<P> Initially created as the Resettlement Administration (RA) in 1935 as part of the New Deal in the United States, the Farm Security Administration (FSA) was an effort during the Depression to combat American rural poverty . </P> <P> The FSA stressed "rural rehabilitation" efforts to improve the lifestyle of sharecroppers, tenants, very poor landowning farmers, and a program to purchase submarginal land owned by poor farmers and resettle them in group farms on land more suitable for efficient farming . Critics, including the Farm Bureau, strongly opposed the FSA as an experiment in collectivizing agriculture--that is, in bringing farmers together to work on large government - owned farms using modern techniques under the supervision of experts . After the Conservative coalition took control of Congress it transformed the FSA into a program to help poor farmers buy land, and that program continues to operate in the 21st century as the Farmers Home Administration . </P> <P> The FSA is famous for its small but highly influential photography program, 1935--44, that portrayed the challenges of rural poverty . </P> <P> The projects that were combined in 1935 to form the RA started in 1933 as an assortment of programs tried out by the Federal Emergency Relief Administration . The RA was headed by Rexford Tugwell, an economic advisor to President Roosevelt . However, Tugwell's goal moving 650,000 people into 100,000,000 acres (400,000 km) of exhausted, worn - out land was unpopular among the majority in Congress . This goal seemed socialistic to some and threatened to deprive influential farm owners of their tenant workforce . The RA was thus left with only enough resources to relocate a few thousand people from 9 million acres (36,000 km) and build several greenbelt cities, which planners admired as models for a cooperative future that never arrived . </P>

When did the farm security administration hire a group of photographers