HomeSearchConnecticut Heritage Gateway
1636-17661776-18181822-18611870-18871893-19051905-19291929-19591965-1996
Significant Events and DevelopmentsSearching for the Common GoodMaking Self-Government Work
The New Deal | The Era of John Bailey


1929
The Stock Market crashes and the Great Depression begins

1930
Democrat Wilbur Cross elected Governor

1932
Roosevelt launches the New Deal

1934
The General Assembly creates the Emergency Relief Commission

1938
The General Assembly reorganizes state government

1941
America enters World War II

1945
Returning servicemen crowd state colleges under the G.I. Bill

1946
John Bailey becomes Democratic State Party Chairman

1947
The General Assembly outlaws racial discrimination in hiring

1950's
The movement to the suburbs intensifies

1958
The Connecticut Turnpike opens

1959
Democrats a majority in House and Senate for first time since 1876.

 

Significant Events
& Developments
, 1929-1964
Click on images for larger version

   

1. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt campaigning in Connecticut
   

The New Deal

Immediately upon taking office in 1932, President Roosevelt began the New Deal, a package of programs aimed at relieving the misery of the Great Depression. Connecticut officials initially spurned all offers of assistance, but by 1933 the legislature created an Emergency Relief Commission to apply for federal support. Picture 1

Cross entered office in 1930 a fiscal conservative but finally recognized the need for a more active state role in helping the destitute. He submitted a "Little New Deal" to the legislature in his second term. New programs assisted the elderly, modernized state hospitals, prisons and universities, and provided jobs for the unemployed. During his tenure, the General Assembly eliminated sweatshops, outlawed the employment of minors under 16, limited the work-week for women and children and passed programs of unemployment insurance and old age pensions. Picture 2

Lights ablaze and dark curtains ready, the State Capitol begins a black-out test on December 12, 1941, five days after the attack on Pearl Harbor. During the War the General Assembly granted the governor broad powers to handle war-time emergencies. Picture 3

The Era of John Bailey

In the 1950's Connecticut rapidly became a suburban state. Between 1945 and 1960 Hartford, New Haven and Bridgeport lost population, while suburbs like Bloomfield, Woodbridge and Trumbull more than doubled. The legislature aided homeowners-to-be with a $60 million mortgage program offering 1.5% financing. Picture 4

Tightly controlling party affairs for over 30 years, Bailey assembled a classic Democratic coalition of ethnic voters, labor, intellectuals and the poor that regularly returned Democrats to office. In Abraham Ribicoff (1955-61), John Dempsey (1961-71) and Ella Grasso (1975-80), Bailey offered this coalition gubernatorial candidates who were socially progressive but fiscally cautious. Picture 5

Bailey controlled the General Assembly's agenda with an iron hand. In the 1959 session, Democrats held a majority in both houses for the first time since 1876, although only by three votes in the House. Party discipline was crucial to Democratic success, and John Bailey delivered it. Picture 6

"All you needed to know was that John Bailey was it."

Bob Conrad, political columnist,
Hartford Times

 

         
   

2. Governor Wilbur "Uncle Toby" Cross
   
         
   

3. Blackout test at the Capitol, December 12, 1941
   
x        
   

4. Lower Litchfield County
   
l        
   

5. John Moran Bailey
   
         
          Return to top