Index

Authors

Richard D. Polenberg

Richard Polenberg is professor of history at Cornell University, where he has received the Clark Distinguished Teaching Award and was appointed Goldwin Smith Professor of American History in 1986. He has been a Fulbright Visiting Professor at Hebrew University in Jerusalem and has published widely on twentieth-century American history, including The World of Benjamin Cardozo: Personal Values and the Judicial Process (1997); Fighting Faiths: The Abrams Case, the Supreme Court, and Free Speech (1989), for which he won the American Bar Association's Silver Gavel Award and the Gustavus Myers Foundation's Outstanding Book Award; and One Nation Divisible: Class, Race, and Ethnicity in the United States since 1938 (1980).


Covering issues of race and ethnicity, and exploring the New Deal's transformative agencies for economic and social ramifications as well as the constitutional revolution they triggered, The Era of Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1933-1945 provides you with a rich context to understand the multifaceted role FDR had as president, reformer, policymaker, and commander-in-chief. Forty-five primary sources, arranged topically, provide you with an engaging historical and biographical overview of FDR and the New Deal.

E-book

Read online (or offline) with all the highlighting and notetaking tools you need to be successful in this course.

Learn More

Table of Contents

Table of Contents
Foreword  
Preface
   
PART ONE
Introduction: Franklin D. Roosevelt and American Liberalism
   
PART TWO
The Documents
   
  1. FDR as President
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1933
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, First Press Conference, March 8, 1933
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, Annual Message to the Congress, January 4, 1935
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, Campaign Address at Madison Square Garden, October 31, 1936
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, Fireside Chat on Reorganization of the Judiciary, March 9, 1937
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, Speeches on Conservation and the Environment, 1936-1937
   
  2. The New Deal
    Robert F. Wagner, The National Labor Relations Act, February 21, 1935
    Frances Perkins, The Social Security Act, September 2, 1935
    John Steinbeck, The Crisis in Agriculture, September 12, 1936
    Harry Hopkins, Federal Relief, September 19, 1936
    Hallie Flanagan, The Federal Theatre Project, May 11, 1938
   
  3. Eleanor Roosevelt and American Women
    Eleanor Roosevelt, Women in the Labor Force, June 16, 1938
    Molly Dewson, Women and the New Deal, April 8, 1936
    Eleanor Roosevelt, Women in Politics, March-April, 1940
   
  4. Documenting the Depression: The Photographs of Dorothea Lange
    Plantation Overseer and His Field Hands, Mississippi Delta, 1936
    Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California, 1936
    Mexican Migratory Field Worker's Home on the Edge of a Frozen Pea Field, Imperial Valley, California, 1937
    Small Independent Gas Station during Cotton Strike, Kern City, California, November 1938
   
  5. Right. . .and Left. . .Face
    Herbert Hoover, The Challenge to Liberty, 1934
    American Liberty League, The New Deal vs. Democracy, July 15, 1936
    Upton Sinclair, The EPIC Plan, 1934
    Father Charles E. Coughlin, The National Union for Social Justice, November 11, 1934
    Huey P. Long, Share Our Wealth, May 23, 1935
   
  6. Race, Ethnicity, and Reform
    Songs of the Mexican Migration: Deported [Deportados], 1933
    Selden Menefee and Orin C. Cassmore, The Pecan Shellers of San Antonio, 1940
    W. E. B. Du Bois and Walter White: The NAACP and Segregation, January-February 1934
    A. Phillip Randolph, The March on Washington, November 1942
    John Collier, A New Deal for American Indians, 1938
    J. C. Morgan, The Voice of a Navajo Indian, April 10, 1934
   
  7. The Constitutional Revolution
    Owen Roberts and Harlan Fiske Stone, United States v. Butler, January 6, 1936
    Robert M. La Follette Jr., Unpacking the Court, February 13, 1937
    Herbert H. Lehman, A Greatly Dangerous Precedent, July 19, 1937
    Charles Evans Hughes and George Sutherland, West Coast Hotel v. Parrish, March 29, 1937
    Benjamin N. Cardozo, Helvering v. Davis, May 24, 1937
   
  8. Morale in Wartime: A Portfolio of Propaganda Posters
    U.S. War Manpower Commission, United We WIn, 1943
    Employment Service, Do the Job HE Left Behind, 1943[?]
    Packer Aircraft, Lookout Monks! Here's Your Plane Warning! 1942
    U.S. Treasury Department, Buy Victory Bonds, 1945
   
  9. The "Good War"?
    Western Defense Command, Instructions to All Persons of Japanese Ancestry, April 30, 1942
    Footprints: Poetry of the American Relocation Camp Experience, ca. 1942-1944
    Hugo Black and Frank Murphy, Korematsu v. United States, December 18, 1944
    Pearl S. Buck and A. Leonard Allen, Debate about the Repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Acts, May 20, 1943
    Robert Jackson and Felix Frankfurter, West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, June 14, 1943
    Randolph Paul, Report to the Secretary [of the Treasury] on the Acquiescence of This Government in the Murder of the Jews, January 13, 1944
    John W. Pehle and John J. McCloy, Debate about the Bombing of Auschwitz, July-November, 1944
    Eleanor Roosevelt, Race, Religion and Prejudice, May 11, 1942
    Franklin D. Roosevelt, An Economic Bill of Rights, January 11, 1944
   
APPENDICES
   
  Chronology of Events during the Era Franklin D. Roosevelt (1933-1945)
  Questions for Consideration
  Selected Bibliography
   
  Index

Richard D. Polenberg

Richard Polenberg is professor of history at Cornell University, where he has received the Clark Distinguished Teaching Award and was appointed Goldwin Smith Professor of American History in 1986. He has been a Fulbright Visiting Professor at Hebrew University in Jerusalem and has published widely on twentieth-century American history, including The World of Benjamin Cardozo: Personal Values and the Judicial Process (1997); Fighting Faiths: The Abrams Case, the Supreme Court, and Free Speech (1989), for which he won the American Bar Association's Silver Gavel Award and the Gustavus Myers Foundation's Outstanding Book Award; and One Nation Divisible: Class, Race, and Ethnicity in the United States since 1938 (1980).


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