History of the WPA The Works Progress Administration was created - TopicsExpress



          

History of the WPA The Works Progress Administration was created by the order of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and was funded by Congress through the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act in April of 1935. The Works Progress Administration was renamed the Work Projects Administration (WPA) in 1939 and was the largest agency in the New Deal, employing millions to construct public buildings and roads, and operate arts and literacy projects. Almost every community in the United States had a public building, road or bridge created by the WPA. The approximate total amount spent from 1936 to 1943 was over $11 billion which especially benefited rural and western populations. During the Great Depression the WPA provided some skills training and almost 8 million jobs to the unemployed. These jobs, however, were limited to one person per household. Approximately 15 percent of the households were headed by women. The average age of the workers was 40 years old. Libraries benefited greatly from the WPA. Construction and renovation projects on libraries alone employed over 27,000 people by 1940
Posted on: Sat, 31 Aug 2013 14:21:35 +0000

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