Annotated Bibliography
Peters, Gerhard, and John Woolley. "Franklin D. Roosevelt - Fireside Chats."Franklin D.
Roosevelt - Fireside Chats. 1999. The American Presidency Project. 23 Feb. 2013
<http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/fireside.php>.
Tran, Brandon. "Old Radio World." Fireside Chat with Franklin D. Roosevelt. 2003. Old
World Radio. 23 Feb. 2013
<http://www.oldradioworld.com/shows/Fireside_Chat_with_Franklin_D._Roosevelt.php>.
I chose to have both the audio and the transcripts because the fill in the blanks for one another. Both the audio and the transcripts show that President Franklin D. Roosevelt was a committed and an involved president. An example of this was his “fireside chats” that he would have to the citizens in during his four terms in office. In these chats, he addressed himself as “I” and the awaiting public as “you” as if he was personally having a conversation with them. This showed that he wants to reassure the public that there was no difference in the between the President and his people. These chats happened at least once a month and consisted of a chat that would update the public about where the economy was going at that time, current events, new plans, and the growth of his New Deal program.
This is a very useful source because all of the audio and transcripts above are all, word by word, from President Franklin D. Roosevelt. This source does not compare to any of the other sources because this is coming the recordings of the President and his current mood, state of mind, and ideas at the time. This source shows a favor in the New Deal whereas some people at the time might have not supported the New Deal. This is because this is the President stating the changes instead of having anyone else say it. The goal of this source is to give the listener or reader an insight on what happened during the term of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
This source fits into our research because it gives us a detailed explanation of when, how, where, and why the New Deal programs were introduced and how they were working out from state to state. This audio/transcript source also shows the state of mind of the President and how open he was to allowing the public into his work and his every step as their President. This has somewhat shifted my point of view of the New Deal to the middle because I was first wary of the idea but now I know that some of the New Deal proposals are still in use today.
Berryman, Clifford K. "The New Deal at 75 When Art, Culture and Government
Intersected."The New Deal at 75 (April 2008). 1933. Library of Congress. 23 Feb.
2013 <http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/0804/detail/newdeal02.html>.
The argument in this source shows that there is a young, naïve President Franklin D. Roosevelt awaiting his New Deal program embroidered stockings to be filled up with gifts, money, and other goods that would help supply his goal of pulling the United States of America out of the Great Depression. President Franklin D. Roosevelt is anxiously awaiting Uncle Sam, who represents all of the United States, to fill his stockings.
This source was useful because it shows the biased pessimistic side of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal programs that he proposed when he came into office. This shows that there were some people of the United States were not interested in having wishy-washy programs. And with that, through this political cartoon, they show that President Franklin D. Roosevelt wants the citizens of the United States to open their wallets and trust him but they have no reassurance that he will pull through and get everyone out of the Great Depression.
This fits into my research because it shows a different point of view from the pros of the New Deal programs that President Franklin D. Roosevelt proposed. This acts as a different part of view and can help our argument by allowing people to see that not everyone was on the same side and that different people had different ideas.
Berryman, Clifford K. "The New Deal and Prospects for the American Way." The Heritage
American. 23 Feb. 2013
<https://heritageamerican.wordpress.com/2011/04/12/the-new-deal-and-prospects-for-the-american-way/>.
This cartoon depicts President Franklin D. Roosevelt mixing various people and programs together in a huge “democratic recovery broth” as part of his New Deal programs. In this cartoon it shows that President Franklin D. Roosevelt is making too many programs too soon. In this political cartoon, we see that there is a person warning President Franklin D. Roosevelt to be careful with all that he is putting into the broth because he doesn’t know which mixture will mess up the entire broth.
This source is useful because it shows a different view of the New Deal proposal. A majority of Americans approved of the New Deal proposal but there were some people that were against the proposal and spoke out against it. I believe that this source is reliable because it was drawn at the time of the Great Depression and shows the views and standpoints of a wide variety of people.
This represents the uncertainty that some people had for the actions of President Franklin D. Roosevelt because of his willingness and dedication to pulling the United States out of the Great Depression. This helps shape my argument because this picture shows that President Franklin D. Roosevelt is a very dedicated and go-getting President when compared to the previous president, Herbert Hoover.
Georgia Performance Standard SS8H8 (d). 1930. Georgia InfoWeb. 25 Feb 2013.
<http://georgiainfo.galileo.usg.edu/gastudiesimages/FDR New Deal Cartoon 2.htm>.
This cartoon is saying that they are going to change something if they made a mistake.
At this time mistakes that were made, were not resolved. This is a good source because most of the time they did not fix the mistakes that were made. . Also it is a cartoon and this is a different way to look at it besides reading articles. The reason why the great depression happened was because of mistakes, for the people wanting to fix the mistakes will help our economy.
"The Great Depression and New Deal." . United States History. Web. 25 Feb 2013.
<http://iws.collin.edu/kwilkison/Online1302home/20thCentury/DepressionNewDeal.html>.
This source explains the background on the great depression. Also it explains all the causes that made this happened in detail. This source is useful because they use pictures and quotes from a book about the great depression. Also it talks about a lot of people who were well known in this time period. These people had a great impact on this time period because of the decisions they made.
Kingsbury, Alex. "Franklin D. Roosevelt's "New Deal" Sealed the Deal in 1932." US NEWS. N.p.. Web. 1 Mar 2013.
<http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2008/01/17/the-new-deal-sealed-the-deal>.
This source is about how the phrase “new deal” came to be. The source basically summarizes the new rules and regulations that President Franklin D. Roosevelt wanted to put into place. This is a monumental change in society because it shows how the United States government economy is slowly but gradually changing and seeing a different in how the there is no trust in U.S. banking, imports of goods, and exports of goods through the United States.
Schwab, Charles . 401k Losses Cartoon. N.d. n.p. Web. 1 Mar 2013.
<http://beginnersinvest.about.com/od/macroeconomics/ig/Recession-Investing-Cartoons/401-k--Losses.htm>.
This is a political cartoon that explains that the investments that people made were too big and caused the economy to crash. People thought that buying properties cheap will make them money but when everyone is doing it at the same time then, it is not worth it.
. "Chart Book: The Legacy of the Great Recession." Budget and policy properties . N.p.. Web. 1 Mar 2013.
<http://www.cbpp.org/cms/index.cfm?fa=view&id=3252>.
The great recession caused many different problems and this is an article with graphs that shows how the great recession affected the economy, employment rate, etc. This article is useful because we know that there was a change in all of these areas but it good to see the actual change. After each graph it explains what each chart means.
Bailey, Thomas. "United States Resource Center." Primary Sources. Centage Learning. Web. 6 Mar 2013.
<http://college.cengage.com/history/us/resources/students/primary/depression.htm >.
This source shows a graph from the beginning of the depression. It shows the unemployment rate. The graph starts low, then the unemployment rate rockets to 12 million people. It varies by going up and down after that but we were never fully restored in the sense of how we were before the crash. This source is useful because it shows the graphic change between the amount of year this depression went on for.
Bailey, Thomas. "United States Resource Center." Primary Sources. Centage Learning. Web. 6 Mar 2013.
<http://college.cengage.com/history/us/resources/students/primary/depression.htm >.
This source shows a graph from the beginning of the depression. It shows the unemployment rate. The graph starts low, then the unemployment rate rockets to 12 million people. It varies by going up and down after that but we were never fully restored in the sense of how we were before the crash. This source is useful because it shows the graphic change between the amount of year this depression went on for.
"The New Deal." The New Deal: A Speech delivered by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.. Dana Roc Productions. Web. 6 Mar 2013.
<http://www.danaroc.com/guests_fdr_021609.html>.
This website is the new deal speech said by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. It was his most famous and effective program during his presidency. This source shows that the new deal was set up to reduce unemployment, provide welfare for the poor, and deal with the devastation of the Great Depression. The government was successful in creating programs to help people in need, such as “The Works Progress Administration.” These were put in place to improve the nation’s economic status.
This website is important because the President tells people what he will do to help people with the damage from the crash. He also introduces everything about the New Deal and how it will work.
This will help the project because it shows step by step what goes on in the New Deal. Many people were aided by this deal. I feel that at this time President Roosevelt was a good choice for a president.
"The New Deal. Surviving the Dust Bowl." General Article: The New Deal. American Experience. Web. 6 Mar 2013.
<http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/general-article/dustbowl-new-deal/ >.
This is an article about the dust bowl. It talks about how Roosevelt reacted to it. It talks in detail about a lot of the things that president Franklin D. Roosevelt was going to do and what he has done with the new deal and how things turned out because of what he has done.
This will help the project because it shows how it affected the country and how the people reacted to the new deal. It also talks about how roosevelt reacted to the depression.
This website is important because it talks about programs set in place to help the country with financial situations from east to west.
Roosevelt - Fireside Chats. 1999. The American Presidency Project. 23 Feb. 2013
<http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/fireside.php>.
Tran, Brandon. "Old Radio World." Fireside Chat with Franklin D. Roosevelt. 2003. Old
World Radio. 23 Feb. 2013
<http://www.oldradioworld.com/shows/Fireside_Chat_with_Franklin_D._Roosevelt.php>.
I chose to have both the audio and the transcripts because the fill in the blanks for one another. Both the audio and the transcripts show that President Franklin D. Roosevelt was a committed and an involved president. An example of this was his “fireside chats” that he would have to the citizens in during his four terms in office. In these chats, he addressed himself as “I” and the awaiting public as “you” as if he was personally having a conversation with them. This showed that he wants to reassure the public that there was no difference in the between the President and his people. These chats happened at least once a month and consisted of a chat that would update the public about where the economy was going at that time, current events, new plans, and the growth of his New Deal program.
This is a very useful source because all of the audio and transcripts above are all, word by word, from President Franklin D. Roosevelt. This source does not compare to any of the other sources because this is coming the recordings of the President and his current mood, state of mind, and ideas at the time. This source shows a favor in the New Deal whereas some people at the time might have not supported the New Deal. This is because this is the President stating the changes instead of having anyone else say it. The goal of this source is to give the listener or reader an insight on what happened during the term of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
This source fits into our research because it gives us a detailed explanation of when, how, where, and why the New Deal programs were introduced and how they were working out from state to state. This audio/transcript source also shows the state of mind of the President and how open he was to allowing the public into his work and his every step as their President. This has somewhat shifted my point of view of the New Deal to the middle because I was first wary of the idea but now I know that some of the New Deal proposals are still in use today.
Berryman, Clifford K. "The New Deal at 75 When Art, Culture and Government
Intersected."The New Deal at 75 (April 2008). 1933. Library of Congress. 23 Feb.
2013 <http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/0804/detail/newdeal02.html>.
The argument in this source shows that there is a young, naïve President Franklin D. Roosevelt awaiting his New Deal program embroidered stockings to be filled up with gifts, money, and other goods that would help supply his goal of pulling the United States of America out of the Great Depression. President Franklin D. Roosevelt is anxiously awaiting Uncle Sam, who represents all of the United States, to fill his stockings.
This source was useful because it shows the biased pessimistic side of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal programs that he proposed when he came into office. This shows that there were some people of the United States were not interested in having wishy-washy programs. And with that, through this political cartoon, they show that President Franklin D. Roosevelt wants the citizens of the United States to open their wallets and trust him but they have no reassurance that he will pull through and get everyone out of the Great Depression.
This fits into my research because it shows a different point of view from the pros of the New Deal programs that President Franklin D. Roosevelt proposed. This acts as a different part of view and can help our argument by allowing people to see that not everyone was on the same side and that different people had different ideas.
Berryman, Clifford K. "The New Deal and Prospects for the American Way." The Heritage
American. 23 Feb. 2013
<https://heritageamerican.wordpress.com/2011/04/12/the-new-deal-and-prospects-for-the-american-way/>.
This cartoon depicts President Franklin D. Roosevelt mixing various people and programs together in a huge “democratic recovery broth” as part of his New Deal programs. In this cartoon it shows that President Franklin D. Roosevelt is making too many programs too soon. In this political cartoon, we see that there is a person warning President Franklin D. Roosevelt to be careful with all that he is putting into the broth because he doesn’t know which mixture will mess up the entire broth.
This source is useful because it shows a different view of the New Deal proposal. A majority of Americans approved of the New Deal proposal but there were some people that were against the proposal and spoke out against it. I believe that this source is reliable because it was drawn at the time of the Great Depression and shows the views and standpoints of a wide variety of people.
This represents the uncertainty that some people had for the actions of President Franklin D. Roosevelt because of his willingness and dedication to pulling the United States out of the Great Depression. This helps shape my argument because this picture shows that President Franklin D. Roosevelt is a very dedicated and go-getting President when compared to the previous president, Herbert Hoover.
Georgia Performance Standard SS8H8 (d). 1930. Georgia InfoWeb. 25 Feb 2013.
<http://georgiainfo.galileo.usg.edu/gastudiesimages/FDR New Deal Cartoon 2.htm>.
This cartoon is saying that they are going to change something if they made a mistake.
At this time mistakes that were made, were not resolved. This is a good source because most of the time they did not fix the mistakes that were made. . Also it is a cartoon and this is a different way to look at it besides reading articles. The reason why the great depression happened was because of mistakes, for the people wanting to fix the mistakes will help our economy.
"The Great Depression and New Deal." . United States History. Web. 25 Feb 2013.
<http://iws.collin.edu/kwilkison/Online1302home/20thCentury/DepressionNewDeal.html>.
This source explains the background on the great depression. Also it explains all the causes that made this happened in detail. This source is useful because they use pictures and quotes from a book about the great depression. Also it talks about a lot of people who were well known in this time period. These people had a great impact on this time period because of the decisions they made.
Kingsbury, Alex. "Franklin D. Roosevelt's "New Deal" Sealed the Deal in 1932." US NEWS. N.p.. Web. 1 Mar 2013.
<http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2008/01/17/the-new-deal-sealed-the-deal>.
This source is about how the phrase “new deal” came to be. The source basically summarizes the new rules and regulations that President Franklin D. Roosevelt wanted to put into place. This is a monumental change in society because it shows how the United States government economy is slowly but gradually changing and seeing a different in how the there is no trust in U.S. banking, imports of goods, and exports of goods through the United States.
Schwab, Charles . 401k Losses Cartoon. N.d. n.p. Web. 1 Mar 2013.
<http://beginnersinvest.about.com/od/macroeconomics/ig/Recession-Investing-Cartoons/401-k--Losses.htm>.
This is a political cartoon that explains that the investments that people made were too big and caused the economy to crash. People thought that buying properties cheap will make them money but when everyone is doing it at the same time then, it is not worth it.
. "Chart Book: The Legacy of the Great Recession." Budget and policy properties . N.p.. Web. 1 Mar 2013.
<http://www.cbpp.org/cms/index.cfm?fa=view&id=3252>.
The great recession caused many different problems and this is an article with graphs that shows how the great recession affected the economy, employment rate, etc. This article is useful because we know that there was a change in all of these areas but it good to see the actual change. After each graph it explains what each chart means.
Bailey, Thomas. "United States Resource Center." Primary Sources. Centage Learning. Web. 6 Mar 2013.
<http://college.cengage.com/history/us/resources/students/primary/depression.htm >.
This source shows a graph from the beginning of the depression. It shows the unemployment rate. The graph starts low, then the unemployment rate rockets to 12 million people. It varies by going up and down after that but we were never fully restored in the sense of how we were before the crash. This source is useful because it shows the graphic change between the amount of year this depression went on for.
Bailey, Thomas. "United States Resource Center." Primary Sources. Centage Learning. Web. 6 Mar 2013.
<http://college.cengage.com/history/us/resources/students/primary/depression.htm >.
This source shows a graph from the beginning of the depression. It shows the unemployment rate. The graph starts low, then the unemployment rate rockets to 12 million people. It varies by going up and down after that but we were never fully restored in the sense of how we were before the crash. This source is useful because it shows the graphic change between the amount of year this depression went on for.
"The New Deal." The New Deal: A Speech delivered by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.. Dana Roc Productions. Web. 6 Mar 2013.
<http://www.danaroc.com/guests_fdr_021609.html>.
This website is the new deal speech said by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. It was his most famous and effective program during his presidency. This source shows that the new deal was set up to reduce unemployment, provide welfare for the poor, and deal with the devastation of the Great Depression. The government was successful in creating programs to help people in need, such as “The Works Progress Administration.” These were put in place to improve the nation’s economic status.
This website is important because the President tells people what he will do to help people with the damage from the crash. He also introduces everything about the New Deal and how it will work.
This will help the project because it shows step by step what goes on in the New Deal. Many people were aided by this deal. I feel that at this time President Roosevelt was a good choice for a president.
"The New Deal. Surviving the Dust Bowl." General Article: The New Deal. American Experience. Web. 6 Mar 2013.
<http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/general-article/dustbowl-new-deal/ >.
This is an article about the dust bowl. It talks about how Roosevelt reacted to it. It talks in detail about a lot of the things that president Franklin D. Roosevelt was going to do and what he has done with the new deal and how things turned out because of what he has done.
This will help the project because it shows how it affected the country and how the people reacted to the new deal. It also talks about how roosevelt reacted to the depression.
This website is important because it talks about programs set in place to help the country with financial situations from east to west.