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The Bowery Boys: New York City History

#337 Robert Moses and the Art of the New Deal

The Bowery Boys: New York City History

Tom Meyers

Places & Travel, History, Documentary, Society & Culture

4.73.9K Ratings

🗓️ 21 August 2020

⏱️ 56 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

PART ONE of a two-part podcast series A NEW DEAL FOR NEW YORK. For Part One, we look at the impact FDR and New Deal funding had in shaping  New York City's bridges and parks -- thanks to an especially tenacious parks commissioner! New York City during the 1930s was defined by massive unemployment, long lines at the soup kitchens, Hoovervilles in Central Park. But this was also the decade of the Triborough Bridge and Orchard Beach, new swimming pools and playgrounds Faced with the nationwide financial crisis, newly elected President Franklin Delano Roosevelt chose to boldly take the crisis on a series of transformative actions by the government that became known as the New Deal. No other American city would benefit more from the New Deal that New York City. At one point, one out of every seven dollars from the Works Progress Administration (WPA) was being spent in New York. And the two men responsible for funneling federal funding to the city was Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia and his new parks commissioner Robert Moses. Moses amassed a great amount of unchecked power, generating thousands of projects through out the city -- revitalizing the city landscape. How did Moses acquire so much power? And how did manage to funnel so much federal assistance into his own projects? boweryboyshistory.com Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/boweryboys

Transcript

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0:00.0

The Bowry Boys Episode 337, New York, and The New Deal.

0:05.6

Hey, it's The Bowry Boys.

0:07.2

Hey.

0:08.4

Support for The Bowry Boys is provided by our listeners.

0:11.9

Join us for as little as a dollar a month

0:14.4

by visiting patreon.com slash Bowry Boys.

0:21.7

Hi there, welcome to The Bowry Boys. This is Greg Young.

0:24.7

And this is Tom Myers.

0:26.4

And in today's show, we are going to visit the 1930s.

0:31.8

That's right. Greg, insert nervous laughter here.

0:35.8

Because this podcast is headed straight into the Great Depression.

0:40.9

Yeah, nervous laughter, I guess.

0:43.3

Tom, because we are, of course, facing right now a very challenging year.

0:48.8

In 2020, everybody's favorite year with the struggling economy that we're dealing with.

0:54.5

And a frightening rise in unemployment that some fear could turn into a replay of the Great Depression.

1:02.8

But in 1933, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt chose to boldly take on this crisis that he and

1:12.0

America was facing with a series of transformative actions by the federal government that became known

1:20.2

as the New Deal.

1:22.0

So over the next two shows, we'll be talking about New York City and the New Deal.

1:28.3

Now, we obviously express a little favoritism in the framing of the subject,

1:32.8

because that's what the show is about.

1:35.9

But the New Deal, of course, would benefit the entire country.

...

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