A Guide to New Deal Records at the State
Archives of Florida
New Deal-era Collections
in Other Repositories

Dedicated to promoting research in the New Deal in Florida, the New
Deal Initiative maintains
a website that lists all the major publications, oral
histories, repositories
and collections on the topic.
- Charles
O. Andrews, 1936-1946
- Legislative papers of New Deal Era U.S.
Senator Andrews.
- Civilian
Conservation Corps (U.S.). Records, 1934-1935
Publications
and newspapers of several Florida camps. 1 ln.ft.
- Robert Alexis
Green Papers 1922-1944 Educator, lawyer, and
U.S. Representative from Florida (1925-1944). Personal, political,
and legislative correspondence.
Born in Lake Butler, Florida. Educated at the University of Florida;
law degree, Yale University. Began law practice in Starke, Bradford County.
20 ln.ft.
- Joseph
Edward Hendricks Papers, 1931-1948 Legislative
papers of Hendricks career as a U.S. Reprehensive, 1937-1949.
- Spessard
Holland Papers, 1913-1972
Holland was a state senator and Florida governor during the New Deal
Era (he later served as a U.S. Senator.) These papers cover his legislative
career. His gubernatorial papers can be found at the State Archives
of Florida.
- Institute
of Food and Agricultural Sciences Welaka Research & Education
Center, 1933-1957
The center was administered in the 1930s by several New Deal agencies.
Includes reports, correspondence, and budgets.
- James Hardin Peterson Papers, 1929-1951
Spanning Peterson’s nine terms, the collection topics includes
the Great Depression, the New Deal agencies, World War II, neutrality
and national defense, taxes, the citrus industry, the Everglades, and
the Cross Florida Barge Canal.
- Nathan Mayo
Papers, 1923-1959 Farmer,
businessman, state legislator, and public official of Florida. Papers relating
to agriculture and politics
in Florida during Mayo's service as Florida Commissioner of Agriculture
(1923-1960). Commissioner, Marion County, 1913. Florida House of Representatives,
1921-1923. Commissioner of agriculture, 1923-1960. Gift of Mr. Mayo's
son, Nat Mayo. 12 ln.ft.
- Claude
Pepper Scrapbooks, 1936-1958 Newspaper
clippings relating to Claude Pepper, U.S. Senator from Florida (1936-1951)
and representative
from Florida (since 1963), in the period 1948-1952 and to his unsuccessful
1958 senatorial primary campaign against Spessard L. Holland. 1 ln.ft.
- Park
Trammell Papers, 1916-1936 Governor and U.S. Senator from Florida;
b. Park Monroe Trammell. - Correspondence, newspaper clippings, and
photos. 6 ln.ft.
- Thomas
Alva Yon Papers, 1927-1933 Merchant, salesman,
and U.S. representative from Florida. Congressional correspondence.
Born near Blountstown. Educated
in Jackson County schools. Attended Lanier Business College, Macon,
Georgia. U.S. House of Representatives, 1927-1933. U.S. Bureau
of Commerce, 1933-1940.
U.S. General Accounting Office, 1941-1949. 1 ln.ft.
Includes several CCC and other New deal-related interviews.
This following is a listing
of the Record Groups that contain New Deal information on Florida.
- RG
9 National Recovery Administration (NRA)
- RG
25 National Labor Relations
Board
- RG
35 Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
- RG
47 Social Security Administration
- RG
69 Works Progress Administration
(WPA)
- RG
119 National Youth Administration (NYA)
- RG
135 Public Works Administration
(PWA)
- RG
145 Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA)
- RG
162 Federal
Works Administration
- RG
187 National Resources Planning Board
- RG
221 Rural Electrification
Administration
- RG
234 Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC)
- RG
258 Federal Crop
Insurance Corporation
The State Library, located
directly above the State Archives of Florida in the R.A. Gray building,
houses hundreds of typescripts on a wide variety
of topics that were created by the Works Projects Administration through
their Historical Records, Federal Writers, and State-wide Library programs.
The Library also possesses hundreds of state documents and publications
in their Florida Room, along with city directories, pamphlets, brochures
and a substantial book collection.
Located in Washington, DC, the Library
of Congress (LOC) houses many of the nation’s manuscript and photographic
collections. Included are the papers of New Dealer Harold Ickes, an extensive
photographic
section, and the WPA folklife collections.
- American Memory
Project
- Florida Folklife
from the WPA Collections, 1937-1942
Created by Robert Cook,
Herbert Halpert, Zora Neale Hurston, Stetson Kennedy, Alton Morris,
and others in conjunction with the Florida
Federal Writers' Project,
the Florida Music Project, and the Joint Committee on Folk Arts of
the Work Projects Administration this is multiformat ethnographic
field
collection documenting
African-American, Arabic, Bahamian, British-American, Cuban, Greek,
Italian, Minorcan, Seminole, and Slavic cultures throughout Florida.
- American Life Histories: Manuscripts form the Federal Writers Project,
1936-1940
Includes 2,900 life histories by more than 300 writers that were compiled
and transcribed by the staff of the Folklore
Project of the Federal
Writers' Project for the U.S. Works Progress (later Work Projects) Administration (WPA)
from 1936-1940.
- America from the Great Depression to WWII: Photographs from the
FSA-OWI, 1935-1945
Over 164,000 images (including 1600 color images) created by the
Federal government as part of its New Deal programs. Includes several
images of
Florida.
- Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers
Project, 1936-1938
More than 2,300 first-person accounts of slavery and 500 black-and-white
photographs of former slaves collected by the Federal Writers'
Project of the WPA.
- Southern
Mosaic: The John and Ruby Lomax 1939 Southern States Recording
Trip
- Zora Neale Hurston Plays
Archive of Folk
Culture
The
Claude Pepper Library houses the papers, photographs, audio recordings,
video recordings, and memorabilia of the late Congressman Claude
Pepper and his wife, Mildred Webster Pepper. In public life for more
than
forty years, the political career of Claude Pepper included 14 years
(1936-1951) in the U.S. Senate, where Pepper was an active New Deal
supporter. Containing over two million pages, the collection of papers
includes his official correspondence, speeches, and legislative,
committee, and campaign files. The Claude Peppers Library is open weekdays
between
8am and 5pm, and is located on the first floor of the Pepper Center
Building on the FSU campus in Tallahassee, Florida. For more information,
got to http://pepper.cpb.fsu.edu/library/ or call (850) 644-9305.
An online searchable collection
of historical records and publications, including materials from the
New Deal Era.
No research project on the New Deal can
be complete without a trip to the Roosevelt Presidential Library. Containing
over 17 million pages
of documents, the Library houses Roosevelt’s private and public
papers, as well as those of Eleanor Roosevelt and other associates
and colleagues. In addition, there are 150,000 photographs, 44,000
books, and thousands of feet of motion picture film. Conceived and
built under President Roosevelt’s direction from 1939 to 1940
on sixteen acres of land, this was the nation’s first presidential
library.
Published and unpublished works
Banks, Ann, and Robert Carter. Survey
of Federal Writers' Project Manuscript Holding in State Depositories.
Foreword by Alan Brinkley. Washington,
D.C.: American Historical Association, 1985.
Bauer, Ruthmary. “Sarasota:
Hardship and Tourism in the 1930s,” Florida
Historical Quarterly 76 (Fall 1997).
Biles, Roger. The
South and the New Deal (Lexington: University
of Kentucky Press, 1994).
Bindas, Kenneth J. All of This Music Belongs to the Nation: The
WPA's Federal Music Project and American Society, 1935-1939 Knoxville:
University of Tennessee Press, 1995.
Blake, Emma. "Zora Neale Hurston: Anthropologist and Folklorist," Negro
History Bulletin 29 (April 1966).
Boulard, Garry. “State
of Emergency: Key West in the Great Depression," Florida
Historical Quarterly 67 (October 1988).
Bordelon, Pamela G. "Mirror to America: the Federal Writers' Project's
Florida Reflection," Ph.D. dissertation: Louisiana State University,
1991.
Brunson, Jeana. “Patterns of Community: Quiltmaking in Florida
during the Depression Era,” Ph.D. dissertation: Florida State University,
1996.
Bulger, Peggy A. "Stetson Kennedy: Applied Folklore and Cultural
Advocacy," Ph.D. dissertation: University of Pennsylvania, 1992.
Bulger, Peggy A. "Stetson Kennedy: Folklore and the Struggle for
Human Rights," The Folklore Historian 8 (1991)
Carlebach, Michael and Eugene F. Provenzo, Jr. Farm Security Administration
Photographs of Florida Gainesville; University of Florida Press, 1993.
Cobb, James C. and Michael V. Namorato, eds. The New Deal and the
South
Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1984.
Cox, Merlin G. “David
Sholtz: New Deal Governor of Florida,” Florida
Historical Quarterly 43 (October 1964).
Dunn, William James.“The New Deal and Florida Politics,” Ph.D.
dissertation: Florida State University, 1971.
Evans, Jon S. “Florida Politics in the Shade of War: The 1940
Governor's Race,” Master’s thesis: Florida State University,
2000.
Fagette, Paul. Digging for Dollars: American Archaeology and the
New Deal Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1995). [Includes
coverage of work done in Florida under the WPA.]
Florida. State Planning Board. Parks, Parkways and Recreational
Areas Study Tallahassee: 1939.
Flynt, J. Wayne. Duncan Upshaw Fletcher, Dixie’s Reluctant
Progressive Tallahassee: FSU Press,1971
Gannon, Michael, ed. The New History of Florida Gainesville:
University Press of Florida, 1995.
Garner, Lori Ann. “Representations
of Speech in the WPA Slaves Narratives of Florida
And the Writings of Zora Neale Hurston,” Western Folklore (Summer
2000).
Glassman, Steve, and Kathryn Lee Seidel, eds. Zora in Florida Orlando:
University of Central Florida Press, 1991.
Green, Elna. Looking for the New Deal: Florida Women’s Letters
During the Great
Depression Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2007.
Henderson, Ann, and Stetson Kennedy. "The WPA Guide to Florida:
A Conversation Between Ann Henderson and Stetson Kennedy," Florida
Forum 9 (Fall 1986).
Hurston, Zora Neale. Folklore, Memoirs, and Other Writings New
York: Library of America, 1995.
Hurston, Zora Neale. Go Gator and Muddy the Water: Writings by Zora
Neale Hurston from the Federal Writers' Project Edited and with
a biographical essay by Pamela Bordelon. New York: W. W. Norton & Company,
1999.
Huss, Veronica, and Evelyn Werner. "The Conchs of Riviera, Florida," Southern
Folklore Quarterly 4 (September 1940): 141-51.
Kabat, Ric A. “From New Deal to Red Scare: The Political
Odyssey of Senator Claude D. Pepper,” Ph.D. Dissertation, Florida
State University, 1995.
Kennedy, Stetson. "Way Down Upon . . . Gathering Tales of Folklife
in Suwannee Country," FORUM 17 (Spring/Summer 1993).
Kennedy, Stetson. "The W.P.A. Florida Writers Project: A Personal
View," FORUM 12 (Spring 1989).
Kersey, Harry A. “Florida
Seminoles in the Depression and the New Deal, 1933-1942,” Florida
Historical Quarterly 65 (October 1986).
Kersey, Harry A., Jr. The Florida Seminoles and the New Deal, 1933-1942
Boca Raton: Florida Atlantic University Press, 1989.
Leslie, Vernon. "The Great Depression in Miami Beach," Master’s
thesis: Florida Atlantic University, 1980.
Linsin, Christopher. “Something
More Than A Creed: Mary McLeod Bethune's Aim of Integrated Autonomy
As Director of Negro Affairs,” Florida
Historical Quarterly 76 (Summer 1997).
Long, Durwood. “Key
West and the New Deal, 1934-1936,” Florida
Historical Quarterly 46 (January 1968).
Lowry, Charles B. “The
PWA in Tampa; A Case Study,” Florida
Historical Quarterly 52 (April 1974).
Lyon, Edwin. New Deal for Southeastern Archaeology Tuscaloosa: University
of Alabama Press, 1996.
McDonough, Gary W., ed. The Florida Negro: A Federal Writers' Project
Legacy Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1993.
Mertz, Paul. New Deal Policy and Southern Rural Poverty Baton
Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1978.
Mormino, Gary. “Florida
Slave Narratives,” Florida Historical
Quarterly 66 (April 1988).
Nelson, Dave. “Relief and Recreation: The Civilian Conservation
Corps and the Florida Park Service, 1935-1942,” Master’s
thesis: Florida State University, 2002.
Nelson, Dave. “ ‘Improving’ Paradise: The Civilian
Conservation Corps and Environmental Change in Florida,” in Jack
E. Davis ed. Paradise Lost? The Environmental History of Florida Gainesville:
University Press of Florida, 2005.
Nelson, Dave. “A New Deal for Relief: Governor Fred Cone and the
Florida State Welfare Board,” Florida Historical Quarterly (October
2005).
Nelson, Dave. “Relief, Gender, and Youth at Camp Roosevelt: A
Case Study of the NYA in Florida,” Florida Historical Quarterly (October
2007)
Pearia, Alicia A. “Preserving
the Past: Library Development in Florida and the New Deal, 1933-1942,” Masters Thesis: Florida State
University, 2007.
Rogers, William W. “The Great Depression.” In The New
History of Florida, edited by Michael Gannon, 304-322. Gainesville: University
Press of Florida, 1996.
Salmond, John A. The Civilian Conservation Corps. 1933 - 1942 Durham:
Duke University Press, 1967.
Shappee, Nathan D. “Zangara’s
Attempted Assassination of Franklin D. Roosevelt,” Florida
Historical Quarterly 37 (October 1958).
Shofner, Jerrell H. “Roosevelt’s ‘Tree
Army’:
The Civilian Conservation Corps in Florida” Florida Historical
Quarterly 65 (April 1987).
Smith, Douglas L. The New Deal in the Urban South Baton Rouge:
Louisiana State University Press, 1988.
Smith, Larry Russell. “The
New Deal and Higher Education in Florida, 1933-1939: Temporary and
Tacit Promises,” Master’s thesis:
University of Florida, 2004.
Snyder, Robert. “Marion
Post and the Farm Security Administration in Florida,” Florida
Historical Quarterly 65 (April 1987).
Stoesen, Alexander R. “Claude
Pepper and the Florida Canal Controversy, 1939-1943,” Florida
Historical Quarterly 50 (January 1972).
Sullivan, John J. "The Civilian Conservation Corps an the Creation
of Myakka River State Park," Tampa Bay History, 9 (Winter
1987).
Sweet, John F. "The Civilian Conservation Corps in Florida," Apalachee 6
(1967).
Tebeau, Charlton. A History of Florida Coral Gables:
University of Miami Press, 1971. [chapter 25 on Depression and New Deal]
Tidd, James Francis. “The
Works Progress Administration in Hillsborough and Pinellas Counties,
Florida, 1935 to 1943,” M.A. thesis, University
of South Florida, 1989.
Walston, Kathleen Anne. "A Case for the Revival of the CCC in
Florida," Master's thesis: University of Florida, 1986.
Wells, William James. “Duncan Upshaw Fletcher, Florida’s
Grand Old Man,” Master’s thesis, Stetson University, 1942.
Willey, Gordon R. Archeology of the Florida Gulf Coast Gainesville: UP
of Florida, 1998. pp. 103-194. [includes descriptions of government
sponsored excavations along the Gulf Coast]
Works Project Administration. Federal Writers Project. Florida:
A Guide to the Southernmost State 1939. [Reissued, with a new
introduction by John I. McCollum, as The WPA Guide to Florida:
The Federal Writers' Project Guide to 1930s Florida. New York:
Pantheon Books, 1984.]
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