Blockk Blockk Blockk Blockk
  • News Portal
  • World Desk
    • Sign In
    • Submit Content
    • Register
  • All Content
    • Edited
      • Topics
        • Agriculture
        • Culture
          • Arts
          • Children
          • Education
          • Entertainment
          • Food and Hunger
          • Sports
        • Disasters
        • Economy
        • Energy
        • Environment
        • Government
        • Health
        • Media
        • Science
        • Spiritual
        • Technology
        • Transportation
        • War
      • Regions
        • Africa
        • Americas
          • North America
          • South America
        • Antarctica
        • Arctic
        • Asia
        • Australia/Oceania
        • Europe
        • Middle East
        • Oceans
          • Arctic Ocean
          • Atlantic Ocean
          • Indian Ocean
          • Pacific Ocean
          • Southern Ocean
        • Space
      • News
      • Commentary
      • Analysis
      • Advisories
      • Source
    • Flatwire
  • About Us
  • Site Map
  • Contact Us

Latest Stories

... loading images
US Farmers, Tech Tycoons Square Off Over Plans For Utopian ...
US Farmers, Tech Tycoons Square Off Over Plans For Utopian City | Glenn Chapman
Falling Solar Power And Storage Prices Make Global Climate ...
Falling Solar Power And Storage Prices Make Global Climate Transition Cheaper Than Expected | Ulrich von Lampe
Why the Next Crypto Bull Run Will Be Like Nothing We've ...
Why the Next Crypto Bull Run Will Be Like Nothing We've Ever Experienced | Solo Ceesay
Human-Driven Mass Extinction Is Eliminating Entire Branches ...
Human-Driven Mass Extinction Is Eliminating Entire Branches Of The Tree Of Life | Stanford University
The Untold Story of the Abuse of Palestinian Women in ...
The Untold Story of the Abuse of Palestinian Women in Hebron | Ramzy Baroud
‘Bread and Circuses’: Musk, Zuckerberg and the Art of ...
‘Bread and Circuses’: Musk, Zuckerberg and the Art of Distraction | Ramzy Baroud
What Are Smart Contracts? | Bing
What Are Smart Contracts? | Bing
Climate Conflagration: Maui to Montana | Amy Goodman & ...
Climate Conflagration: Maui to Montana | Amy Goodman & Denis Moynihan
Best Way To Enter News Stories Into A Blockchain? | Bing
Best Way To Enter News Stories Into A Blockchain? | Bing
War By Other Means: Short-Selling JPMorgan | Ellen Brown
War By Other Means: Short-Selling JPMorgan | Ellen Brown
Israel’s Slippery Slope | Nouriel Roubini
Israel’s Slippery Slope | Nouriel Roubini
How To Stop And Reverse Global Warming | Bing
How To Stop And Reverse Global Warming | Bing
US and Israel: Is the ‘Unbreakable Bond’ Finally Breaking? ...
US and Israel: Is the ‘Unbreakable Bond’ Finally Breaking? | Ramzy Baroud
Meaning Of Solidarity In The Time Of A New Palestine | ...
Meaning Of Solidarity In The Time Of A New Palestine | Ramzy Baroud
CLASS WAR: America’s Privileged Technocrats Not Ready For ...
CLASS WAR: America’s Privileged Technocrats Not Ready For What’s About To Happen To Them | Jon Schwarz
The Federal Debt Trap: Issues and Possible Solutions | ...
The Federal Debt Trap: Issues and Possible Solutions | Ellen Brown

We Poke Along | David Glenn Cox

More items by author
Categories
Edited | WNT Reports | News -- WNT Reports | News | All Content | Front Page Stories | Culture | Labor | Government | Politics | North America | Commentary -- WNT Reports | FlatWire
Tool Bar
View Comments

wpaDavid Glenn Cox -- World News Trust

Oct. 1, 2009 -- In May of 1935, Franklin Roosevelt signed Executive Order 7034 establishing the Works Projects Administration. The WPA replaced the Federal Emergency Relief Agency. You see, they didn’t have any cut-and-dried answers, they were in new territory and kept trying things until they got it right. The WPA only existed for eight years, but over the course of its life it employed a total of 8,500,000 people.

Republicans called it a bastion for waste and pork barrel projects, lampooning the acronym of WPA as "We Poke Along." Their answer was to let the market work. Those eight and a half million people didn’t need jobs; all they really needed was self-reliance and faith that tomorrow would be a better day.

At its height, the WPA employed 3,400,000 workers who worked a maximum of 30 hours per week. The goal was to put enough money in the workers' pockets to keep a roof over their heads and feed themselves. Thirty hours made room for more workers and also time for those employed workers to look for private employment. No more than one person per family was allowed to participate in the WPA.

In those eight years the WPA built over 651,000 miles of streets, roads and highways. They built or repaired 124,031 bridges; they built, modernized or repaired 125,031 public buildings. They built 851 airport landing fields and 8,192 public parks and playgrounds. The Federal Writer’s Project created pamphlets and guidebooks and organized state archives. The Federal Arts Project employed artists to create murals, sculptures and canvases to decorate schools and public buildings.

In the cities the WPA organized summer day camps to keep children occupied and to give them a hopeful diversion complete with a hot meal served at lunch. Symphony orchestras and traveling stock companies toured the country to bring music and theatre to the masses that had little in the way of diversions. We Poke Along indeed.

Night school classes taught welding, radio repair, auto mechanics, aviation mechanics, construction techniques and management techniques. Music & art lessons were available. Training in tailoring and as nurse’s aides was available, unless you were attending one of the dances sponsored by the WPA. The WPA was about more than just reviving the economy, it was about reviving the people’s spirits, as well.

From the homeless to those living in Hoovervilles and hobo jungles, it must have seemed as if Jesus himself had cracked open the sky to rescue them. If you’re unfamiliar with the term Hooverville, it is a hole dug into the ground where the dirt is piled around the edges, then scrap wood is put over the top and covered with more dirt. It was a hole in the ground used to keep you from freezing to death when your faith and self-reliance had worn thin.

For unmarried men between the ages of 18 to 26 there was the CCC, Civilian Conservation Corps. The men were paid a dollar a day and a mandatory $25.00 dollar allotment was sent home each month. Enlistment tours were six months and reenlistment was allowed. One of the first problems was that most of the unemployed were in the East and the bulk of the work was in the West. Roosevelt’s tree army, as they were called, planted 3 billion trees and accounted for half of all reforestations in the United States, public and private, in the nation's history.

The rules were relaxed to allow veterans to serve in the corps; many large cities reported drops in crime of more than 50 percent and credited it to the creation of the corps. But more than just planting trees, it got unemployed teenagers and young men out of the house which allowed for strained food budgets to go a little farther. Camps were set up in all of the states and eventually reached a total of 500,000 men. Like the WPA, vocational education was a part of the program. The CCC taught 40,000 men to read and write; 90 percent participated in some aspect of vocational education.

Classes included: blacksmithing, bulldozer operation, carpentry, woodworking, cooking, vocational guidance, use of powder, road construction, tractor operation and photography. Academic classes included: English composition, spelling, business arithmetic, trigonometry, Latin, Spanish, and citizenship. Universities offered correspondence courses to the enlistees in auto mechanics, forestry, journalism, and bookkeeping.

The camps competed with each other in athletics and built recreation centers and vied for bragging rights on most-days-worked. Camp Fremont in Wyoming worked every day throughout the winter of 1935. They ran telephone and power lines; they built the ranger stations and the docks on Fremont lake. So good was the record of the CCC that prospective employers looked at them as workers who knew what was expected of them and weren’t afraid of a day's work or of a challenge.

The corps built 97,000 miles of fire roads and 3,470 fire towers. They built parks and campgrounds complete with picnic shelters, swimming pools, fireplaces and public restrooms. In conjunction with the soil conservation service they reclaimed 84,000,000 acres of arable farmland. The corps fought forest fires, floods and hurricanes, even blizzards in Utah, all while planting 3 billion trees, helping to end the dust bowl.

The men returned home a little older and much wiser, with stories to tell and with a new confidence and skills. More than just planting trees, it grounded the men with a new vision of the world, a world where they felt self-assured and confident in their abilities. A kid from Chicago climbed the Rocky Mountains; a kid from New York had built roads in Virginia or parks in Alabama.

The CCC changed the way the United States treated its forests and farmlands. The dust bowl had taught us how fragile these ecosystems can be. They ushered in an era of stewardship because those 3 billion trees planted weren’t new forests, they were planted to replace the 3 billion cut down by the free market and never replaced. Soil conservation was a new idea that has never been forgotten and is the watchword in modern farming worldwide.

It is truly amazing all that was accomplished in a decade, a decade where putting the well-being of the people first was job one. They changed America and gave a new birth to this nation. From utter hopelessness and devastation to a modern America, open to try new ideas and new ways. Given hope and skills and an opportunity, they went on to become what today we casually call the middle class. Even more than that we call them the "Greatest Generation," but lest we forget how they earned that sobriquet, they had help.

The match they lit was small but the fire was big, it was opportunity that saved that America generation. An administration that lifted the people up and shook the dust off of their clothes, then gave them tools saying, "Now show us what you can do." Today in America we face a similar crisis, and the answer just seems so simple.

Check out David Glenn Cox's recent novel, The Servants of Pilate.

back to top
  • Created
    Thursday, October 01, 2009
  • Last modified
    Wednesday, May 09, 2018

World Desk Activities

  • Report
Francis M Goodwin
Francis M Goodwin ▶ Editorial -- Blockchain & Crypto 21/09/2023
  • Report
 

www.entrepreneur.com/money-finance/3-reasons-why-t…

3 Reasons Why the Next Crypto Bull Run Will Be Like Nothing We've Ever Experienced | Entrepreneur
3 Reasons Why the Next Crypto Bull Run Will Be Like Nothing We've Ever Experienced | Entrepreneur We are on the precipice of what could be the greatest transfer of wealth that has ever happened in human history. www.entrepreneur.com/money-finance/3-reasons-why-the-next-crypto-bull-run-will-be-like-nothing/458852
  • Report
Francis M Goodwin
BIG WAVE SURFING COMPILATION 2020 is now a featured video. 14/09/2023
BIG WAVE SURFING COMPILATION 2020

BIG WAVE SURFING COMPILATION 2020

** BIG WAVE SURFING COMPILATION 2020 ** 60-100FT** WORLD RECORD MONSTER WAVES - AMAZING FOOTAGE **Please Subscribe if You Would like to see More...

  • Report
Francis M Goodwin
Francis M Goodwin ▶ World News Trust Project 14/09/2023
  • Report
 

www.niemanlab.org/2023/09/the-colorado-sun-a-pione…

The Colorado Sun, a pioneering for-profit/nonprofit hybrid, moves toward a fully nonprofit model | Nieman Journalism Lab
The Colorado Sun, a pioneering for-profit/nonprofit hybrid, moves toward a fully nonprofit model | Nieman Journalism Lab "Whether I agree with it or not, whether I even like it or not, the reality is that many individuals, many institutions and philanthropic groups,… www.niemanlab.org/2023/09/the-colorado-sun-a-pioneering-for-profit-nonprofit-hybrid-moves-toward-a-fully-nonprofit-model/
  • Report
Francis M Goodwin
Francis M Goodwin ▶ Editorial -- Blockchain & Crypto 14/09/2023
  • Report
 

www.coindesk.com/consensus-magazine/2023/09/13/3-b…

3 Big Drivers Determining the Future of Crypto in the U.S.
3 Big Drivers Determining the Future of Crypto in the U.S. Blockchain Association CEO Kristin Smith weighs where the digital asset industry may be in the next half decade, on the organization's five-year anniversary. www.coindesk.com/consensus-magazine/2023/09/13/3-big-drivers-determining-the-future-of-crypto-in-the-us/
  • Report
Francis M Goodwin
Francis M Goodwin ▶ Editorial -- Blockchain & Crypto 14/09/2023
  • Report
 

www.coindesk.com/consensus-magazine/2023/09/13/wha…

What Will Be the Next Target of the SEC's Enforcement Regime?
What Will Be the Next Target of the SEC's Enforcement Regime? Troutman Pepper lawyers predict that crypto wallets and TradFi firms could face the agency's wrath. www.coindesk.com/consensus-magazine/2023/09/13/what-will-be-the-next-target-of-the-secs-enforcement-regime/
  • Report
Francis M Goodwin
Does Buddhism support romantic love? is now a featured video. 11/09/2023
Does Buddhism support romantic love?

Does Buddhism support romantic love?

Thich Nhat Hanh answers questions during a retreat in Plum Village (May, 2014).Question: If Buddhism supports love for Mother Nature why doesn't it...

  • Report
Francis M Goodwin
Francis M Goodwin ▶ Editorial 11/09/2023
  • Report
 

americanpressinstitute.org/publications/articles/b…

Building source tracking into newsroom workflows - American Press Institute
Building source tracking into newsroom workflows - American Press Institute americanpressinstitute.org/publications/articles/building-source-tracking-into-newsroom-workflows/
  • Report
Francis M Goodwin
Francis M Goodwin ▶ Editorial 11/09/2023
  • Report
 

reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/digital-news-re…

News podcasts: who is listening and what formats are working? | Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
News podcasts: who is listening and what formats are working? | Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism Over the last few years, much has been written about a so-called golden age of podcasting, which many date from the launch of the true… reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/digital-news-report/2023/news-podcasts-who-is-listening-what-formats-are-working
  • Report
Francis M Goodwin
Francis M Goodwin ▶ Editorial 11/09/2023
  • Report
 

ijnet.org/en/story/tips-conduct-investigations-tv-…

Tips to conduct investigations for TV, from ICFJ Knight Award winner Riad Kobaissi | International Journalists' Network
Tips to conduct investigations for TV, from ICFJ Knight Award winner Riad Kobaissi | International Journalists' Network The 2020 Beirut port blast – one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history – killed more than 200 people and injured over 6,500. It… ijnet.org/en/story/tips-conduct-investigations-tv-icfj-knight-award-winner-riad-kobaissi
  • Report
Francis M Goodwin
Francis M Goodwin ▶ Editorial 11/09/2023
  • Report
 

ijnet.org/en/story/digital-training-tool-helps-loc…

This digital training tool helps local community members become journalists | International Journalists' Network
This digital training tool helps local community members become journalists | International Journalists' Network In early 2020, Lindsey and Joey Young, owners of the small rural media company, Kansas Publishing Ventures (KPV), were interviewing a journalism school graduate for… ijnet.org/en/story/digital-training-tool-helps-local-community-members-become-journalists
blue-flag-thumb2_50x50Our side's flag is a thin, airlight blue, drifting almost unseen against the sky. Our military march is a meadowlark's song among the dandelions.
--Ken Kesey, The Real War 
 
Welcome to the World News Trust social news network. We are dedicated to your privacy and the highest standards of journalistic excellence. Help us build a great news service. Visit our World Desk community to register or log in. See you there.
 
 -Francis Goodwin, World News Trust founder

Community Videos

  • David Bowie - Under Pressure (Live) 1996 • TopPop 04:07
  • Chumbawamba - Tubthumping 03:34
  • ZZ Top - La Grange (Live From Gruene Hall) | Stages 04:38
  • Exmagma - Goldball   1974  (full album) 35:06
  • Digital News Report 2023 | Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism 02:20
  • Let 'Em Sing 04:31
View all videos

Popular

  • CLASS WAR: America’s Privileged Technocrats Not Ready For What’s About To Happen To Them | Jon Schwarz
  • How To Stop And Reverse Global Warming | Bing
  • Meaning Of Solidarity In The Time Of A New Palestine | Ramzy Baroud
  • The Federal Debt Trap: Issues and Possible Solutions | Ellen Brown
  • US and Israel: Is the ‘Unbreakable Bond’ Finally Breaking? | Ramzy Baroud

Blogs & Submissions

  • Israeli ‘Coup’ and the Death of False Democracy | Ramzy Baroud
  • The Other Side of the West Africa Upheaval | Ramzy Baroud
  • ‘Bread and Circuses’: Musk, Zuckerberg and the Art of Distraction | Ramzy Baroud
  • The Twisted Israeli Logic of Murdering Palestinian Children, and What Can We Do to Stop It? | Ramzy ...
  • Can BRICS, Global South Help Us Escape the West’s Hegemony, Contradictions? | Ramzy Baroud and Roman...
Prophets of Doom: Kissinger and the ‘Intellectual’ Decline ...
Prophets of Doom: Kissinger and the ‘Intellectual’ Decline of the West | Ramzy Baroud
Why US Democrats Are Growingly Challenging Israel | Ramzy ...
Why US Democrats Are Growingly Challenging Israel | Ramzy Baroud
The Financial Transactions Tax That Could Eliminate Need ...
The Financial Transactions Tax That Could Eliminate Need for All Others | Ellen Brown
How Palestinians Defeated Netanyahu and Redefined ‘Unity’ | ...
How Palestinians Defeated Netanyahu and Redefined ‘Unity’ | Ramzy Baroud
Transphobia | Wikipedia
Transphobia | Wikipedia
Did Entheogens Cause Human Intelligence? | Bard
Did Entheogens Cause Human Intelligence? | Bard
How To Deinstitutionalize The Practice Of Human Warfare | ...
How To Deinstitutionalize The Practice Of Human Warfare | Bard
How Khader Adnan Unified Palestinians from His Prison Cell ...
How Khader Adnan Unified Palestinians from His Prison Cell | Ramzy Baroud

Electronic Frontier Foundation

  • Don’t Fall for the Intelligence Community’s Monster of the Week Justifications
    September 22, 2023
  • This Bill Would Revive The Worst Patents On Software—And Human Genes  
    September 21, 2023
  • Today The UK Parliament Undermined The Privacy, Security, And Freedom Of All Internet Users 
    September 19, 2023
  • We Want YOU (U.S. Federal Employees) to Stand for Digital Freedoms
    September 19, 2023

The Intercept

  • FBI Warned Sikhs in the U.S. About Death Threats After Killing of Canadian Activist
    September 23, 2023
  • The Secret History of How the Super-Rich Have Kept the Working Class Out of Work
    September 23, 2023
  • Menendez "Appreciated" Meeting With Egypt Dictator Amid Alleged Bribes for Arms Sales
    September 22, 2023
  • North Carolina GOP Hides Redistricting Process From State Public Records Law
    September 22, 2023

VTDigger

  • What is Population Health?
    September 23, 2023
  • Zoning spat in Morristown paved over as tenants fill affordable apartments
    September 22, 2023
  • About 1,500 in Vermont will get Medicaid back following new federal directive
    September 22, 2023
  • Wildlife activists want animal cruelty charge applied to deer poaching case
    September 22, 2023

Mountain Times -- Central Vermont

  • September 22, 2023
  • Mountain Times – Volume 51, Number 38 – Sept. 20-26, 2023
    September 21, 2023
  • Are you ready for the Rollins? He’s ready for you!
    September 20, 2023
  • ‘Baby it’s not so cold outside’
    September 20, 2023
  1. You are here:  
  2. Home
  3. All Content
  4. Edited
  5. We Poke Along | David Glenn Cox
Copyright © 2023 World News Trust. All Rights Reserved.
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU General Public License.