|
On this day, April 8, 1935, the United States Congress passed the Emergency
Relief Appropriation Act. The act provided President Franklin Roosevelt
with funding for several new government employment programs including
the Works Progress Administration; a program that offered work building
bridges, roads, public parks and airports. It also addressed the employment
needs of non-construction workers. The Federal Writers Project was
one of several projects within the WPA that targeted people with skills
in the arts.
With automobile travel increasing nation-wide, the Federal Writers Project
was given the task of creating An American Guide Series; tour
guides to all 48 states and the territories of Alaska and Puerto Rico.
In North Dakota, the writer's project was sponsored by the State Historical
Society of North Dakota and the post of state director was assigned to
a news writer named Ethel Schlasinger. Only 20 years old and the youngest
director in the nation, Schlasinger was responsible for some 60 men and
women across the state who were set to the task of gathering information
concerning local history and customs as well as points of interest.
To publish the guidebook, Ethel Schlasinger requested from the state legislature
$2,000 with the understanding that the state would be reimbursed through
book sales. Concerned that the state legislature would fail to grant the
appropriation requested before they adjourned, Schlasinger battled the
worst blizzard of the year to personally present her case.
Her efforts paid off as the legislature approved the appropriation bill.
But when it reached Governor William Langers desk, he informed Schlasinger
that no funds were available unless she could prove the books would sell.
Project fieldworkers immediately began determining possible sales around
the state. Once the report put expected sales in the thousands, Governor
Langer signed the bill.
Schlasinger however believed the governor had other motivations. She later
recalled, He enjoyed needling me
Not signing the bill until
the last possible moment was his way of telling me that I shouldnt
be a Democrat.
North Dakota: A Guide to the Northern Prairie State was published
by Knight Printing in 1938. With details on ethic customs, documentation
of local architecture and a Calendar of Annual Events, the guidebook provides
modern North Dakotans with a unique window into the 1930s. According
to Governor Langer, who penned the books Foreword, it should serve
to awaken the consciousness of North Dakota people to the historical,
sociological, and cultural heritage that is theirs.
Written by Christina Sunwall
Sources:
Mangione, Jerre Gerlando. The dream and the deal: the Federal Writers'
Project, 1935-1943 (Syracuse University Press; 1996)
Tweton, Jerome D. and Theodore B. Jellif. North Dakota: The Heritage of
a People (Fargo: North Dakota Institute of Regional Studies, 1976)
The WPA Guide to 1930s North Dakota (State Historical Society of
North Dakota; 1990)
This text and audio may not be copied without securing
prior permission from Prairie Public.
|