(1) The most active First Hundred Days was under president Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s first term. (2) In a desperate attempt to solving the woes of the American population, FDR and his Congress passed more bills than any other president-congressional combination as ever done in their first impression time period. (3) FDR’s domestic policy, known more widely as the New Deal, was intended to be a group of innovative measures to counteract the effects of the Great Depression. (4) Roosevelt and the U.S. Congress, trying to reduce unemployment, restore prosperity and return a sense of morale to American citizens, endorsed a wide variety of bills creating new federal programs and agencies. (5) These agencies were known as alphabet agencies due to their titles that included many different letters (i.e., WPA, FERA, TVA).