Saturday, December 5, 2009
THEY DID NOT DIE!
Saturday, October 3, 2009
ROOSEVELT'S "BLUE EAGLE" CAMPAIGN AND ITS CRITICS ON THE LEFT
LIBRARY OBJECT(S) OF THE WEEK
Within the first hundred days of taking the oath of office, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt attempt to "jump-start" the moribund American economy back to life through the passage of the first of his "New Deal" programs: the National Industrial Recovery Act (1933) and the National Recovery Administration, (or NRA). The Roosevelt administration consciously promoted this program with patriotic symbols and colors. Charles T. Coiner designed the NRA's emblem, a "blue eagle." This "thunderbird" carried in its talons a cogwheel as the symbol of industry and lightning bolts representing the electrical power that would be generated through other New Deal programs like the REA (Rural Electrification Administration), and the TVA (Tennessee Valley Authority) tasked with building large hydroelectric dams. Although membership and compliance with NRA regulations was voluntary, businesses who refused to display the eagle were often subject to boycotts and in 1935 the conservative judges on the Supreme Court ruled the NRA unconstitutional.
For more information on the Wolfsonian Library's collection of New Deal materials, see:
http://www.librarydisplays.wolfsonian.org/WPA/wpa.htm
http://www.librarydisplays.wolfsonian.org/New%20Deal/NewDeal.htm
http://www.librarydisplays.wolfsonian.org/Great%20Depression/GD%20home.htm