African Americans were hit close to the hardest by the Great Depression, but FDR responded with an equally strong response. Despite African Americans being initially barred from government-created towns and projects by the TVA, the Roosevelt administration sought to include them as a part of the country and in the path to recovery from the Depression (Document 6). The Crisis, in which Roosevelt’s treatment of African Americans is praised shows the effectiveness in FDR addressing even the most controversial of problems during the Great Depression because it shows that the NAACP saw Roosevelt’s New Deal as beneficial. The New Deal, while primarily focused on addressing the economic issues of the Great Depression, also addressed ever-important social issues, namely of which is the color line. Since New Deal legislation reached beyond simply an economic scope, its legislation was effective in addressing all problems present during the Great