From its birth in 1935 until its death in 1943, the WPA (the common acronym for the Works Progress Administration and, after 1939, the renamed Work Projects Administration) hired a total of 14,000,000 Americans for a wide variety of public works projects. This massive army of WPA employees and veterans represented more than one in ten of the 132,000,000 Americans counted by the 1940 census. Some economists argued that a cutback in WPA hiring triggered a downturn in the national economy in 1937. Of all the initiatives of the Roosevelt Administration, only Social Security surpassed WPA in terms of size and scope
Workers' education, a form of adult education, emphasized the study of economic and social problems ...
Economic conditions during the 1930s caused unprecedented problems for the American people. The most...
Dated ca. 1935-1940, this photograph shows Butler County Emergency School, a Works Progress Administ...
Original description reads: "A native of Hungary tries a reading lesson before a circle of critical ...
This study concerns itself with one response the federal government made to deal with jobless white-...
Original description reads: "W.P.A. display at Mont. Co. Fair, Sept. 1936. Dayton, Ohio." On April ...
The Works Progress Administration (WPA) aided 8.5 million people across the United States during its...
178 pagesFormed under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal, the Works Progress Administra...
Original description reads: "The May festival, a W.P.A. recreational program for school children, No...
A WPA art project in Urbana, Ohio depicting World War I era soldiers marching away from a large skul...
Tree with an ear. The Works Progress Administration WPA was a government office that hired unemploye...
Original description reads: "Jewish Refugees from Nazi Germany in a WPA literacy class in the office...
Dated 1936, this photograph shows a home in Hamilton, Ohio, with a note on its reverse which reads "...
Original description reads: "Pyramiding, Girls' Gym Class. WPA Recreation Project, Dayton, Ohio. 193...
The Works Progress Administration (WPA), served as a catalyst for public works programs, specificall...
Workers' education, a form of adult education, emphasized the study of economic and social problems ...
Economic conditions during the 1930s caused unprecedented problems for the American people. The most...
Dated ca. 1935-1940, this photograph shows Butler County Emergency School, a Works Progress Administ...
Original description reads: "A native of Hungary tries a reading lesson before a circle of critical ...
This study concerns itself with one response the federal government made to deal with jobless white-...
Original description reads: "W.P.A. display at Mont. Co. Fair, Sept. 1936. Dayton, Ohio." On April ...
The Works Progress Administration (WPA) aided 8.5 million people across the United States during its...
178 pagesFormed under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal, the Works Progress Administra...
Original description reads: "The May festival, a W.P.A. recreational program for school children, No...
A WPA art project in Urbana, Ohio depicting World War I era soldiers marching away from a large skul...
Tree with an ear. The Works Progress Administration WPA was a government office that hired unemploye...
Original description reads: "Jewish Refugees from Nazi Germany in a WPA literacy class in the office...
Dated 1936, this photograph shows a home in Hamilton, Ohio, with a note on its reverse which reads "...
Original description reads: "Pyramiding, Girls' Gym Class. WPA Recreation Project, Dayton, Ohio. 193...
The Works Progress Administration (WPA), served as a catalyst for public works programs, specificall...
Workers' education, a form of adult education, emphasized the study of economic and social problems ...
Economic conditions during the 1930s caused unprecedented problems for the American people. The most...
Dated ca. 1935-1940, this photograph shows Butler County Emergency School, a Works Progress Administ...