Generated by GPT-5-mini| 1933 establishments in the United States | |
|---|---|
| Name | 1933 establishments in the United States |
| Settlement type | Year-based list |
| Established title | Year |
| Established date | 1933 |
1933 establishments in the United States The year 1933 saw the founding of numerous United States institutions, corporations, and landmarks amid the aftermath of the Great Depression and the inauguration of Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal. Prominent entities established in 1933 include federal initiatives, private enterprises, cultural institutions, and transportation facilities linked to broader developments such as the Social Security Act, the Civilian Conservation Corps, and shifts influenced by events like the Dust Bowl and the repealing of Prohibition in the United States.
1933 witnessed the creation of organizations connected to the United States Banking Reform, responses to the Stock Market Crash of 1929, and programs associated with the Wagner Act era, producing entities that interacted with institutions like the Federal Reserve System, the Department of the Treasury, and the United States Congress. Many establishments from 1933 later engaged with national projects such as the Tennessee Valley Authority, the Works Progress Administration, and federal courts including the Supreme Court of the United States. Cultural institutions founded that year entered networks with the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Smithsonian Institution, and the Library of Congress.
Federal and state responses in 1933 led to the founding of agencies and programs aligned with Franklin D. Roosevelt initiatives and legislative acts debated in the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. Entities initiated that year interfaced with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and aspects of the New Deal framework, influencing interactions with the Department of Labor, the Internal Revenue Service, and state-level bodies such as the California State Water Resources Control Board and the New York State Department of Health. Several public institutions established in 1933 later collaborated with the National Park Service, the Civilian Conservation Corps, and regional authorities like the Tennessee Valley Authority.
1933 saw the founding of corporations that later competed with established firms such as General Electric, Ford Motor Company, and Standard Oil. New businesses established that year entered markets alongside corporations like American Airlines, United Airlines, and Pan American World Airways, and many eventually traded on exchanges like the New York Stock Exchange or the NASDAQ. Industries affected included publishing networks related to The New York Times, retail chains comparable to Sears, Roebuck and Company, and emerging firms that would interact with antitrust precedents from cases involving the United States v. Microsoft Corp. lineage in later decades.
Cultural institutions established in 1933 joined a landscape featuring the Metropolitan Opera, the Brooklyn Museum, and the Museum of Modern Art, while educational bodies affiliated with universities such as Harvard University, Yale University, and the University of California, Berkeley were influenced by contemporaneous academic trends. Scientific organizations from 1933 later collaborated with research centers like the National Institutes of Health, the Smithsonian Institution, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and contributed to fields later shaped by initiatives including the Manhattan Project and programs at the California Institute of Technology. Literary and performing arts groups founded that year entered circuits with the New York Public Library, the Carnegie Hall, and festivals resembling the Bayreuth Festival in prominence.
Transportation facilities and utilities inaugurated in 1933 connected to networks dominated by entities such as the Interstate Highway System planners, the Pennsylvania Railroad, and the Southern Pacific Railroad, and linked to aviation developments involving Charles Lindbergh-era carriers and airports like LaGuardia Airport and Los Angeles International Airport. Public works projects established in 1933 related to water management akin to the Hoover Dam program, energy systems comparable to the Tennessee Valley Authority, and telecommunications infrastructure that would later integrate with companies such as AT&T and the Bell System.
Buildings and landmarks completed or opened in 1933 joined a roster including the Empire State Building era landmarks, theaters like the Radio City Music Hall, and civic structures comparable to Grand Central Terminal. Many such sites were sited in municipalities like New York City, Chicago, and Los Angeles, and later became part of preservation efforts involving the National Register of Historic Places and the National Trust for Historic Preservation. These 1933 landmarks often hosted events tied to cultural figures such as Babe Ruth, Louis Armstrong, and Albert Einstein and have been subjects of coverage by outlets like The New Yorker and Time (magazine).