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- Works Progress Administration - Wikipedia
In 1942, the WPA played a key role in both building and staffing internment camps to incarcerate Japanese Americans At its peak in 1938, it supplied paid jobs for three million unemployed men and women, as well as youth in a separate division, the National Youth Administration
- Works Progress Administration: WPA New Deal - HISTORY
The WPA was designed to provide relief for the unemployed by providing jobs and income for millions of Americans At its height in late 1938, more than 3 3 million Americans worked for the WPA
- Works Progress Administration (WPA) - Britannica
Works Progress Administration (WPA), work program for the unemployed that was created in 1935 under U S Pres Franklin D Roosevelt’s New Deal
- Records of the Work Projects Administration [WPA]
Records of the Work Projects Administration [WPA] in the holdings of the U S National Archives and Records Administration From the Guide to Federal Records in the National Archives of the U S
- The WPA and the Slave Narrative Collection | An Introduction to the WPA . . .
Private efforts to preserve the life histories of former slaves accounted for only a small portion of the narratives collected during the late 1920s and 1930s
- The Works Progress Administration | American Experience | PBS
Of all of President Roosevelt’s New Deal programs, the Works Progress Administration (WPA) is the most famous, because it affected so many people’s lives
- Works Progress Administration (WPA) - Encyclopedia of Arkansas
The Works Progress Administration (WPA), later called the Work Projects Administration, was the largest and best known of the federal work relief programs established by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt to combat unemployment and stimulate a national economy ravaged by the Great Depression
- WPA4: What It Is and How To Prepare For It - Bitdefender
Thinking about upgrading your kitchen tech? Here’s what WPA4 would change for Wi-Fi security and how to buy safely right now
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