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Links to Great Depression Resources
These links to information about the Great Depression in the United States provide further resources for your study. We hope you find them useful and informative. We check them periodically, but we cannot be responsible for their availability or content. If you see problems with response or content at any of these sites, please notify that site's webmaster.
American Life Histories: Manuscripts from the Federal Writer's Project, 1936-1940 (American Memory, Library of Congress)
American History 102 , University of Wisconsin
The Crash and the Great Depression
The Great Depression and the New Deal
Dr. New Deal or Dr. Win-the-War
The CCC Museum and Research Center , St. Louis, Missouri
Civilian Conservation Corps Museum , Roscommon, Michigan (Michigan Historical Center)
Detroit News "Review Mirror" articles :
The Battle of the Overpass
The Diego Rivera Murals
Detroit, the City of Champions
Father Charles E. Coughlin, The Radio Priest
The historic 1936-37 Flint auto plant strikes
The Killer Heat Wave of 1936
How the Great Depression Changed Detroit
The Great Depression in Ann Arbor (Arts of Citizenship Program, University of Michigan)
The Great Depression in New York (PBS Kids, Learning Adventures in Citizenship, Episode 6)
Hard Times, Soft Sell (wNET School lesson plan for grades 9-12))
Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum, Gallery Six: The Great Depression (National Archives and Records Administration)
James F. Justin Civilian Conservation Corps [online] Museum
Lesson Plans: Voices from the Great Depression (Ward Hill Press)
New Deal Network (Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute)
The New York State Civilian Conservation Corps Museum , Gilbert Lake State Park, NY
Franklin D. Roosevelt Library and Museum , Hyde Park, NY
Michigan Exhibit at the Century of Progress Exposition, Chicago, May 27 to November 1, 1933
National Archives and Records Administration
On the Air: Michigan Radio and Television Broadcasting 1920 - 2000 (Click on the 1930s link.)
Social Security Administration History Page
Archives of Michigan holdings (Archival Circulars)
To Kill a Mockingbird . Lesson plan with a historical perspective. (The Learning Page, Library of Congress)
Contact the Michigan Historical Center.
Updated 08/18/2010