Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Federal Writer's Project-- Part of FDR's New Deal

This week we have a guest writer for this blog, Jennifer Uhlarik. This post was originally published on Heroes, Heroines, and History on April 25th. Since our post last week mentioned FDR, I thought you might enjoy this one also. Check out the information about Jennifer's new book on the bottom of the post. Thanks much, Jennifer for sharing this information with us.

By Jennifer Uhlarik

Franklin D. Roosevelt
I’m sure we’ve all heard of the Stock Market crash that occurred on September 24, 1929, when the market lost eleven percent of its value in a single day. Most of us know that this was a contributing factor to the decade-long Great Depression, when countries all around the world saw enormous economic decline. In the United States alone, the unemployment rate soared to twenty-five percent during this period. And plenty of us heard about Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “New Deal,” a series of government programs put in place in the 1930’s in order to get Americans back to work through the “3 R’s” of Relief, Recovery, and Reform.

I remember learning all of these things in my middle and high school history classes, but they were all just static facts of American history to me until this past December. That’s when my husband and I received a phone call that brought this era of history to life for me. We’d arrived home from a nice dinner out to find a message from my husband’s long-lost step-sister. Her mother had passed away the month before, and in going through her mom’s effects, she’d found a box of my husband’s father’s things which she wanted to return to us.

Carl Uhlarik
When the box arrived, we were thrilled to find black and white photos of my husband’s parents and grandparents, old watches, birth and baptism certificates, diplomas, and other interesting memorabilia. But of most interest to me were a set of hand-written notes on notebook paper, as well as an old journal—all which had belonged to Carl Uhlarik, my husband’s grandfather. As we read over Carl’s neat script, we found the loose-leaf pages to be a journal of his efforts to write and publish a novel. The journal, dated February 10, 1939, was an odd assortment of sentences, phrases, and short paragraphs detailing story ideas he’d written down to remember for future writing endeavors. These items began to bring the man I’d never met to life, and it made me quite curious to know more about him. Thankfully, my husband remembered the basics…and despite the fact that Carl lived long before its invention, the internet helped me research other aspects of his life. The most interesting detail I found was that he worked for the Nebraska branch of the Federal Writers’ Project, one of the many arms of FDR’s New Deal program.

The Federal Writers’ Project was created in 1935 to provide employment for librarians, teachers, historians, writers, and other white-collar workers who were otherwise unfit for manual labor jobs. Instead, these folks were tasked with writing guide books about the peoples, geography, history, resources, traditions, and achievements of their respective states. All 48 states at that time had a guide book, as well as Washington D.C. and Puerto Rico. The American Guide Series is still considered to be one of the most comprehensive surveys of the American cultural geography ever written.

FWP authors at work in their Lincoln, Nebraska office.

Over time, the job expanded to more than just the guide books for each state. These historians went on to write the oral traditions, folklore, interesting tidbits, and historical facts for their states. Today, the Library of Congress contains over 300,000 pieces written by the authors of the Federal Writers’ Project, all filed under the American Memory Collection.

Some of the staff of Nebraska's Federal Writers Project team. We aren't sure, but
believe the man standing left of the two posters in the right corner may be Carl Uhlarik.
I can’t say what happened to all of the men and women who worked with the Federal Writers’ Project in the late 1930’s, but for Carl Uhlarik, his stint with the FWP set him on the path of writing throughout the rest of his life. He went on to work long-term jobs in radio and newspaper news, as well as doing freelance articles for various magazines. Among those are various western history magazines such as The West Magazine and Real West Magazine. It was pretty exciting to search the internet and find digital copies of a few of his articles published in the 1930’s, 1940’s, and 1950’s. I was also able to find and a few magazines on Ebay with his articles inside. What a thrill to read his words all these years later. It made him come alive in a way I never expected to experience, and he made The New Deal come alive in my brain in a way that it never had before.


It’s your turn: Have you explored your family tree and discovered any interesting characters? Who are they? Did discovering your ancestors make history come alive for you in a new way?

Jennifer Uhlarik discovered the western genre as a pre-teen, when she swiped the only “horse” book she found on her older brother’s bookshelf. A new love was born. Across the next ten years, she devoured Louis L’Amour westerns and fell in love with the genre. In college at the University of Tampa, she began penning her own story of the Old West. Armed with a B.A. in writing, she has won five writing competitions and finaled in two other competitions. In addition to writing, she has held jobs as a private business owner, a schoolteacher, a marketing director, and her favorite—a full-time homemaker. Jennifer is active in American Christian Fiction Writers and lifetime member of the Florida Writers Association. She lives near Tampa, Florida, with her husband, teenaged son, and four fur children.


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4 comments:

  1. Thanks so much, Jennifer, for contributing this article. As a note, I found out yesterday that a new book "Milwaukee in the 1930s" is being published soon. A retired professor collated documents that were written in the 30s under the FWP in the Milwaukee area. I'm excited to read it.

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    1. I thought of that article as soon as I read this. How many other period pieces may be languishing somewhere, forgotten?
      I found my grandfather's aunt in a book listing the top 50 women in Wisconsin. She'll be my heroine in a story someday.

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  2. How wonderful, Connie! I'll have to look for the book you mentioned. I used to live in the Milwaukee area, so I'd find it quite interesting. (Of course, I moved from there when I was 10, so it's been a few decades! LOL) Thank you so much for letting me contribute to your blog.

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