The Works Progress Administration (WPA), served as a catalyst for public works programs, specifically in the area of providing work to the unemployed. In cities all over the nation, the WPA provided grants that either paid employees directly or allocated funds to private firms. These programs were fundamental not only to the individuals they employed, but to the future of the cities themselves. Through the construction of public buildings, art projects, parks, and roads, American cities endured, remained intact, and even flourished as a result of the WPA
On the whole, the New Deal was a good deal for California, and San Francisco got the best of the bar...
Original description reads: "Emily Scrivens; Grace Leonard; Judy Zemnick; Ulmer Brown. Artists worki...
The depression of the 1930s had an early effect on the state of Oregon. A decline in timber and agri...
The Works Progress Administration (WPA), served as a catalyst for public works programs, specificall...
178 pagesFormed under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal, the Works Progress Administra...
A WPA art project in Urbana, Ohio depicting World War I era soldiers marching away from a large skul...
This booklet describes a number of work relief projects operating in Milwaukee County in the 1930s w...
This study concerns itself with one response the federal government made to deal with jobless white-...
Original description reads: "The May festival, a W.P.A. recreational program for school children, No...
A mural of a train station in the center of a town photographed for the Ohio WPA Art Program. The ar...
James E. SherowAfter the stock market crash of 1929, the country fell into a deep financial depressi...
Economic conditions during the 1930s caused unprecedented problems for the American people. The most...
From its birth in 1935 until its death in 1943, the WPA (the common acronym for the Works Progress A...
Original description reads: "Painters working at Federal Art Project, WPA, Cleveland." The Federal ...
When President Roosevelt assumed office in March of 1933, he faced an unemployment rate of twenty-fi...
On the whole, the New Deal was a good deal for California, and San Francisco got the best of the bar...
Original description reads: "Emily Scrivens; Grace Leonard; Judy Zemnick; Ulmer Brown. Artists worki...
The depression of the 1930s had an early effect on the state of Oregon. A decline in timber and agri...
The Works Progress Administration (WPA), served as a catalyst for public works programs, specificall...
178 pagesFormed under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal, the Works Progress Administra...
A WPA art project in Urbana, Ohio depicting World War I era soldiers marching away from a large skul...
This booklet describes a number of work relief projects operating in Milwaukee County in the 1930s w...
This study concerns itself with one response the federal government made to deal with jobless white-...
Original description reads: "The May festival, a W.P.A. recreational program for school children, No...
A mural of a train station in the center of a town photographed for the Ohio WPA Art Program. The ar...
James E. SherowAfter the stock market crash of 1929, the country fell into a deep financial depressi...
Economic conditions during the 1930s caused unprecedented problems for the American people. The most...
From its birth in 1935 until its death in 1943, the WPA (the common acronym for the Works Progress A...
Original description reads: "Painters working at Federal Art Project, WPA, Cleveland." The Federal ...
When President Roosevelt assumed office in March of 1933, he faced an unemployment rate of twenty-fi...
On the whole, the New Deal was a good deal for California, and San Francisco got the best of the bar...
Original description reads: "Emily Scrivens; Grace Leonard; Judy Zemnick; Ulmer Brown. Artists worki...
The depression of the 1930s had an early effect on the state of Oregon. A decline in timber and agri...