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Christine Erickson (2002)
“I have not had One Fact Disproven”: Elizabeth Dilling's Crusade Against Communism in the 1930sJournal of American Studies, 36
I. Hendrick (1972)
The Impact of The Great Depression On Public School Support In CaliforniaSouthern California quarterly, 54
P. Fass (1982)
Without Design: Education Policy in the New DealAmerican Journal of Education, 91
[The Depression of the 1930s led many Americans to reconsider the nature of their political, social, and economic institutions. In California, the social and economic crisis of the Depression raised significant challenges for Corinne Seeds and Helen Heffernan, including financial cutbacks, the beginning of attacks from conservatives, and the need to respond to the entry of increasing numbers of impoverished children into the schools.1 As was true throughout the United States, California was deeply affected by the Depression: local economies suffered, tax revenues shrank, and unemployment reached extraordinary levels. But unlike the Midwest or East, California also experienced an influx of migrants from other states seeking work in its rich agricultural counties, a migration documented by such well-known figures as Dorothea Lange, John Steinbeck, and Carey McWilliams. Through Lange’s photographs and the 1940 film “The Grapes of Wrath,” images of white migrant farmworkers became icons of the Depression. At the same time, under the New Deal, California received substantial federal aid; it was the site of large public works projects such as the Golden Gate and Bay Bridges in San Francisco and was the recipient of federally supported programs for the unemployed, farmworkers, and children. This increased federal aid led to an increased federal presence and influence in the state.]
Published: Nov 19, 2015
Keywords: Social Order; Teacher College; Rural School; Progressive Education; Seasonal Worker
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