The Truth about Race and the New Deal
For generations, FDR’s success in reshaping the American economy has been a model for what transformative, public-minded policymaking can look like.
His failings have been just as instructive. As we explore in our research, that transformation did not include all Americans, and explicitly excluded or compromised the well-being of Black Americans in ways that still reverberate throughout society.
In a new special exhibition, “Black Americans, Civil Rights, and the Roosevelts, 1932-1962,” the FDR Presidential Library and Museum offers critical perspectives on the administration’s policies and practices, and of the Roosevelts themselves.
And as Jennifer Schuessler writes about the exhibition for the New York Times, “. . . it makes one thing clear: Where opportunities expanded, it was because Black Americans demanded it.”
“Presidential libraries aren’t just about the name on the building,” FDR Library Director William A. Harris told Schuessler. “They have to tell the story of everybody.”
Black activism was, and is, central to that story.
Read more of the New York Times’s coverage: “At the Roosevelt Library, an Unflinching Look at Race.”
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