1. Introduction
The Social Security Act of 1935 and its 1939 amendments included federal programs for maternal and infant welfare, child welfare services, and Aid to Dependent Children (ADC). The Social Security Act nationalized aspects of the assistance program long championed by the Children’s Bureau, itself a product of women’s civic organization and institution building dating back to the late-nineteenth century. The advances made by women reformers for public assistance to families in need laid the ground for crucial components of the contemporary American welfare state.Footnote 1
From a political development perspective, we can see that, over the course of several decades, a locally based movement had built governmental capacity in social service delivery across many parts of the nation, developed state-level administration in some places, established an institution within the federal government that encouraged programs that supported mothers and children in need, and converted mothers’ pensions into a program of the federal government. By 1939, a number of the social services provided in Cook County, Illinois in 1899 were available nationwide, under federal funding and administrative authority. In the calculus of political development, progressive female activists and their allies had birthed noteworthy accomplishments.
A major policy innovation of women reformers was enshrined into federal law, but critical features and goals of the program were lost and the progressive vision that gave rise to this federal law was vanquished.Footnote 2 A narrative of achievement in political development is problematic for several reasons. First, mothers’ pensions ended up out of the hands of the reformers who had birthed the movement and in the hands of Social Security Administration (SSA) officials who had neither expertise, nor particular interest in, mothers and children. As far as Children’s Bureau reformers were concerned, the wrong agency was charged with implementing the program. Second, what was signed into law was not the program these female activists now serving in government had hoped and tried to design.Footnote 3 Children’s Bureau leaders had hoped, through imposition of federal standards, to broaden eligibility for mothers’ pensions, end punitive practices that prevailed in too many counties under local pension administration (a survival from the era of poor relief and charities), and remedy race-based exclusions.Footnote 4 The ADC program was not preventative, it separated children’s aid and mothers’ aid, it cast mothers as unemployables rather than as deserving of earned income for labor performed, and it was not adequately funded. Third, when ADC lodged administration with state agencies, it bypassed the experts in various parts of the country that reformers had spent decades training. A number of New Dealers expected that transferring governance from the local to the national level would result in greater efficiency, more professional agencies, and better and perhaps even more responsive policies; yet with ADC, nationalization was incomplete, perpetuating some of the problems reformers had previously identified. And fourth, maternalist reformers had been working to extend to the entire society values such as nurturance and care, which were associated with women’s capacities as mothers.Footnote 5 By the mid-1920s, they had expressed aspirations for the creation of a department of labor and welfare that would encompass a more holistic notion of the environmental factors affecting mothers’ and children’s health.Footnote 6 Now, their comprehensive approach to social problems was supplanted as a centerpiece of their efforts was parceled out to other federal agencies.
Getting ADC into the Social Security Act was a deeply flawed victory. This is then, in part, a story about policy failure. The part of the Social Security Act that nationalized family support had critical defects, not only in the eyes of those who had championed the nationalization of such support, but in the eyes of subsequent scholars. Some of the negative consequences were predictable.Footnote 7 What became of their public assistance goals provides insight into the limited position these reformers occupied.Footnote 8 We investigate here what happened to unravel what had been such a vibrant, and often successful movement, and what this policy history stands to tell us about American political development.Footnote 9 Here, we look to the state to consider how it played a role in producing undesirable outcomes and also in shaping maternalist strategy in pursuit of their broader goals. When we focus on political development perspectives, we are reminded of the partial, incomplete, and uneven nature of political change.Footnote 10
2. Addressing critics of maternalists’ mothers’ pensions
Critics have attributed this policy failure to the policy itself, not to the manner in which services were nationalized or layered. These critics blame the reformers who created mothers’ pensions for leaving a legacy of racialized, surveilled, inherently unequal social services. In the 1980s and early 1990s, feminist scholars emphasized gender at the core of the welfare state, locating the crucial importance of gender both in the influence of women in shaping these policies prior to the New Deal and in the design of social policy, which reproduced the subordination of women.Footnote 11 Wendy Mink pointed to the standard of womanhood advanced by reformers as one that was based on whiteness, obscuring racial difference and inscribing disparate experiences of recipients based on race, class, and political position.Footnote 12 Continued critical race critiques have pointed to the sideswiping of alternatives offered by Black women reformers in the shaping of mothers’ pension programs.Footnote 13 Dorothy Roberts traces the patriarchal assumptions of Progressive Era white women reformers to the family surveillance authority that has become a tool of the state in the era of mass incarceration, inviting the state to break up Black families in the name of child welfare.Footnote 14
These critics of maternalism trace U.S. policy shortcomings and failures regarding support for women and children to the select group of largely white, middle-class female reformers who spearheaded juvenile court and mothers’ pensions movements. They have pointed out the legacy of the early years of mothers’ aid—featuring casework, evaluation of fitness of mothers and suitability of homes, and close supervision—and the development of tools of surveillance of the ADC program under Social Security. Under ADC, vulnerable groups faced regulation, paternalism, and stigmatization.Footnote 15 Maternalists were blamed for creating a system that policed families rather than one caring for children.Footnote 16 Local administration of early mothers’ pensions tended to lead to de facto exclusion of women of color and poor unwed mothers from receipt of public benefits, casting them as undeserving beneficiaries of this governmental program.Footnote 17 These social provisions “tilled the soil of a racialized politics of dependency” in American citizenshipFootnote 18 and contributed to persistent toxic racialization of the welfare program.Footnote 19
Once enshrined in the Social Security Act, critics argue, these legacies contributed to divided citizenship in the New Deal state.Footnote 20 Critics have pointed to the strong emphasis on the home in mothers’ pensions, which reified the gendered hierarchy of the family.Footnote 21 Women’s citizenship was established as maternal dependence while men’s economic security was tied to “fair wages, unions, and social insurance.”Footnote 22 Men, predominantly white, enjoyed privileges of national citizenship, while women and minority men were relegated to policies and whims of administrators at subnational levels.Footnote 23 The existing order was reinforced along lines of both race and gender.Footnote 24 As public assistance programs became stingy and stigmatized, social insurance programs were well-funded and became widely respected. This can all be traced back to the maternalist vision; for Linda Gordon, the maternalists’ “children first” policy was a net loss for both women and children in the New Deal.Footnote 25
The perspective shifts when we place these reformers in an institutional context, where they encountered a number of obstacles as they sought to enact their visions. In shifting focus to the politics of American federalism, Michelle Bezark finds that the Children's Bureau's lack of authority to collect data on the Maternity-Infancy program presented a structural and political impediment. Data collection rested on states, who delivered uneven data, which drew ready criticism of the program from opponents.Footnote 26 Jane Perry Clark found that this political pressure extended to personnel standards for the Maternity-Infancy program, with the Children's Bureau reluctant to be seen as interfering in state administration.Footnote 27 Kimberley Johnson, who also focuses on structural and institutional contexts, points to the need for the Children’s Bureau to focus on less divisive issues as a strategic choice to avoid political attack.Footnote 28 These accounts note that the Children's Bureau, which had achieved a spot in the Department of Labor, “trod lightly” and practiced “self-effacement.”Footnote 29
These reformers remained constrained within the very institutions they had access to. Maternalists had race and class-based perspectives and they leveraged their perspective and privileges.Footnote 30 Their networks generally remained white, ignoring or excluding Black reformers who were working to provide schools, medical clinics and other services to their immediate communities.Footnote 31 White maternalists used their privilege and connections to gain access, first at the county courts, then with state level mothers’ pension programs, and finally in the federal government. Yet at each of these points of entry, they operated at the margins of the state. These women reformers enjoyed enough connections to establish juvenile courts and subsequent maternalist programs. While able to introduce maternal social services as part of governing, they were not equipped to fully advance or control their programs.
This positionality allows us to consider the political and institutional constraints upon the legacy of women reformers along with some of their notorious consequences. One key dimension in this exploration of policy failure involves transformation of claims to authority and expertise. The kind of expertise Progressive Era maternalists had built up was being increasingly marginalized. They lost hope of housing their programs under one bureaucratic roof. Related to this were struggles for bureaucratic authority—which, under both a Republican and a Democratic president, pitted the leaders of the Children’s Bureau against other claimants who had strong support in Washington. In addition, both Hoover and Roosevelt planned for reorganization and rationalization of the executive branch, and their administrations prioritized consolidating what they considered related programs into fewer agencies. The legislative branch posed other challenges. During deliberations on Social Security, Congress appeared singularly uninterested in dimensions of new economic security initiatives that involved women and children and were also unwilling to disrupt certain state welfare prerogatives. Not only was the Bureau reduced to narrow functions, but ADC, under the new SSA, became an increasingly stigmatized program, contrary to the aspirations of maternalists.
These female reformers’ own place in hierarchies of citizenship affected the kinds of authority claims they could make and figured into their strategic calculations; their influence on the shape of welfare policy underscored women’s roles as mothers.Footnote 32 The framework, centered around women’s experience and knowledge claims about mothers and childcare, had helped them secure their institutional base and maintain claims to expertise. They attempted to guard their source of authority, knowledge claims, and institutional base from erosion and institutional reorganization.Footnote 33 Risking exclusion or marginalization in planning for the future, maternalists were not very well placed to exploit the policy window for federal social provision that opened up in the early New Deal. Shifting our emphasis toward the state, we ask how existing institutional constraints shaped bureaucratic tactics and reformers’ political strategies.
By locating the context in which reformers operated, particularly when, where, and how they gained access to the federal government, we can appreciate how maternalism posed both an opportunity and constraint. Reliance on the core identity of maternalism and the tools maternalist reformers had developed to gather and disseminate data rooted them and helped them to retain their seat at the table in New Deal policymaking.Footnote 34 Yet the basic core of maternalism—care of mothers and children—was separated from a larger agenda connecting this care to the environment, the economy, public health, and the home. As this vision was constrained, the United States began to lag behind a number of other advanced industrial democracies in family policies while the program that remained carried racial disparities into American political development.Footnote 35
Maternalists faced competition between different progressive forces within various federal government institutions.Footnote 36 Struggles between institutions and between policy entrepreneurs figured importantly in shaping policy fortunes for aid to women and children. Under its first chief, Julia Lathrop, the Children’s Bureau expanded its mission, and its support network was solidified. However,
the strong-minded women selected as bureau chiefs were unable to maintain a consistently expansive mode after the term of the first chief.… In each decade the seeds of transformation were conceived only to be aborted in the bureaucratic and political universe in which the Children’s Bureau was situated.Footnote 37
What women advocated for had less traction by the late 1920s; women's moral authority was not as easily deployed as it had been in the run-up to World War I.Footnote 38 Some politicians had supported aid to women and children in the Sheppard-Towner Act largely because they thought (and a number of women claimed) that the women's vote would be wielded as a bloc; by the latter part of the 1920s, politicians realized this was a chimera.Footnote 39
Despite the power critics have attributed to maternalism as the root cause of inequality in child welfare, the Children’s Bureau lacked bureaucratic autonomy. Dan Carpenter argues that “bureaucratic autonomy prevails when a politically differentiated agency takes self-consistent action that neither politicians nor organized interests prefer but that they either cannot or will not overturn or constrain in the future.”Footnote 40 The Bureau had support networks with actors outside the agency, but it “lacked the broad coalitional and institutional support that other federal bureaus enjoyed.”Footnote 41 The grassroots movement that had advocated for its creation and that had supported Sheppard-Towner’s passage in 1921 faced a more conservative Congress by the mid-1920s and President Coolidge wanted to curtail formal subsidies to states for Bureau priorities.Footnote 42 From this time forward, the Children’s Bureau increasingly had to contest policy turf, and it was unable to resist incursions from politicians and ascendant bureaucracies with different policy visions.
Maternalists in the Children’s Bureau wanted a single government agency dealing with related economic conditions. They would have preferred that the department in which they were housed be named the Department of Labor, Health, and Welfare.Footnote 43 They drew linkages between children's delinquency and economic hardships in the home, and between the chronic exploitation of industrial and immigrant labor and poverty. Children should not, they thought, be split into sociological, educational, and medical parts, and each program should be capable of responding to the entire range of problems that affected children's lives.Footnote 44 The Bureau’s labor reform agenda had to be couched in terms of specific problems faced by women and children, but the scope of the work was wide. This comprehensive approach was at odds with emerging approaches to science, professionalization, and progress by the time of the New Deal. Newer visions edged out their approach to program design. The shift led to governmental actions that intentionally and unintentionally transformed families.
In an effort to understand what looks like a significant power shift and loss of power by maternalist reformers, we went back to some archival sources, especially the papers of Grace Abbott, Chief of the Children’s Bureau from 1921 to 1934, to track the mechanisms of development in the early days of the New Deal and the shaping of the Social Security Act. Abbott, who had received her B.A. from a small Nebraska college, studied political science and law at the University of Chicago,Footnote 45 served on the faculty of the University’s School of Civics and Philanthropy, and directed the Immigrants’ Protective League before coming to Washington. We drew on various other documents of the period, including reports issued by the Children’s Bureau, accounts by Edwin Witte, Executive Director of FDR’s 1934 Committee on Economic Security[CES],Footnote 46 and congressional records.
3. The early years of mothers’ pensions
Finding opportunities within constraints shaped the early years of aid to children and mothers. ADC provisions had roots in the juvenile court movement and the mechanisms used by reformers to re-envision the role of the state so that it developed both the warrant and the means to take on new tasks.Footnote 47 With the 1899 establishment of the first Juvenile Court in Cook County, Illinois, reformers began to develop social service provisions within the authority and administrative capacity of county-level courts. Highly critical of political corruption and partisan politics of their time,Footnote 48 progressive reformers turned to the court system, a branch to which they had access through their network of lawyers and judges, and to which they turned to deal with at-risk youth.Footnote 49 The doctrine of parens patriae gave the juvenile court the authority to intercede on behalf of children, including those who were not being cared for adequately as a result of poverty. The juvenile court could receive children who had been arrested and redirect their sentences, providing social services rather than punishment.
Linda Gordon has noted that paternalism and maternalism are hard to distinguish from one another.Footnote 50 Indeed, the initial source of authority for the maternalist project was a parental source of authority, with the parenting power of the state modeled on patriarchal authority.
During the first decade of the twentieth century, progressive legal scholars and lawyers believed local courts were key players in the process of making law more responsive to social needs.Footnote 51 Reformers built the court’s capacity to administer services, and the court became the site for training social workers. Probation officers acted as social workers to study the child’s case and home conditions, advocated before the court, and served what they saw as the child’s needs. The probation officers of the court, frequently volunteers from the Chicago Woman’s Club and the Illinois Federation of Colored Women’s Clubs, visited homes, collected data on family members, and removed children from unsuitable surroundings in what sometimes looked like highly publicized raids, accompanied by police. Black children were far more likely to be removed from the home and institutionalized than were white immigrant children.Footnote 52 Increasing rates of Black children’s incorporation into the juvenile justice system “did not translate into equal black youth and community access to the juvenile court movement's citizen-building ambitions.”Footnote 53 Black children who came to the attention of the juvenile court usually had markedly inferior access to rehabilitative services than their white counterparts. Even reformers regarded accommodations for semi-delinquent Black youth as inadequate.Footnote 54 Officials at northern detention homes serving Black youth generally steered boys toward menial work, with little attempt at rehabilitation. Except for the efforts of Black clubwomen and Black probation officers, the Black constituency cannot be deemed to have been a high priority for white maternalists.Footnote 55
Expanded juvenile court powers to compel school attendance, attack truancy, and sweep up children found on the streets during school hours occasioned complaints of intrusion into family decisions.Footnote 56 Opponents asserted that agents of the court were “child snatchers,” traffickers in children, and participants in child enslavement.Footnote 57 Juvenile court workers gradually became less aggressive in child removal, and Merritt Pinckney, Cook County juvenile court judge from 1908 to 1916, let the legislature know that he was “unwilling to continue to order children moved from their mothers’ care and placed in an institution on the ground of poverty alone.”Footnote 58 Determining that the best situation for children was to be with their mothers, practices shifted toward relying on the established casework of probation officers to assess the suitability of the child's home.
The next step in institutional development was to devise a way for mothers to stay home with their children. President Theodore Roosevelt’s 1909 White House Conference on the Care of Dependent Children, attended by a number of Chicago reformers, considered various ideas for mothers’ pensions. After the Conference, Edith Abbott's “Women in Industry” surveyed women in the workplace and concluded that “unskilled women could never work their way to economic independence.”Footnote 59 The resultant policy rested on a realistic economic assessment that mothers who left the home to work would likely be placed in low-wage jobs, possibly with long hours, allowing them little time with their children. If poor mothers could not earn a family wage, then aid to mothers could give mothers the support needed to promote the social, economic, and health needs of children if they were in otherwise acceptable homes.Footnote 60 Grace Abbott viewed mothers’ pensions as the first social insurance laws, providing mothers whose husbands were dead or incapacitated with aid that was more generous than poor laws.Footnote 61
A frequently repeated claim was that the destitute mother only takes from the state money that is her right for a service provided (maintaining a home), akin to military service.Footnote 62 “Pension” suggested reward for past services.Footnote 63 Rights language also extended to children, who had a right to the care of a “well-rested and well-nourished mother.”Footnote 64 Although maternalists sought to valorize mothers’ care work, mothers’ pension bills did reinforce gendered roles in the labor market and in the family. Local administrators generally excluded households with an able-bodied father.Footnote 65 If women worked too many hours, they were often disqualified from receiving pensions for failure to maintain a healthy home environment.Footnote 66 Nationwide, families headed by widows were those most likely to receive aid.Footnote 67 The practice of awarding pensions also reinscribed racial hierarchy. In 1926, only 24 of the 573 Black women who applied for mothers’ pensions in Chicago received them.Footnote 68 The Children’s Bureau flagged these racial disparities in 1931.Footnote 69
The institutionalization of the first mothers’ pensions in 1911 was spearheaded by juvenile court judges and reformers, administered initially by juvenile courts.Footnote 70 Within twenty years, all but two states established mothers’ aid laws, and in the mid-1920s, juvenile courts administered the program in at least twenty states.Footnote 71
4. The Children’s Bureau and its limited reach
The idea of establishing a Children’s Bureau was advanced at the 1909 White House Conference on the Care of Dependent Children.Footnote 72 The Children’s Bureau investigated, collected statistics, wrote reports, and advocated for policies and enhanced state and local resources to aid women and children; yet it exercised “no direct control over finances or administration” of these programs.Footnote 73 These design features created a number of frustrations and problems. The New Deal seemingly offered the opportunity to implement a national program, with national funding and uniform standards.
The Children’s Bureau, founded in 1912, had to be pitched as a “fact-gathering” bureau “to soften fears that it would become a bureaucracy for child labor laws.”Footnote 74 Investigation, data gathering, interpretation and reporting were central to its mission; the act creating the Bureau charged it “to investigate and report … upon all matters pertaining to the welfare of children and child life among all classes of our people.”Footnote 75 Data collection and dissemination had been a central component of female reform efforts since the Hull-House Maps and Papers project was released in 1895.Footnote 76 One of the early efforts of the Children’s Bureau would be to develop a nationwide system for the documentation of births, bringing it into partnership with the Census Bureau.Footnote 77 The new Children’s Bureau leaders believed that data had the power to transform social inequality.Footnote 78 It was essential to avoid the appearance of fostering a wider labor reform agenda. Julia Lathrop was a viable candidate for first chief of the Bureau not only because of her reputation for strong executive ability but because, upon investigation, she was found not to have signed any petitions for labor organizers who had resorted to violence.Footnote 79
The Children’s Bureau did end up administering the short-lived federal child labor law of 1916; Grace Abbott joined the Bureau in 1917 to lead this effort.Footnote 80 In preparation for a federal ban on child labor, and with mothers facing the prospect of loss of their children’s wages, reformers sought to ensure aid to mothers so that they could remain at home. In 1917, Abbott proposed a federally funded, nationwide program for public protection of maternity and infancy. That funding would come in the Sheppard-Towner Maternity and Infancy Act of 1921, the year Abbott became Chief of the Bureau.Footnote 81 Sheppard-Towner, a bold national social welfare program that was designed to provide prenatal and newborn care and reduce maternal and infant mortality, is often deemed the high water mark of the female dominion in American reform and the apex of the power of the Children’s Bureau.Footnote 82
Three features of these Sheppard-Towner services would inform the Children’s Bureau during the writing of the Social Security Act. First, the Maternity and Infancy Act was administered by state and local officials, continuing parochialism in welfare administration.Footnote 83 This arrangement was in keeping with the intergovernmental policy structure of the time.Footnote 84 Sheppard-Towner had retained state authority over administration as a necessity to get the law passed.Footnote 85 In 1921 and 1922, when the vast majority of states accepted federal funding under the program, however, a number of these local administrators were trained in keeping with the tenets of the juvenile court movement. As child savers expanded the programs and institutional capacity of services, they built up experienced personnel, allies, and policy stakeholders at the state and local level. Having already enlisted a cadre of social workers in social science research and statistics collection, they envisioned building on these resources and offering new training. However, because federal funds under Sheppard-Towner could not be deployed to augment the maternity and infancy work that voluntary organizations had been doing previously, the Act demoted the very groups on which the Children’s Bureau had depended for support.Footnote 86
Second, and related to this, one legacy of Sheppard-Towner proved a liability for Children’s Bureau women as they sought influence over the emerging Social Security bill. States retained authority over programming and accounting under Sheppard-Towner, and the Bureau was thwarted in its efforts to provide Congress with nationwide statistics to support claims that the programs were working. The Bureau had no authority to compel uniform federal data reporting in this federal matching grant program; “the tension between the Bureau’s need for efficient national data collection and the political need for state autonomy was written into the legislation itself.”Footnote 87 The Bureau was often accused of federal overreach, and there was a constant barrage of criticism as officials administered funding under Sheppard-Towner.Footnote 88 With states sometimes collecting no data, or collecting data differently, Children’s Bureau officials could not demonstrate the Act’s effectiveness nor that federal funds were being well-spent, and could not defend themselves from detractors in Washington when the program was up for renewal.Footnote 89 A bureau charged with data collection and that prided itself on documenting problems facing women and children was left in a deeply embarrassing position. Michelle Bezark argues that the Children’s Bureau learned lessons from this frustrating and debilitating problem and were able to build into Social Security federal requirements for data reporting by states.Footnote 90
Third was the collection of adversaries. The Sheppard-Towner Act rendered Children's Bureau reformers at odds with physicians in the American Medical Association (AMA) and officials in the Public Health Service (PHS). Both organizations pointed to poor statistics gathering under the Sheppard-Towner Act.Footnote 91 A professional association, the AMA preserved its monopoly on medical knowledge in opposition to women reformers and retained its focus on medicine as a business, not a public service.Footnote 92 Opposing Sheppard-Towner from the start and viewing it as an “imported socialistic scheme,” the AMA remained consistent when it was time for reauthorization.Footnote 93 At the time it was to be renewed, Surgeon General Hugh Cumming, opposed to federal grants to the states and objecting to their management outside PHS (i.e., by the Children’s Bureau), joined with the AMA in opposition.Footnote 94 The maternal and infancy program ended in 1929.Footnote 95
After Sheppard-Towner was terminated, the Children’s Bureau’s work continued to overlap with PHS. The PHS—given expanded power to investigate human diseases under the legislation that changed its name the same year the Children’s Bureau was created—and the Bureau both reflected progressive era aspirations and expansion of the federal role in health and welfare. Early in the century, the PHS embarked on a rural sanitation campaign, was involved in the identification of the cause and means of prevention of typhoid fever, identified the cause of yellow fever, attacked malaria, conquered trachoma and tularemia, and attacked the North American hookworm problem in the American South. The Service published what became “something of a bible for rural sanitation work as well as a blueprint for the development of county health departments.”Footnote 96 Though not ultimately successful with influenza during World War I and the 1918 pandemic, PHS’s extensive efforts earned them further recognition.Footnote 97
PHS researchers, physicians, and nurses increased their involvement in disease control activities on behalf of children, despite the fact that the Children’s Bureau was formally responsible for children.Footnote 98 A number of key PHS leaders were at odds with the Children's Bureau as they struggled over turf. Surgeon General Cumming, who served from 1920 to 1936, believed the Bureau was “an unqualified agency, largely comprising social workers infringing inappropriately into the field of health.”Footnote 99 The medical model of sanitation and disease prevention, seen as a key to the engineering feat of the Panama Canal, and work on diseases in the South, had given a large boost to a physician- and science-oriented model of eradicating problems rather than the social environmental approach of the maternalists.
Like the Children’s Bureau, the PHS was not immune to efforts to restructure related governmental activities in the 1920s. A 1926 study found that forty government agencies, in five cabinet departments and employing 5,000 persons, were involved in public health work.Footnote 100 Some called for consolidation of the PHS, but the Service managed to resist. With a growing sense that biomedical research was a key to progress, the PHS Hygienic Laboratory was renamed and its mission expanded as the National Institute of Health under the PHS in 1930. The 1930 Ransdell and Parker Acts strengthened the PHS consistent with the wishes of the Surgeon General, “while giving little ground to other departments of government.” Yet the Service acquired little new work under President Hoover.Footnote 101 The tension between physicians and these reformers—perceived to be mere laypeople—followed the Children's Bureau into the Great Depression.
Hoover won the support of Progressives, prohibitionists, the National Woman’s Party, and a disproportionate share of women in general in 1928.Footnote 102 Most of the maternalist reformers, including Abbott, were Republicans.Footnote 103 Political parties, both in the United States and elsewhere, tended not to take up the interests of newly enfranchised women, yet histories of suffrage movements suggest that “organized women endorsed progressive issues and mobilized women on these issues outside candidate-centered contexts.”Footnote 104 Abbott and her allies engaged in protracted efforts to advance causes, drawing on organizations, networks, and solidarities that sustained these activities.Footnote 105 Women’s groups of this period remained “knit together by dense patterns of multiple memberships.”Footnote 106 As the administrative state expanded, the Executive Branch became an increasing focus of movement activity.Footnote 107
A number of networked female reform administrators were concentrated in the Department of Labor, yet Abbott and her Children’s Bureau allies increasingly felt ignored or even besieged.Footnote 108 Hoover had faith in managerial expertise, believed in the benefits of private–public cooperation, and set up conferences and commissions to address social problems.Footnote 109 But reorganization and reconfiguration of agencies were also on the table, to support Executive Branch direction of progressive reform efforts. As Secretary of Commerce, Hoover “saw orderly administration resting on the rational grouping of administrative functions and subjects” and thought all functions pertaining to a subject should be in one department.Footnote 110 On the face of it, nothing about policy-driven approach to administration placed him at odds with the Children’s Bureau.
Hoover hosted a White House Conference on Child Health and Protection in 1930. Mentioning the “problems of dependent children” first when announcing plans for the conference a year in advance, the President said it would be “comprised of representatives of the great voluntary associations, together with the Federal and State and municipal authorities interested in these questions.”Footnote 111 Hoover turned to Secretary of the Interior Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur to direct plans for the conference, “with the cooperation of the Secretary of Labor,” where the Children’s Bureau was lodged. Abbott reported, however, that she and the Bureau were shut out of its planning. Physicians with the American Child Health Association played a major role in organizing the conference. Neither the Children’s Bureau nor the Secretary of Labor knew about the details until the announcement that a planning committee would be appointed; Abbott was belatedly included after expressing her concerns but was given a minor role as the Secretary of the Executive Committee, which she found a “wholly nominal arrangement.”Footnote 112
Abbott suspected (correctly) that Secretary Wilbur, leading conference efforts, wanted to transfer the health work of the Children’s Bureau to the PHS, relocating it to the Interior Department, where the PHS would administer maternity and infancy work. “Wilbur supported the AMA’s position maintaining that all federal health care work should be the responsibility of the PHS.”Footnote 113 Like Secretary Wilbur, Hoover was persuaded that the health work of the Children's Bureau should be given to the PHS and lodged in the Department of the Interior, since the Service provided expert professional guidance in the fields of maternity, infancy, and child hygiene. Hoover's willingness to support renewal of the Sheppard-Towner maternal and infant health bill was tied to shifting the administration of the program to the PHS.Footnote 114 Some of the arguments made both for and against moving this work to PHS centered on data collection and statistics, with continuing criticism of the Children’s Bureau’s faulty and unreliable maternal and infant health statistics.Footnote 115 “Welfare” work would be left with the Children’s Bureau. This would strip the Children’s Bureau of one of its long-held duties;Footnote 116 no longer would the Bureau be in charge of the needs of the “whole child.”Footnote 117 Women reformers opposed the narrowing of the notion of health.Footnote 118
Hoover, who found Abbott inflexible and self-righteous, was not hostile per se to the Children's Bureau.Footnote 119 He wrote his budget director a few days before the stock market crash that he would be obliged “if you would treat with as liberal a hand as possible the applications of … the Children’s and Women’s Bureaus. I have great sympathy with the tasks they are undertaking.” He increased appropriations for the Children’s Bureau each year until 1932.Footnote 120 The president’s depression-era Committee for Employment expanded the Bureau’s reporting of relief to cover all cities with 50,000 or more inhabitants, and the collection of these relief statistics continued until responsibility shifted to the Social Security Board in 1936.Footnote 121 Yet Hoover seemed unwilling to maintain the Bureau’s integrity.Footnote 122
Bureau supporters believed that attendees of the 1930 Conference were discussing the “proposed dismemberment of the Bureau.”Footnote 123 The Conference did not receive the Children’s Bureau minority report.Footnote 124 Abbott raised the omission at the conference, noting that she had not been sent a copy of the majority report. When she had asked for it, she was refused at the Central Office. After Marguerite Wells of the National League of Women Voters submitted “a statement signed by representatives of twelve predominately female organizations protesting the transfer of child health work from the Children’s Bureau,” Abbott was allowed to read her minority report. Both the majority and minority reports were tabled, so no transfer occurred.Footnote 125 However, lines were drawn for those who would later gather to consider Social Security.
The Children’s Bureau remained vigilant on reorganization efforts. When the President indicated support for continuance of the Sheppard-Towner Act in 1930; he did not make clear to the Children’s Bureau his intention to shift this maternal and infancy work to PHS. Heartened, thirteen national women's organizations participated in a legislative committee on Maternity and Infancy Hygiene, of the Women's Joint Congressional Committee, to urge passage of HR 1195, sponsored by John Cooper of Ohio. This bill, known as the Jones-Cooper Maternity and Infancy Bill, was not reported out of House committee, but it promised to revive Sheppard-Towner under the supervision of the Children’s Bureau.Footnote 126 Female supporters were surprised when Cooper instead introduced a substitute bill, HR 9888, which rested on Hoover's transfer of health administration to the PHS. HR9888 provided that the federal government would cooperate with state and local authorities in the welfare and hygiene of mothers and children as well as the development of local health services.Footnote 127 Under HR 9888, funding—and, notably, functions—would be split. While Children’s Bureau would have received funding for child welfare (which was undefined in the Act), the bill would have allocated funding to local health organizations—to be administered by the PHS— for mothers’ and children’s health.Footnote 128
The Children’s Bureau increasingly had to contend with different methodological approaches and knowledge claims of newer cadres of male reformers. The PHS, heavily staffed by medical professionals, was disdainful of the Bureau’s “whole child” approach.Footnote 129 Camilla Stivers argues that bureau men's philosophy—focusing on expertise and “detached scientific investigation aimed at bringing to light administrative misdeeds and shortcomings”—ultimately became the dominant orthodoxy in public administration.Footnote 130 The settlement movement's ideas and values became “public administration’s buried heritage.”Footnote 131 One scholar suggests that the Bureau's “study and reporting” mandate and understandable data dissemination gave the impression (false though it was because the collection was scrupulous and rigorous) that anyone could do this kind of work; the lack of mystery helped undermine them by comparison to agencies with less transparent claims to expertise.Footnote 132
Allocating money to the PHS for county health departments that worked chiefly on communicable diseases and sanitation would mean that maternal and child health would no longer be a priority. Further, the PHS generally did not have personnel devoted to maternal and child hygiene.Footnote 133 The President had approached the Rockefeller Foundation to temporarily fund child health work with a $1,000,000 donation; it was based on the county unit structure, and Hoover expressed support for this structure in August 1929. Abbott approved, but noted, “I said I was, of course, in favor of a county health organization—but that child health work would not be done, particularly maternity and infancy work unless special provision was made for that … .”Footnote 134
Abbott saw that removing health work from the Bureau would destroy the “unified approach” to the problems of childhood at the national level.Footnote 135 The Department of Labor “has been, and will be, always concerned with human welfare problems.”Footnote 136 In June 1932, Abbott convened leaders of national women’s organizations to generate a “plan of action” in case the President's reorganization plan went through. The group collected a list of physicians who were favorable to the health mission of the Children’s Bureau.Footnote 137 As the Election of 1932 neared, the Women’s Division of the Democratic Committee urged Abbott to say that President Hoover had not supported the Children’s Bureau. She refused, because he had supported the Children’s Bureau with funding appropriations.Footnote 138
5. The New Deal: Fighting for a seat at the table
The election of FDR would seem to offer a new era for the Children’s Bureau, yet Abbott had to find footing within the Democratic Party. There were new interests and voices in town, vying with the Progressives in the Children’s Bureau.Footnote 139 To gain access to the Roosevelts, Abbott worked with Mary [Molly] Dewson, Director of the Women’s Division of the Democratic National Campaign Committee, who had her own patronage operation.Footnote 140 Abbott feared that she might be replaced, but Senator Norris of the Judiciary Committee assured Sophonisba Breckinridge, University of Chicago School of Social Service Administration professor, that he had heard of no attempts to replace Abbott.Footnote 141 Abbott retained her position and Frances Perkins, who had worked in Hull-House and shared with Children’s Bureau reformers the comprehensive maternalist approach to social problems, was to become the new Secretary of Labor.Footnote 142
The Children’s Bureau planned for its participation in the New Deal. Leadership of the Children’s Bureau had come to embrace nationalization of some other programs it supported during the 1920s, and now backed national funding and universal availability of mothers’ pensions.Footnote 143 They supported equalization of aid provision regardless of where a mother lived.
In the Great Depression, county-level administration of children’s services was not working well; resources were taxed. Private funds were decreasing as demands for public relief were increasing.Footnote 144 By 1933, Abbott estimated that there were 300,000 children being taken care of under mothers’ aid provisions, and many more that would be taken care of if there were sufficient funding.Footnote 145
Of more fundamental concern was the structure of county unit administration. The juvenile court movement developed at the county level. Indeed, some counties took charge and implemented and developed social services. Other counties, however, had little to no provision for child welfare. Rural areas and small towns tended to be underdeveloped in the first place. Agricultural and single industry towns, such as mining communities, were “particularly affected” and could not offer child welfare services.Footnote 146
Between 1931 and 1933, there was a net loss of sixty-nine counties no longer able to fund their programs.Footnote 147 Some counties cut programs and funds, and some rural counties could not provide services for women and children at all.Footnote 148 Abbott thought federal grants-in-aid could overcome the funding problem.Footnote 149 With the welfare of children in increasing peril, Abbott hosted a conference on “Present Emergencies in the Care of Dependent and Neglected Children” to emphasize what the Bureau had to offer under crisis conditions. Convening leaders in private and public welfare work from twenty-eight states, Abbott wanted “to hear from all areas so that we shall have a National picture.”Footnote 150 J. Prentice Murphy, Executive Secretary of the Children’s Bureau, prepared a report explaining that the federal government had made a commitment to relief for children, but “[i]n practice, however, in most states and localities it has been extremely difficult to raise standards so as to insure such adequacy.”Footnote 151
The earliest federal response, the National Industrial Recovery Administration, worried Abbott. She confided to close Roosevelt adviser, Harvard Law professor and future Supreme Court justice Felix Frankfurter her concern that the NIRA Administrator was empowered to respond to labor crises rather than the Secretary of Labor. The questionnaire the Administrator distributed to industries was “of the most amateurish sort.” She found the proposal for a uniform minimum wage “unenlightened.” Abbott thought that Secretary Perkins would “be put in the position of having to fight on every issue” with an administrator who, as far as she was concerned, lacked experience in labor issues.Footnote 152 It was becoming clear that the experience that Abbott and other child savers had gained over the years was at risk of being given over to New Dealers even though Children’s Bureau work was included in New Deal programs and the Bureau expanded in functions, appropriations, and staffing.Footnote 153
Fearing loss of access in the new administration, Abbott again enlisted the help of Felix Frankfurter. In June 1933, Frankfurter sent a telegram to President Roosevelt, letting him know that
Devoted women supporters of the administration representing influential national organizations insist on believing that curtailment of present scope of Children's Bureau is threatened as part of reorganization scheme stop I told them I refused to believe that you would sanction inroads upon extraordinarily fine achievements Children's Bureau because of any alleged claim of abstract logic regarding division of functions between Children's Bureau and Public Health Service stop Venture to believe that not another agency of government has finer record for economy and efficiency than Children's Bureau nor is any more warmly entrenched in loyalty of women and liberal sentiment of country.Footnote 154
Frankfurter told Josephine Goldmark (co-author of the “Brandeis brief” that helped win the campaign for maximum working hours for women) that FDR’s response to his telegram “indicates the need of a good concrete inclusive statement of the facts about the Bureau.”Footnote 155 Dewson told Goldmark that Perkins said, “she would fight for the [Children’s Bureau] till the last breath so they had better lay off.”Footnote 156 Goldmark informed Abbott that FDR responded to Frankfurter's telegram with the “portentous” suggestion that “loose ends will have to be tied up some day.”Footnote 157 Abbott kept abreast of any steps that would shift Children’s Bureau functions to the PHS. Roosevelt would persist in the goal of reorganizing the executive branch and reducing the number of agencies reporting directly to the President.Footnote 158
Under Roosevelt, the PHS became part of the strategy to stimulate the national economy, and programs were designed for malaria control, rat control, constructing rural privies, and sealing abandoned mines to prevent stream pollution.Footnote 159 The New Deal and the Social Security Act in particular “invited PHS involvement in the medical and social fabric of the country in a more intense way than ever before.”Footnote 160 On the eve of the Social Security Act, the PHS had built “a strong reputation for itself as an organization committed to fighting the diseases that plagued the rural South,” and organizational reputation helped it shape the development of future policies.Footnote 161 The Service forged relationships not only with state and local elected officials but with civic leaders and landowners, and “worked to embed the organization in the governing structures of the region.” When Southern Democrats became key players in the New Deal, the Service was a beneficiary in terms of expansion of federal public health efforts under the new Social Security Act.Footnote 162
By August, Abbott had penned a report on the administrative logic of the Children's Bureau. The theory of reorganization on a functional basis was being promoted by Dr. Willoughby, formerly Director of the Institute of Government Research and then Director of the Department of Government of the Brookings Institute. Willoughby envisioned consolidating the Department of Labor with a Department of Commerce and Industry. According to Abbott, such thinking “appeals to those who are not well informed on actual work being done by various administrative units.”Footnote 163 Under a functional scheme, the Department of Labor would be considered for its economic aspects, and the health work of the Children's Bureau would be transferred to the PHS. Coming to the aid of children in all their interrelated needs, the Bureau’s work, Abbott explained, was “based on a population basis” rather than a functional one. Health departments, involved in sanitation, stream pollution, food inspection, and communicable disease, were not equipped for the special health needs of children.Footnote 164 The Children’s Bureau could coordinate considerations of health, environment, and social and economic conditions if they addressed the child’s developmental needs holistically. The Bureau and its advocates sought expanded authority to administer a national health plan with experts from medicine (including pediatrics, nutrition, psychology), dentistry, public health nursing, social welfare, economics, and education.
6. Dealing with the Federal Emergency Relief Administration
In his earliest New Deal programming, FDR relied on Harry Hopkins, who had worked closely with then-Governor Roosevelt on New York’s Temporary Relief Administration. Hopkins, who cut his teeth in New York social settlement work as a “friendly visitor,” had not gained the confidence of Chicago social work circles. He became Administrator of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA), whose objectives were to create a diversified and flexible program providing adequate relief and useful work for the able-bodied needy. It issued funds through public agencies. Social workers, accustomed to working with private agencies, were unsupportive. Hopkins believed that he could control the federal administrators in those public agencies, and he was exploring new solutions.Footnote 165
FERA asked the Children's Bureau to serve as consultant in the organization of state-wide nursing projects. Abbott suggested a plan for the employment of nurses working under FERA and the Civil Works Administration, noting the history of cooperative efforts of the Bureau and state health departments in administering Maternal and Infancy programs. The New Deal Child Health Recovery Program could make use of this experience and employ out-of-work nurses.Footnote 166 Abbott reiterated that the commissioned medical corps in the PHS tended to be career service and not the best qualified.Footnote 167
Abbott was not actually keen on being included in FERA and felt strongly that the current and developed mothers’ aid program should not be administered through FERA.Footnote 168 Mothers’ pensions, with a policy rationale of caring for children in their homes, should be delivered to mothers before things became dire and led to child removal. Under FERA, “assistance became available only after and not before she had broken down under the double burden of wage earner and homemaker and after the children had become demoralized or delinquent.”Footnote 169 Furthermore, FERA was emergency relief, a response to crisis, and not a permanent policy; mothers’ aid should be delivered long term.Footnote 170
Abbott, who left her post in 1934 claiming health reasons (she had battled tuberculosis), seems to have seen the writing on the wall. From the University of Chicago’s School of Social Service Administration, she remained in touch with Katharine Lenroot, the new Chief of the Bureau, and she remained available for consulting. When FDR assembled a Committee for Economic Security to lay the groundwork for the Social Security Act, Abbott participated.
7. In the Committee on Economic Security: Fighting to include child welfare in the Economic Security Bill
The President’s CES was appointed in June 1934, convened that autumn, delivered its report to the President in December, and presented the proposal for the Wagner–Lewis Economic Security Bill in January 1935. The Committee was comprised of the Secretaries of Labor, Treasury, and Agriculture; the Attorney General; and the FERA Administrator. It also included FERA staff, USDA and AAA employees, academics in labor and social insurance, women labor activists, and Abbott. Edwin E. Witte, Executive Director of the Committee, remembered that there were “violent differences of opinion” among the specialists, and the president, too, contributed ideas.Footnote 171 A smaller advisory council convened on November 15, 1934, with Grace Abbott and Molly Dewson selected by the president; these were “quite close to the committee from the outset.”Footnote 172
Executive Director Witte later recounted that Abbott, Lenroot, and Perkins promoted the inclusion of child welfare in conceptions of social insurance. “But for Miss Abbott and Miss Lenroot and Miss Perkins, they would not have been in the bill at all.”Footnote 173 And “[Grace Abbott] above everyone else, was responsible for the child welfare provisions which occur in the Social Security Act …”Footnote 174 That did not reflect the experience of Abbott, Lenroot, and Perkins. The CES skewed heavily toward the Wisconsin School, which relied on a theory of the regenerative power of capitalism, leading to some of the differences in treatment of beneficiaries. The Wisconsin School was focused on unemployment insurance, designated for workers in industrial occupations. Abbott observed that this focus on unemployment insurance left mothers and nonindustrial workers relegated to second-tier programs.Footnote 175 Any movement for a merger of social insurance and mothers’ pensions never developed.Footnote 176
Children’s Bureau advocates submitted a proposal that would have provided adequate, long-term support for mothers. It presented the aid as earned income for labor that mothers performed,Footnote 177 a formulation consistent with some early language used to generate support for mothers’ pensions. Their proposal was included in the CES report submitted to the President in December.Footnote 178 Yet the bill proposed to Congress in January contained a new provision for ADC, authored by the FERA staff members of the CES.Footnote 179 Martha Eliot, a doctor with the Children’s Bureau, wrote to Abbott: “The FERA is planning to do all sorts of things with the ‘Dependent Children' section and anything like a Mothers' Aid program is just going by the board or would if they had their way.” As usual, Bureau advocates had to fight back: “It is certainly futile to appear at a hearing thinking that the section on Dependent Children has to do with Mothers’ Aid. They [Hopkins and others] may not get their way, but I notice that they have a way of getting it.”Footnote 180 That is backed up by Witte, who noted that in the final stages, the FERA members of the committee classified aid as public assistance, to be administered by FERA.Footnote 181
The fact that Lenroot was chosen to head the Children’s Bureau over physician Martha Eliot may have helped seal the fate of mothers’ pensions. Lenroot (supported by social work executives in eastern Catholic and Protestant social services) was seen, even by Abbott, as lacking in imagination and creativity, as a “second-rate person” who was “not resourceful … not original … never has new ideas.” This may have been a reason Hopkins intervened in that portion of the Social Security Act that would have assigned ADC administrative responsibility to the Children’s Bureau; he did not think Lenroot could successfully administer Title IV.Footnote 182
Although the bill went to Congress with FERA in charge of dependent children’s aid, the House Ways and Means Committee refused to have the administrator of emergency aid involved in any part of the Social Security bill. “Accordingly, it unanimously adopted a motion amending this part of the bill to vest the administration of the federal grants in the Social Security Board.” This, too, was unsatisfactory to the Bureau women. After the bill moved to the Senate, Labor Department representatives made a last effort to lodge administration of ADC with the Children’s Bureau. No amendment to make this change was ever offered, although it was discussed briefly in the Senate Finance Committee.Footnote 183
The Children’s Bureau was also unhappy with the addition of language about the maximum federal aid for dependent children by the House Ways and Means Committee; Witte concurred that this was extremely unfortunate. The final bill set a maximum federal dollar contribution per child in a family, with no funds for the mother herself. The amount was much less than the original bill, which had stipulated that the federal government would pay no more than one-third of the amount spent by state and local governments for such aid. “There was little interest in Congress in the aid to dependent children. It is my belief,” Witte wrote, “that nothing would have been done on this subject if it had not been included in the report of the Committee on Economic Security.”Footnote 184
Reformers expected the proposed Act to provide greater uniformity in aid to mothers and children; this did not occur. The report of the Advisory Council to the CES that included Abbott requested that a federal department or bureau of public welfare “be given authority to require a state to consolidate its welfare functions in one satisfactory permanent department with appropriate local units as a condition to the use of state and local machinery in the administration and distribution of federal funds.”Footnote 185 Yet
the congressional committees considering the proposals of the Committee on Economic Security stripped from the public assistance provisions of the Social Security Act of [sic] any language that would have allowed federal administrators to supervise the decisions of state and local officials about such vital matters as eligibility for old age pensions or mothers' pensions, or decisions about the adequacy of the benefits offered to those accepted onto the rolls.Footnote 186
Congress failed to impose federal standards that states would have to meet to receive aid, partly on grounds that there was insufficient data to establish standards, frustrating reformers who prided themselves on data collection.Footnote 187 Sectional pressures also militated against imposition of federal standards.Footnote 188 The Social Security Act differentiated social insurance from public assistance. Unemployment insurance and old age insurance were part of the former, financed by employer and employee contributions. Public assistance programs included immediate old age assistance, ADC, Maternity and Child Welfare, Services for Crippled Children, Child Welfare Services, Vocational Rehabilitation, Aid to the Blind, and additional funds for public health work.Footnote 189 Mothers' pensions were now provided via federal grants-in-aid to the states through ADC, and it was to assist the PHS.Footnote 190 In classifying ADC as public assistance, Social Security cast mothers as “unemployables” in need of relief.Footnote 191 Abbott believed this classification, ignoring the labor mothers performed, would “misbrand them and injure them very much.”Footnote 192
The ADC program experienced a number of early obstacles. With Huey Long's filibuster of the Appropriations Bill, old age assistance and ADC funds were not being paid. Social workers knew of unmet needs of various people who were not included in Social Security programs, left in the old, outdated, locally administered poor relief system. Abbott observed the exclusion of farm labor, domestic servants, teachers, and social workers. Wives of male workers were not covered. And public relief needed to be a permanent program.Footnote 193 Work programs did not relieve unemployment, which was “not exclusively a depression problem,” and they steered federal resources away from developing direct relief.Footnote 194
There were a few encouraging developments—some in the Social Security Act itself. The Social Security Act did effectively reestablish Sheppard-Towner as an intergovernmental program for the support of maternal and child health, and Title V, part 3 left such services, along with those for disabled children and child welfare services lodged with the Bureau. Based on lessons learned about administrative oversight problems deriving from the earlier Act, the Children’s Bureau managed to insert into Title V better and stricter regulations for state-level accounting.Footnote 195 Supervision of these programs brought a dramatic increase in budget; the Children’s Bureau allocated $330,000 in 1930, but by 1940, the figure was $10.9 million, and these programs were attractive to all states.Footnote 196 States quickly took advantage of these maternal and child health programs, and by 1936, child health services were available in all forty-eight states, Hawaii, Alaska and the District of Columbia.Footnote 197 The Children’s Bureau continued to work on some remaining issues in the administration of services.Footnote 198 In May 1936, enlisting Abbott’s help, the Bureau called a meeting of the Advisory Committee on Child Welfare Services to discuss the development of services under the provisions of Title V. The committee recommended increased maternity and infant care, as well as training for physicians and nurses in this field. It recommended that maternal and child health work be extended by securing federal cooperation with states, to meet economic as well as medical needs, in an effort to restore the linkages between economy, health, and welfare.Footnote 199 Katharine Lenroot noted that by 1939, “strong foundations for an effective program had been laid.”Footnote 200
Some developments subsequent to the Social Security Act were positive. With the appointment of Thomas Parran as Surgeon General in 1936 and several other staffing shifts, cooperation between the PHS and the Children's Bureau increased.Footnote 201 Amendments to the Social Security Act in 1939 increased the share the federal government contributed to the states for ADC under Title IV.Footnote 202 And child labor, long a Children’s Bureau priority, was now taken care of by the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, with sixteen set as a minimum age at which children could work; the Children’s Bureau had long crusaded for the use of government documentary evidence to establish age, since so many of their programs were age-delimited.Footnote 203 The Amendments also added survivors’ benefits to Old-Age Insurance (offering monthly payments to surviving children and spouses of deceased covered workers), shifting quite a few “worthy widows” of working husbands from ADC and into a social insurance system where they received support as a matter of right from the federal government.Footnote 204
However, as Robert Lieberman has argued, “shifting ‘worthy widows' into OAI contributed to the erosion of the ‘maternalist’ foundations of ADC.” It left as ADC-eligible recipients “abandoned or unmarried mothers, women whose husbands were in jail, or widows whose husbands had worked either in noncovered occupations or not at all.” ADC, no longer a program for needy widows generally, became associated with a more suspect group of needy women who were often cast as undeserving because of their perceived behavior and race.Footnote 205 Cultural constructions of unemployed mothers without husbands changed for the worse.
While 85 percent of ADC recipients were white at its inception, the creation of Survivor's Insurance led to the exodus of most poor white widows from the welfare program; they dropped from 43 percent of welfare recipients in 1937 to just 7 percent in 1961.Footnote 206 These widows with school-age children, whose deceased husbands had contributed to Social Security while working, were not expected to apply for welfare or seek work; “the presumption is that these stipends are not handouts, but were earned by dint of their husband’s work.” Their Social Security payments far exceed the average Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) award.Footnote 207 AFDC (the successor to ADC) would come to aid a disproportionate number of women of color.Footnote 208
The 1935 Social Security Act placed few restrictions on ADC eligibility and envisioned states awarding benefits chiefly on the basis of need, yet it incorporated no protections against discrimination.Footnote 209 Even the New Deal lacked the capacity to obliterate the parochialism of some of its foundations.Footnote 210 The struggle between national and local authority continued to shape what the program would become. The administrative environment in which the Children's Bureau functioned had always been a blend of federal, state, and local authority.Footnote 211 Old Age and Survivor’s Insurance more fully integrated people of color than did ADC because the norm in provision of welfare policy had long been state and local control, and there was strong resistance to nationalized action and administration of ADC, particularly in the South.Footnote 212 With the Democratic Party trying to maintain an uneasy compromise between northern and southern wings where the racial order was implicated, it is hardly surprising that ADC administration remained localized. And many African Americans were relegated to types of jobs left uncovered by the Social Security Act.Footnote 213
Bureau leaders continued to press for adequate funding to maintain eligible families. At the 1940 White House Conference on Children in a Democracy, Secretary Perkins (chair) and Chief of the Children's Bureau Lenroot (Executive Secretary), recommended that “Aid to Dependent Children should be further developed with the objective of enabling each eligible family to provide adequate care for its children. Rigid limitations on the amounts of grants to individual children or families should be removed from State and Federal laws …”Footnote 214 The report insisted that programs needed to be designed and administered “without regard to legal residence, economic status, race, or any other consideration other than the child’s need.”Footnote 215 Yet the Bureau's ability to advance such agendas was largely gone.
While the Social Security Act left women in the Children’s Bureau with authority and funding to administer programs for maternal and child health, for children with physical disabilities, and for childcare welfare services,Footnote 216 a signature program left their hands. The Bureau itself would be absorbed into the SSA in a governmental reorganization of 1946, and at this time, it lost authority over any remaining labor-related programs that had been central to its comprehensive approach. New Frontier and Great Society initiatives, including Head Start, further marginalized the Children's Bureau, and in 1969, President Nixon further eviscerated the Bureau when he created the Office of Child Development within Health, Education, and Welfare. While both Head Start and the Office of Child Development touted encompassing approaches to early childhood, including nutrition and the “physical, social, and intellectual development of children and their families,” in this reorganization, “many of the Bureau's responsibilities were assigned to other areas of the Federal Government, never to be regained.”Footnote 217
8. Conclusion
Political contests among strategic bureaucratic actors during the early New Deal—some whose claims to expertise were rising and some who fought to retain what they had established—contributed to an entrepreneurial approach to policymaking. Even as maternalists joined the CES, they did so amid the sustained contestation with other ascendant bureaucratic actors and presidents with competing visions for reform. The Children’s Bureau was engaged in chronic struggles to shape the terrain of contest on the issue of children’s welfare. Hemmed in and pigeon-holed, despite their more expansive goals, maternalists dug deeper into their connection to women and children. This was the turf that male policy makers had been willing to grant their carve-out claims to expertise in the first place.Footnote 218 Fighting rearguard battles, their ambit narrowed to relief for mothers and children, we can see the ways in which institutional constraints shaped this version of maternalism.
Even the type of social science research maternalist reformers deployed to establish their authority and their desire to treat a wide range of causes and consequences of women’s and children's poverty were losing luster and appeal while the political coalitions behind an expanded focus on a science of public health as factors in poverty were gaining.Footnote 219 Scientific breakthroughs and miraculous results were more seductive than investment for long-term problems generated by capitalism.
Reformers who drew on maternalism established programs that centered on vulnerable children and mothers, although their unmet aspirations extended to attacking the conditions that led to their impoverishment. They embraced traditional views that women with children belonged in the home if possible and argued that mothers should be compensated for this work. Eligibility standards for proper homes, unlike eligibility standards for social insurance, were tied to home surveillance techniques that would be part of the maternalist legacy. After the mothers’ pension program left their hands, racial disparities in federal treatment of Black mothers deepened. The establishment of the Children’s Bureau rested on an assurance that it would not engage in labor reform. Even as the Bureau tried to effect a comprehensive notion of welfare for children, it ran into conflict with doctors. In serving as the representative of children’s interests in the New Deal, their position was already narrowed.
Progressive Era reformers who had created juvenile courts and mothers’ pensions were able to sustain only part of their bold vision into the New Deal and the origins of Social Security. Maternalists inside government were participants in a dynamic period of statebuilding and bureaucratic competition, but the vision, narrative, and methods that had served them well during the first two decades of the twentieth century were less compelling by the Depression. Maternalists worked to create a far more effective program of national aid to mothers and children that the Children’s Bureau would have supervised, but the political will to impose conditions on states receiving aid, and interest in robust funding were not there. Maternalists may have had access to the state, but they were increasingly marginalized, seen as sentimental and unscientific women. Aspects of their signature program survived as federal policy, but these women would not want to celebrate what became of ADC and AFDC.
Competing interests
The authors declare none.
Acknowledgments
We acknowledge and thank Swarthmore students, Molly Petchenik ’16, Elizabeth Balch-Crystal ’19, Abigail Diebold ‘20, Michael Meyer ’22, Sydney White ’22, and Adithi Attada ‘24, for research assistance and suggestions for this article, and Linnet Davis-Stermitz ’12 and Nora Sullivan for assistance with archival work in Chicago. Eileen McDonagh, Ruth O’Brien, Julie Novkov, Patricia Strach, Jim Greer, anonymous reviewers for Studies in American Political Development, panel discussants, and others have helped improve our work.