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Public Works Administration Facts: Fast Fact Sheet for
kids
Fast, fun facts and Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ's)
about the Public Works Administration
(PWA) for kids.
What did the Public Works Administration do?
The PWA was created by the
National
Industrial Recovery Act of 1933 (NIRA)
that put public
works programs under the control of the
federal government who awarded contracts for
heavy
construction projects building highways,
airports, bridges, dams, irrigation, water
management and
sewage systems
What was the result of the Public Works Administration?
The result of the PWA
was to
complete
more than 34,000 large-scale, heavy
construction projects around the country
that improved the nation's infrastructure
and invigorated
America’s "core industries" such as steel,
lumber and construction. The project also
created work for many skilled, unemployed
workers, although the PWA did not directly
employ workers
Public Works Administration
Facts for kids
The following fact
sheet contains interesting facts and information on Public Works Administration
for kids.
Facts
about the Public Works Administration (PWA) for kids
Public Works Administration Fact 1:
The law known
as the 1933 National Industrial Recovery
Act (NIRA) was passed on June 16, 1933 and continued the government's policy of
creating federal agencies to manage the economy and bring about
Industrial recovery
Public Works Administration Fact
2: The NIRA provided for
antitrust relief and labor provisions which were enacted
by the National Recovery Administration (NRA) headed by
Hugh S. Johnson.
Public Works Administration Fact 3:
The National Industrial Recovery
Act (NIRA) also provided for a public works program and the Public
Works Administration (PWA) was created. The PWA programs were
focused on improving the nation's infrastructure by building
national highways, irrigation systems, reclaiming ruined land,
draining swamps, electrical power generation
projects and large scale projects such as the construction of
tunnels and bridges
Public Works Administration Fact
4: The PWA was allotted $3.3 billion to
be spent on the construction of public works as a means
of contributing to a revival of American industry and
providing employment to many skilled workers. Its major
goals were to stimulate economic development, planning
and growth in the private sector ending the decline in
production and investment. The government money
would be used to re-invigorate America’s "core
industries" such as construction, steel, concrete,
lumber and increase tool and machinery production.
Public Works Administration Fact
5: Hugh S. Johnson expected to run
the whole of the NRA, however, President Roosevelt decided to split
it into two and placed the Public Works Administration, with its 3.3
billion dollar public works program, under the control of Harold
Ickes, who he had also appointed as his Secretary of the Interior. .
Public Works Administration Fact
6: The two men were completely
different. Johnson was flamboyant, domineering and outspoken whereas
Harold Ickes was cautious and meticulous. Ickes was also known for
being scrupulously honest and obsessively careful with money.
Public Works Administration Fact 7:
FDR knew that he had
placed the PWA in the hands of a man who would be
careful with the government's funds. Ickes would
personally examine every project in minute detail which
led to his critics accusing him of being too slow.
Public Works Administration Fact
8: The $3.3 billion was to be awarded in
contracts for large scale, heavy construction public
works projects via construction firms and contractors.
The agency did not directly employ workers on PWA
projects. This would change under a 1935 New Deal
program that would be called the Works Progress
Administration (WPA) which focused on public employment
rather than public works
Public Works Administration Fact
9: Ickes was cautious
about awarding contracts and authorized a minuscule
amount of PWA money of $110 million in 1933 from the
$3.3 billion that had been
allocated. He came into conflict with Harry Hopkins who
poured unallocated PWA funds into the
Civil Works Administration (CWA) to finance light
construction jobs helping unskilled and unemployed
people through the winter of 1933/34. By June 1934 the
PWA, under the
leadership of Ickes, had distributed its total fund to
13,266 federal projects and 2,407 non-federal projects
Continued...
Facts
about the Public Works Administration (PWA) for kids
Facts
about the Public Works Administration for kids
The following fact
sheet continues with facts about Public Works Administration for
kids.
Facts
about Public Works Administration (PWA) for kids
Public Works Administration Fact 10:
The PWA was responsible for
oversee an enormous variety and number of public works
projects including the construction of major roads, bridges, sewers,
water systems, dams and 50 airports.
Public Works Administration Fact 11:
The PWA was famous for its dam
building projects including the completion of the
Hoover Dam on
March 11, 1936 on
the Colorado River in Arizona.
The Fort Peck Dam funded by the WPA and the
Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
was completed in 1940 providing hydroelectric power and water
management along the upper Missouri River. The Grand Coulee Dam was
built from 1933 to 1942 and harnessed the power of the Columbia
River to turn arid land in eastern Washington into farmland
Public Works Administration Fact 12:
Funding from the PWA helped rebuild the tiny
airfield on Long Island into LaGuardia Airport. A total of 50
airports were constructed by the PWA. The PWA's work on airports was
important because the Great Depression had suppressed private
investment in airport development
Public Works Administration Fact 13:
Between 1933 and 1939 the PWA built
35% of the nation's schools and 70% of its hospitals
Public Works Administration Fact 14:
The construction of the Triborough
Bridge in New York City was another major achievement of
the PWA. The Triborough Bridge opened on July 11, 1936
at a cost of $60.3 million. The PWA was also responsible
for the electrification of the Pennsylvania Railroad
from New York to Washington
Public Works Administration Fact 15:
The PWA agency broke down some of the
long standing racial barriers in the construction
industry by insisting that contractors employed African
Americans
Public Works Administration Fact 16:
The benefits of the public works
provisions of the NIRA via the PWA were completed too
slowly to have much immediate effect on national
recovery.
Public Works Administration Fact 17:
The PWA was liquidated on June 30,
1943 as the nation concentrated on war production for
World War Two.
Facts
about Public Works Administration for kids
Public Works Administration for kids - President Franklin Roosevelt Video
The article on the
PWA provides detailed facts and a summary of one of the important events during his presidential term in office. The following
Franklin Roosevelt video will
give you additional important facts and dates about the political events experienced by the 32nd American President whose presidency spanned from March 4, 1933 to April 12, 1945.
Public Works Administration
●
Interesting Facts about the PWA for kids and schools
●
Summary of the Public Works Administration in US history
●
Public Works Administration of important, key
events
●
Franklin Roosevelt
Presidency from March 4, 1933 to April 12, 1945
●
Fast, fun facts about the PWA
●
Foreign & Domestic
policies of President Franklin Roosevelt
● Franklin Roosevelt Presidency and
Public Works Administration for schools,
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