The New Deal was the most ambitious peacetime government intervention in American history. Launched in 1933 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in response to the Great Depression, it remade the relationship between citizens and the federal government in ways that are still felt today. This guide explains what the New Deal actually was, what it set out to do, how it worked in practice, and what it left behind. The writing is direct and the structure is clear. Each chapter covers a distinct phase of the policy, building from the causes of the Depression through the first emergency measures, the major relief and recovery programs, the push for structural reform, and the political battles that shaped everything. You will follow the crisis from its origins in the financial collapse of 1929 through the bank runs, farm foreclosures, and mass unemployment of the early 1930s. You will see how FDR's advisors designed programs under pressure, how those programs reached people on the ground, and which groups were excluded by political compromise and racial barriers. You will understand the Supreme Court confrontations, the second wave of New Deal legislation, and the forces that eventually limited how far the experiment could go. What you will find inside this guide: the causes and consequences of the 1929 crash and the banking crisis that followed; a clear breakdown of the three phases of New Deal policy covering relief, recovery, and reform; profiles of the key advisors, administrators, and local officials who made the programs run; analysis of which regions and demographic groups gained the most and who was shut out; and an account of the political and constitutional challenges that shaped the final form of each law. This guide is written for general readers, students, and anyone who wants a clear account of this period without wading through academic debate. No prior knowledge of economics or policy is needed. The New Deal is where modern American government began. This guide shows you exactly how it happened.