Tuesday, November 30, 2021

John Collier, the Indians at Work newsletter, and FDR's comments on the American Indian

 
Above: John Collier at Zion National Park. Collier was head of the U.S. Office of Indian Affairs (today, the Bureau of Indian Affairs) from 1933 to 1945. This photo is from the January - February 1945 edition of Indians at Work, a newsletter of the Office of Indian Affairs.

A chronicle of the Indian New Deal

The Indians at Work newsletter ran from 1933 to 1945, the same years that John Collier was commissioner of the U.S. Office of Indian Affairs. It is an amazing source of information for those wanting to know more about American Indians during the New Deal; more specifically,  American Indians during the "Indian New Deal." Over the coming months I'll be highlighting interesting stories, photos, and artwork from Indians at Work - stories about the Indian Division of the Civilian Conservation Corps; PWA and WPA public works on Indian land; political developments of the Indian Reorganization Act; artwork facilitated by the Indian Arts and Crafts Board; and more. 

Indians at Work ended with a special memorial issue, Indians in the War, highlighting the sacrifice that American Indian tribes made during World War II. It also ended, ostensibly, because of a paper shortage. But paper shortages are temporary. The reason Indians at Work permanently ended probably had more to do with congressional and public indifference to the well-being of American Indians (in his resignation letter, Collier alluded to growing congressional apathy). After the New Deal, and especially after 1980, Americans increasingly rejected the general welfare... let alone the welfare of those on reservations. Many American Indian communities have long suffered from poverty, unemployment, and suicide; and Congress and the general public don't seem overly concerned about it (see, e.g., "Serious issues plague Native American communities," KTTC (NBC affiliate, Minnesota and Iowa), November 23, 2021).

In a contrast to modern disregard, and in reply to John Collier's resignation letter (January 1945), FDR highlighted the New Deal's approach to Native American issues:

"During the last twelve years, more than ever before, we have tried to impress upon the Indians that we are indeed Christians; that we not only avow but practice the qualities of freedom and liberty and opportunity that are explicit in our institutions. We have come to treat the Indian as a human being, as one who possesses the dignity and commands the respect of fellow human beings. In encouraging him to pursue his own life and revive and continue his own culture, we have added to his worth and dignity. We have protected the Indian in his property rights while enlarging them. We have opened the window of his mind to the extent that we have had money with which to do it. We have improved his medical service, we have enlarged his intellectual program. We have protected him in his religion and we have added greatly to his political stature. All of these things have been done under your leadership because of your wisdom and courage... [I] hope that, in the future as in the past... you will continue to achieve lasting benefits for the descendants of those misunderstood and misused human beings who originally possessed this great land of ours and who were displaced involuntarily, all too often with a selfish disregard of their right to live their own lives in their own way." (From Indians at Work, January - February, 1945.)

Some of FDR's words might sound paternalistic by today's standards; but considering pre-New Deal cruelty towards American Indians, and post-New Deal indifference, they sure sound good to me.


Above: The cover for the September 15, 1933 edition of Indians at Work. In the graphic, we see "Indian Emergency Conservation Work." This was an early name for the Civilian Conservation Corps - Indian Division. The CCC would prove to be one the most important and beneficial New Deal programs for American Indians. Image courtesy of Hathitrust.

Sunday, November 28, 2021

New Deal Art: "City Store Fronts"

 
Above: "City Store Fronts," an oil painting by Francis Criss (1901-1973), created while he was in the New Deal's Public Works of Art Project, 1934. Image courtesy of the Smithsonian American Art Museum.


Above: Francis Criss, working on a WPA art project, New York City, 1940. Photo by Max Yavno, Federal Art Project, provided courtesy of Wikipedia and the Archives of American Art.


Wednesday, November 24, 2021

The New Deal's Three Square Meals

 
Above: A WPA poster promoting nutritious meals, ca. 1941-1943. Image courtesy of the Library of Congress.


Above: Children eating a hot lunch at a Farm Security Administration migratory labor camp in Florida. The New Deal provided food to the less fortunate during the 1930s, not only in migratory camps, but also through the Federal Surplus Commodities Corporation, WPA lunch programs, three square meals in the CCC, and more. Photo by Marion Post Wolcott (part of a larger photograph), Farm Security Administration, provided courtesy of the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

Sunday, November 21, 2021

The CCC protected our sequoia trees. Today, ignorance and apathy are killing them.

Above: Part of an article from the Los Angeles Times, July 23, 1934. Image courtesy of newspapers.com.

Sequoias Burning, Billionaires Giggling 

During the New Deal, the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) protected America's giant sequoia trees, as well as many other trees. By putting out fires and reducing wildfire fuel, the CCC boys greatly reduced the amount of acreage burned in the nation's parks and forests (see, for example, my blog post, "CCC fire prevention and firefighting: How successful was it?" February 27, 2021).

Today, ignorance and apathy are killing our sequoia trees ("Up to 19% of the world's 'irreplaceable' giant sequoias lost to fire in about a year, study finds," USA Today, November 19, 2021). 

Too many people refuse to acknowledge man-made climate change, and then actively block needed change. They ridicule the Green New Deal while sequoias go up in flames. 

And too many people prefer to give tax cuts to the rich, instead of providing more revenue to government for needed firefighting resources (more manpower, more equipment). The rich, in turn, use their extra after-tax money to buy European mega-yachts, luxury doomsday bunkers in New Zealand, private islands, and politicians (how any of these "job creator" investments create good-paying American jobs I do not know). 

Jeff Bezos even wants to build a space hotel--called "Orbital Greed Reef"--so that, I assume, billionaires can watch the sequoia smoke from the comfort of their luxury, celestial suites.

Yes, our planet heats, burns, and floods... as the 1% build spaceships for their 1% progeny to escape in. And the duped and doomed masses will wave goodbye to the billionaire brats rocketing off to Andromeda, comforting each other as the flames approach, "Well, after all, it was their money."

How funny (as in, sick) is that?