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Defining Documents in American History: Dissent and Protest

“A Black Inventory of the New Deal”

by Karen Linkletter

Date: 1935

Author: John P. Davis

Genre: Essay

Summary Overview

John Preston Davis’s essay “A Black Inventory of the New Deal” is a scathing indictment of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s early programs to combat the economic woes of the Great Depression. Published in May of 1935 in The Crisis, the magazine of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), this essay challenged African Americans to create their own solutions to their dire economic situation rather than relying on a government that had systematically failed to come through for them.

Davis’s essay was published at the time of a conference held at Howard University in Washington, D.C., titled “The Position of the Negro in Our National Economic Crisis.” The conference was organized by Davis and Ralph Bunche, who was a professor of political science at Howard University and would later become a key architect of the United Nations. Like Davis, most of the participants in the conference were highly critical of Roosevelt’s New Deal, noting that the government programs had severely negative impacts on African Americans. “A Black Inventory of the New Deal” serves as a reminder that oft-celebrated historical achievements have not always included all Americans.

Davis’s critique of Roosevelt’s New Deal programs gained him increased recognition as a black activist and leader. It also positioned him at odds with the more conservative African American figures who sought to work within the Roosevelt administration to effect change.

Defining Moment

African Americans suffered immensely during the great depression. Black tenant farmers in the South languished as crop prices fell, and black workers in the industrial North were the first to be let go as the unemployment rate climbed. President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Democratic administration showed signs of promise for the plight of African Americans. In the summer of 1933, Roosevelt created a position for a special adviser on “the economic status of negroes” to serve under the secretary of the Department of the Interior. The government also initiated programs to provide direct relief to the public. Two of these important programs were initiated, respectively, by the Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) and the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA), both passed in 1933.

It soon became apparent, however, that these two programs had considerable flaws. One component of the NIRA was to develop industry-specific standards that would govern competition, pricing, wages, and work hours in each industry. However, as business leaders worked with government representatives, it became clear that African Americans were being systematically discriminated against. Black workers in Atlanta, Georgia, protested against the industrial codes in August of 1933. Southern business interests, however, won concessions from the government that perpetuated racial discrimination.

Similarly, the AAA harmed black farmers, who farmed as tenants, or sharecroppers who did not own their own land. In order to increase farmers’ income, the government paid farmers incentives to leave land unfarmed. Unfortunately, southern landowners fired their black tenant farmers first, as fewer crops grown meant fewer farmers needed. Just as black workers in the North protested against the NIRA, tenant farmers in the South, black and white, joined together to form the Southern Tenant Farmers Union in 1934, bringing the plight of African American farmers to the public’s attention.

In 1935 unemployment was a staggering 20 percent, and the promises of the Roosevelt administration appeared unfulfilled.

Author Biography

John Preston Davis was born on January 19, 1905, and grew up in Washington, D.C. Davis participated in the artistic and literary movement known as the Harlem Renaissance, replacing W. E. B. Du Bois as editor of The Crisis magazine. Davis received a master’s degree in journalism from Harvard University in 1927 and served as Fisk University’s director of publicity until 1928. He went on to earn a law degree from Harvard in 1933.

Davis and several of his peers at Harvard grew increasingly concerned with the U.S. government’s response to the deepening economic crisis that was the Great Depression. In the summer of 1933 Davis and his colleague Robert Weaver traveled back to their hometown of Washington, D.C., in order to give voice to the plight of African Americans. They created the Negro Industrial League to call for equitable treatment of black Americans in New Deal programs. Davis and Weaver’s example led many civil rights organizations to form the Joint Committee on National Recovery, an organization dedicated to exposing racial injustice in the implementation of federal programs. In 1934 the NAACP sent Davis to the South to interview black farmers, an experience that exposed Davis to the inequalities of the New Deal program that resulted from the AAA.

In 1935, Davis became executive secretary of the National Negro Congress, which he had helped found. The organization sought to unite African Americans across class lines and involved the support of the Communist Party. This affiliation became a political liability following the Nazi-Soviet Nonaggression Pact of 1939, and more conservative organizations withdrew from the National Negro Congress. Davis remained its executive secretary until 1942. The next year he filed the first lawsuit in Washington, D.C., to challenge the district’s segregated school system. Later in life, Davis turned to the literary world once again, founding Our World—a magazine dedicated to the African American community—in 1946, and publishing The American Negro Reference Book in 1964. He died on September 11, 1973.

Historical Document

It is highly important for the Negro citizen of America to take inventory of the gains and losses which have come to him under the “New Deal.” The Roosevelt administration has now had two years in which to unfold itself. Its portents are reasonably clear to anyone who seriously studies the varied activities of its recovery program. We can now state with reasonable certainty what the “New Deal” means for the Negro.

At once the most striking and irrefutable indication of the effect of the New Deal on the Negro can be gleaned from relief figures furnished by the government itself. In October, 1933, six months after the present administration took office, 2,117,000 Negroes were in families receiving relief in the United States. These represented 17.8 per cent of the total Negro population as of the 1930 census. In January, 1935, after nearly two years of recovery measures, 3,500,000 Negroes were in families receiving relief, or 29 per cent of our 1930 population. Certainly only a slight portion of the large increase in the number of impoverished Negro families can be explained away by the charitable, on the grounds that relief administration has become more humane. As a matter of fact federal relief officials themselves admit that grave abuses exist in the administration of rural relief to Negroes. And this is reliably borne out by the disproportionate increase in the number of urban Negro families on relief to the number of rural Negro families on relief. Thus the increase in the number of Negroes in relief families is an accurate indication of the deepening of the economic crisis for black America.

The promise of N.R.A. to bring higher wages and increased employment to industrial workers has glimmered away. In the code-making process occupational and geographical differentials at first were used as devices to exclude from the operation of minimum wages and maximum hours the bulk of the Negro workers. Later, clauses basing code wage rates on the previously existing wage differential between Negro and white workers tended to continue the inferior status of the Negro. For the particular firms, for whom none of these devices served as an effective means of keeping down Negro wages, there is an easy way out through the securing of an exemption specifically relating to the Negro worker in the plant. Such exemptions are becoming more numerous as time goes on. Thus from the beginning relatively few Negro workers were even theoretically covered by N.R.A. labor provisions.

But employers did not have to rely on the code-making process. The Negro worker not already discriminated against through code provisions had many other gauntlets to run. The question of importance to him as to all workers was, “as a result of all of N.R.A.’s maneuvers will I be able to buy more?” The answer has been “No.” A worker cannot eat a wage rate. To determine what this wage rate means to him we must determine a number of other factors. Thus rates for longshoremen seem relatively high. But when we realize that the average amount of work a longshoreman receives during the year is from ten to fifteen weeks, the wage rate loses much of its significance. When we add to that fact the increase in the cost of living—as high as 40 per cent in many cases—the wage rate becomes even more chimerical. For other groups of industrial workers increases in cost of living, coupled with the part time and irregular nature of the work, make the results of N.R.A. negligible. In highly mechanized industries speed-up and stretch-out nullify the promised result of N.R.A. to bring increased employment through shorter hours. For the workers are now producing more in their shorter work periods than in the longer periods before N.R.A. There is less employment. The first sufferer from fewer jobs is the Negro worker. Finally the complete break-down of compliance machinery in the South has cancelled the last minute advantage to Negro workers which N.R.A.’s enthusiasts may have claimed.

The Agricultural Adjustment Administration has used cruder methods in enforcing poverty on the Negro farm population. It has made violations of the rights of tenants under crop reduction contracts easy; it has rendered enforcement of these rights impossible. The reduction of the acreage under cultivation through the government rental agreement rendered unnecessary large numbers of tenants and farm laborers. Although the contract with the government provided that the land owner should not reduce the number of his tenants, he did so. The federal courts have now refused to allow tenants to enjoin such evictions. Faced with this Dred Scott decision against farm tenants, the A.A.A. has remained discreetly silent. Farm laborers are now jobless by the hundreds of thousands, the conservative government estimate of the decline in agricultural employment for the year 1934 alone being a quarter of a million. The larger portion of these are unskilled Negro agricultural workers—now without income and unable to secure work or relief.

But the unemployment and tenant evictions occasioned by the crop reduction policies of the A.A.A. is not all. For the tenants and sharecroppers who were retained on the plantations the government’s agricultural program meant reduced income. Wholesale fraud on tenants in the payment of parity checks occurred. Tenants complaining to the Department of Agriculture in Washington have their letters referred back to the locality in which they live and trouble of serious nature often results. Even when this does not happen, the tenant fails to get his check. The remainder of the land he tills on shares with his landlord brings him only the most meagre necessities during the crop season varying from three to five months. The rest of the period for him and his family is one of “root hog or die.”

The past year has seen an extension of poverty even to the small percentage (a little more than 20 per cent) of Negro farmers who own their own land. For them compulsory reduction of acreage for cotton and tobacco crops, with the quantum of such reduction controlled and regulated by local boards on which they have no representation, has meant drastic reduction of their already low income. Wholesale confiscation of the income of the Negro cotton and tobacco farmer is being made by prejudiced local boards in the South under the very nose of the federal government. In the wake of such confiscation has come a tremendous increase in land tenantry as a result of foreclosures on Negro-owned farm properties.

Nor has the vast public works program, designed to give increased employment to workers in the building trades, been free from prejudice. State officials in the South are in many cases in open rebellion against the ruling of P.W.A. that the same wage scales must be paid to Negro and white labor. Compliance with this paper ruling is enforced in only rare cases. The majority of the instances of violation of this rule are unremedied. Only unskilled work is given Negroes on public works projects in most instances. And even here discrimination in employment is notorious. Such is bound to be the case when we realize that there are only a handful of investigators available to seek enforcement.

Recently a move has been made by Negro officials in the administration to effect larger employment of Negro skilled and unskilled workers on public works projects by specifying that failure of a contractor to pay a certain percentage of his payroll to Negro artisans will be evidence of racial discrimination. Without doubting the good intentions of the sponsors of this ingenious scheme, it must nevertheless be pointed out that it fails to meet the problem in a number of vital particulars. It has yet to face a test in the courts, even if one is willing to suppose that P.W.A. high officials will bring it to a test. Percentages thus far experimented with are far too low and the number of such experiments far too few to make an effective dent in the unemployment conditions of Negro construction industry workers. Moreover the scheme gives aid and comfort to employer-advocates of strike-breaking and the open shop; and, while offering, perhaps, some temporary relief to a few hundred Negro workers, it establishes a dangerous precedent which throws back the labor movement and the organization of Negro workers to a considerable degree. The scheme, whatever its Negro sponsors may hope to contrary, becomes therefore only another excuse for their white superiors maintaining a “do-nothing” policy with regard to discrimination against Negroes in the Public Works Administration.

The Negro has no pleasanter outlook in the long term social planning ventures of the new administration. Planning for subsistence homesteads for industrially stranded workers has been muddled enough even without consideration of the problem of integrating Negroes into such plans. Subsistence Homesteads projects are overburdened with profiteering prices for the homesteads and foredoomed to failure by the lack of planning for adequate and permanent incomes for prospective homesteaders.

In callous disregard of the interdiction in the constitution of the United States against use of federal funds for projects which discriminate against applicants solely on the ground of color, subsistence homesteads have been planned on a strictly “lily-white” basis. The more than 200 Negro applicants for the first project at Arthurdale, West Virginia were not even considered, Mr. Bushrod Grimes (then in charge of the project) announcing that the project was to be open only to “native white stock.” As far north as Dayton, Ohio, where state laws prohibit any type of segregation against Negroes, the federal government has extended its “lily-white” policy. Recently it has established two Jim-Crow projects for Negroes. Thus the new administration seeks in its program of social planning to perpetuate ghettoes of Negroes for fifty years to come.

An even more blatant example of this policy of “lily-white” reconstruction is apparent in the planning of the model town of Norris, Tennessee, by the Tennessee Valley Authority. This town of 450 model homes is intended for the permanent workers on Norris Dam. The homes are rented by the federal government, which at all times maintains title to the land and dwellings and has complete control of the town management. Yet officials at T.V.A. openly admit that no Negroes are allowed at Norris.

T.V.A. has other objectionable features. While Negro employment now approaches an equitable proportion of total employment, the payroll of Negro workers remains disproportionately lower than that of whites. While the government has maintained a trade school to train workers on the project, no Negro trainees have been admitted. Nor have any meaningful plans matured for the future of the several thousand Negro workers who in another year or so will be left without employment, following completion of work on the dams being built by T.V.A.

None of the officials of T.V.A. seems to have the remotest idea of how Negroes in the Tennessee Valley will be able to buy the cheap electricity which T.V.A. is designed to produce. They admit that standards of living of the Negro population are low, that the introduction of industry into the Valley is at present only a nebulous dream, that even if this eventuates there is no assurance that Negro employment will result. The fairest summary that can be made of T.V.A. is that for a year or so it has furnished bread to a few thousand Negro workers. Beyond that everything is conjecture which is most unpleasant because of the utter planlessness of those in charge of the project.

Recovery legislation of the present session of Congress reveals the same fatal flaws which have been noted in the operation of previous recovery ventures. Thus, for example, instead of genuine unemployment insurance we have the leaders of the administration proposing to exclude from their plans domestic and agricultural workers, in which classes are to be found 15 out of every 23 Negro workers. On every hand the New Deal has used slogans for the same raw deal.

The sharpening of the crisis for Negroes has not found them unresponsive. Two years of increasing hardship has seen strange movement among the masses. In Chicago, New York, Washington and Baltimore the struggle for jobs has given rise to action on the part of a number of groups seeking to boycott white employers who refuse to employ Negroes. “Don’t Buy Where You Can’t Work” campaigns are springing up everywhere. The crisis has furnished renewed vigor to the Garvey Movement. And proposals for a 49th State are being seriously considered by various groups.

In sharp contrast with these strictly racial approaches to the problem, have been a number of interracial approaches. Increasing numbers of unemployed groups have been organized under radical leadership and have picketed relief stations for bread. Sharecroppers unions, under Socialist leadership in Arkansas, have shaken America into a consciousness of the growing resentment of southern farm tenants and the joint determination of the Negro and white tenants to do something about their intolerable condition.

In every major strike in this country Negro union members have fought with their white fellow workers in a struggle for economic survival. The bodies of ten Negro strikers killed in such strike struggles offer mute testimony to this fact. Even the vicious policies of the leaders of the A. F. of L. in discrimination against Negro workers is breaking down under the pressure for solidarity from the ranks of whites.

This heightening of spirit among all elements of black America and the seriousness of the crisis for them make doubly necessary the consideration of the social and economic condition of the Negro at this time. It was a realization of these conditions which gave rise to the proposal to hold a national conference on the economic status of Negroes under the New Deal at Howard University in Washington, D.C., on May 18, 19 and 20. At this conference, sponsored by the Social Science Division of Howard University and the Joint Committee on National Recovery, a candid and intelligent survey of the social and economic condition of the Negro will be made.

Unlike most conference it will not be a talk-rest. For months nationally known economists and other technicians have been working on papers to be presented. Unlike other conferences it will not be a one-sided affair. Ample opportunity will be afforded for high government officials to present their views of the “New Deal.” Others not connected with the government, including representatives of radical political parties, will also appear to present their conclusions. Not the least important phase will be the appearance on the platform of Negro workers and farmers themselves to offer their own experience under the New Deal. Out of such a conference can and will come a clear-cut analysis of the problems faced by Negroes and the nation.

But a word of caution ought to be expressed with regard to this significant conference. In the final analysis it cannot and does not claim to be representative of the mass opinion of Negro citizen[s] in America. All it can claim for itself is that it will bring together on a non-representative basis well informed Negro and white technicians to discuss the momentous problem it has chosen as its topic. It can furnish a base for action for any organization which chooses to avail itself of the information developed by it. It cannot act itself.

Thus looking beyond such a conference one cannot fail to hope that it will furnish impetus to a national expression of black America demanding a tolerable solution to the economic evils which it suffers. Perhaps it is not too much to hope that public opinion may be moulded by this conference to such an extent that already existing church, civic, fraternal, professional and trade union organizations will see the necessity for concerted effort in forging a mighty arm of protest against injustice suffered by the Negro. It is not necessary that such organizations agree on every issue. On the problem of relief of Negroes from poverty there is little room for disagreement. The important thing is that throughout America as never before Negroes awake to the need for a unity of action on vital economic problems which perplex us.

Such a hope is not lacking in foundation upon solid ground. Such an instance as the All India Congress of British India furnishes an example of what repressed groups can do to better their social and economic status. Perhaps a “National Negro Congress” of delegates from thousands of Negro organizations (and white organizations willing to recognize their unity of interest) will furnish a vehicle for channeling public opinion of black America. One thing is certain: the Negro may stand still but the depression will not. And unless there is concerted action of Negroes throughout the nation the next two years will bring even greater misery to the millions of underprivileged Negro toilers in the nation.

Glossary

A.F. of L.: the American Federation of Labor, an umbrella organization for labor unions

Agricultural Adjustment Administration: a federal agency created by the Agricultural Adjustment Act that paid farmers to reduce crop production to raise prices

All India Congress of British India: the All India Congress Committee, which led the struggle for Indian independence from British rule

code-making process: a reference to Title I, Section 3, of the National Industrial Recovery Act, which permitted trade or industrial associations to seek presidential approval of codes of fair competition

Dred Scott decision: a reference to the 1858 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford, which denied citizenship rights to African Americans

Garvey Movement: a reference to the black nationalism of Marcus Garvey, the founder of the United Negro Improvement Association

homestead: land acquired from U.S. public lands by filing a record and living on and cultivating it

New Deal: the name given to the legislative programs of the Franklin Roosevelt administration to alleviate the effects of the Great Depression

N.R.A. the National Recovery Administration, created by the National Industrial Recovery Act; enacted changes in the American economy but was declared unconstitutional in 1935

open shop: place of employment where the employee is not required to join or pay dues to a labor union as a condition of hiring or continued employment

P.W.A. Public Works Administration: a New Deal agency created to provide funds for public-works projects to increase employment during the Great Depression

relief: welfare payments

Document Analysis

Davis begins by systematically evaluating key measures enacted by the government, showing how they have had mostly negative effects on black Americans. Davis cites government statistics demonstrating that the number of black families receiving aid increased during Roosevelt’s time in office, arguing that the administration’s policies have created more poverty among African Americans.

Davis states that the National Recovery Administration as yet failed to improve wages and hiring conditions arguing that during the development of the industrial “code,” companies in the South were excluding black workers from the protective features of the labor codes, fighting the idea of national wage standards. While the federal intent behind the codes was to eliminate racial bias in wages and hours for each industry, its implementation resulted in the continuation of “the inferior status of the Negro.” Even with an increased wage, African American workers were still disproportionately affected by layoffs or the reduction of work hours. The rising cost of living (one of the by-products of the codes was that the prices for food and other necessities were set above market value) disproportionately affected poor Americans, including African Americans.

Davis next turns his attention to the Agricultural Adjustment Act and Agency. The act allowed the secretary of agriculture to reduce the production of a given commodity through the use of incentives. The goal of the program was to prop up the prices of agricultural products and thus help raise the income and buying power of farmers. Davis argues that it actually worsened the farmers’ plight. Uncultivated land meant fewer farmers were needed to tend to crops, and black sharecroppers were the first to be turned out. In the South, implementation of these policies was often corrupt. The government mandated that landowners pay a portion of the government incentive for crop reduction to its tenants, but many landowners simply kept all of the money for themselves. Local authorities refused to enforce the law.

Davis then takes up the Public Works Administration (PWA), a job-creation program designed to put people to work building roads, dams, bridges, and other infrastructure. While all PWA contracts had to include a nondiscrimination clause, southern interests found ways to circumvent this. The quota system developed to aid in enforcement, under which PWA contract recipients would be required to hire a minimum percentage of black skilled workers based on the proportion of such workers in the local population, had several problems. These included the tensions placed on unions.

The PWA and other New Deal programs also funded public housing. Most of these housing projects were segregated, upholding the status quo of racial inequality in America. Davis criticizes two specific programs: the Subsistence Homestead projects and the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) model towns. Part of the NIRA, the Subsistence Homesteads were designed to be communities based on the older American idea of the family subsistence farm, where families grew enough to sustain themselves but not to bring cash crops to market. However, the earliest communities were designated for whites only. In particular, the Arthurdale project in West Virginia, mentioned by Davis in paragraph 11, aroused virulent protest from civil rights activists.

The TVA also built segregated communities. Part of the TVA’s development program included the creation of housing in planned communities based on a social vision similar to that of the Subsistence Homestead program. The TVA model communities were to be examples of self-contained, self-sustaining rural towns tied to cooperative industries. Norris, Tennessee, was one such community. As Davis notes, Norris functioned more as a “company town” for workers building the Norris Dam; the government supplied housing and power, ran the town store, and controlled all aspects of town life, not to mention providing the monthly paycheck. While the all-black Dayton communities were “ghettoes,” Norris was “lily-white,” designated as a whites-only town.

Davis refers to the debates over the new Social Security legislation and contends that parts of these laws that would exclude certain workers (such as agricultural workers) would unfairly target the black population.

Davis discusses how the black community has responded to this litany of injustice, such as the “Don’t Buy Where You Can’t Work” campaigns, which began in Chicago in 1929 but spread to many cities by the mid-1930s which encouraged African Americans to boycott establishments that refused to hire blacks. He also mentions the Garvey Movement and The National Movement for Establishment of a 49th State, both early examples of black separatism. He also goes on to highlight interracial protests, often backed by the Communist Party, which organized Unemployed Councils, radical groups that employed a variety of tactics to demand relief. Bread riots, street demonstrations, and rent strikes were commonplace in cities such as New York and Detroit. He also notes the interracial nature of labor activism.

At the end of his essay, Davis points to the future. He comments on the upcoming conference at Howard University and calls for existing organizations from a variety of sectors to come together. He uses the All India Congress as an example of such an organization. Divided by caste and religious differences, India overcame such differences to achieve independence and serve as a model for other repressed groups. Davis pointedly states that African Americans are responsible for overcoming their own divisions and must take responsibility for solving the economic and social problems that face them.

Essential Themes

While African Americans might have supported Roosevelt and his party, many were growing more and more disillusioned with the administration’s unproductive policies. John P. Davis’s “A Black Inventory of the New Deal” gave voice to the increasingly urgent demand from the black community for tangible strides to be made in America’s move toward racial equality.It is with historical hindsight that Davis’s essay has become important for a wider American audience. This document catalogs what are now well-established negative effects of New Deal programs on the African American community, effects that were minimized by many in the government and the public in 1935. One of the lasting impacts of this essay is its reminder to modern audiences that even the most well intentioned of public policies can sometimes have negative consequences for some citizens.

Bibliography and Additional Reading

1 

Fishel, Leslie H., Jr. “The Negro in the New Deal Era.” Wisconsin Magazine of History 8, no. 2 (Winter 1964–1965): 111–126.

2 

Hamilton, Donna Cooper. “The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and New Deal Reform Legislation: A Dual Agenda.” Social Service Review 68, no. 4 (December 1994): 488–502.

3 

Sitkoff, Harvard. A New Deal for Blacks: The Emergence of Civil Rights as a National Issue: The Depression Decade. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1981).

4 

Sullivan, Patricia. Days of Hope: Race and Democracy in the New Deal Era. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1996).

Citation Types

MLA 9th
Linkletter, Karen. "“A Black Inventory Of The New Deal”." Defining Documents in American History: Dissent and Protest, edited by Aaron Gulyas, Salem Press, 2017. Salem Online, online.salempress.com/articleDetails.do?articleName=DDProtest_0064.
APA 7th
Linkletter, K. (2017). “A Black Inventory of the New Deal”. In A. Gulyas (Ed.), Defining Documents in American History: Dissent and Protest. Salem Press. online.salempress.com.
CMOS 17th
Linkletter, Karen. "“A Black Inventory Of The New Deal”." Edited by Aaron Gulyas. Defining Documents in American History: Dissent and Protest. Hackensack: Salem Press, 2017. Accessed May 30, 2026. online.salempress.com.