Colorado Springs artist Pat Musick lives in the home her famous artist father, Archie Musick, created and built in the late 40s and 50s. It s built into a natural amphitheater
Colorado Springs artist Pat Musick lives in the home her famous artist father, Archie Musick, created and built in the late 40s and 50s. It s built into a natural amphitheater
Colorado Springs has a reputation as a place that favors small government and limited public spending, but 75 years ago the city was a hub for projects funded by the government s New Deal.Without those projects, Rampart Range Road wouldn t snake into the mountains, Garden of the Gods wouldn t be studded with juniper trees, Monument Creek might still flood its banks and some of the city s most visible public art wouldn t exist.This year marks the 75th anniversary of the New Deal, a series of programs that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt pushed through as his stimulus package to help the country weather the Great Depression. The government job-creation program began in 1933, employing more than 4 million Americans at its peak, in skills as varied as painting and bridge-building. It fizzled out by 1942, after the bombing of Pearl Harbor thrust the nation into World War II.Whether one views the New Deal as a boon or a boondoggle, it was a remarkable period in the nation s history.