The Great Depression
Equal Rights and the New Deal
Black Americans faced
discrimination everywhere but suffered especially severe legal
inequality in the Jim Crow South. In 1931, for instance, a group of nine
young men riding the rails between Chattanooga and Memphis, Tennessee,
were pulled from the train near Scottsboro, Alabama, and charged with
assaulting two white women. Despite clear evidence that the assault had
not occurred, and despite one of the women later recanting, the young
men endured a series of sham trials in which all but one were sentenced
to death. Only the communist-oriented International Legal Defense (ILD)
came to the aid of the "Scottsboro Boys," who soon became a national
symbol of continuing racial prejudice in America and a rallying point
for civil rights–minded Americans. In appeals, the ILD successfully
challenged the boys' sentencing, and the death sentences were either
commuted or reversed, although the last of the accused did not receive
parole until 1946.63
Despite a concerted effort to appoint Black
advisors to some New Deal programs, Franklin Roosevelt did little to
specifically address the particular difficulties Black communities
faced. To do so openly would provoke southern Democrats and put his New
Deal coalition - –the uneasy alliance of national liberals, urban
laborers, farm workers, and southern whites - at risk. Roosevelt not
only rejected such proposals as abolishing the poll tax and declaring
lynching a federal crime, he refused to specifically target African
American needs in any of his larger relief and reform packages. As he
explained to the national secretary of the NAACP, "I just can't take
that risk".64
In fact, many of the programs of the New Deal had
made hard times more difficult. When the codes of the NRA set new pay
scales, they usually took into account regional differentiation and
historical data. In the South, where African Americans had long suffered
unequal pay, the new codes simply perpetuated that inequality. The
codes also exempted those involved in farm work and domestic labor, the
occupations of a majority of southern Black men and women. The AAA was
equally problematic as owners displaced Black tenants and sharecroppers,
many of whom were forced to return to their farms as low-paid day labor
or to migrate to cities looking for wage work.65
Perhaps the
most notorious failure of the New Deal to aid African Americans came
with the passage of the Social Security Act. Southern politicians chafed
at the prospect of African Americans benefiting from federally
sponsored social welfare, afraid that economic security would allow
Black southerners to escape the cycle of poverty that kept them tied to
the land as cheap, exploitable farm laborers. The Jackson (Mississippi)
Daily News callously warned that "The average Mississippian can't
imagine himself chipping in to pay pensions for able-bodied Negroes to
sit around in idleness . . . while cotton and corn crops are crying for
workers". Roosevelt agreed to remove domestic workers and farm laborers
from the provisions of the bill, excluding many African Americans,
already laboring under the strictures of legal racial discrimination,
from the benefits of an expanding economic safety net.66
Women,
too, failed to receive the full benefits of New Deal programs. On one
hand, Roosevelt included women in key positions within his
administration, including the first female cabinet secretary, Frances
Perkins, and a prominently placed African American advisor in the
National Youth Administration, Mary McLeod Bethune. First Lady Eleanor
Roosevelt was a key advisor to the president and became a major voice
for economic and racial justice. But many New Deal programs were built
on the assumption that men would serve as breadwinners and women as
mothers, homemakers, and consumers. New Deal programs aimed to help both
but usually by forcing such gendered assumptions, making it difficult
for women to attain economic autonomy. New Deal social welfare programs
tended to funnel women into means-tested, state-administered relief
programs while reserving entitlement benefits for male workers, creating
a kind of two-tiered social welfare state. And so, despite great
advances, the New Deal failed to challenge core inequalities that
continued to mark life in the United States.67