Order Code RL33126
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Disaster Response and Appointment of a
Recovery Czar: The Executive Branch’s
Response to the Flood of 1927
October 25, 2005
Kevin R. Kosar
Analyst in American National Government
Government and Finance Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

Disaster Response and Appointment of a
Recovery Czar: The Executive Branch’s
Response to the Flood of 1927
Summary
In the wake of the destruction caused by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the press
and policymakers have looked to the past for examples of federal responses to natural
disasters that might serve as models for emulation today. Some Members of
Congress have expressed an interest in creating a cabinet-level “czar” to administer
Hurricane Katrina and Rita relief programs. Since the federal response to the flood
of 1927 featured Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover as the director of the flood
response and wielding immense executive powers, this episode in federal history may
be of particular interest to Congress.
This report describes the flood of 1927, and assesses the federal government’s
response thereto. In short, the federal response was an executive branch response.
President Calvin Coolidge created a quasi-governmental commission that included
members of his Cabinet and the American National Red Cross. This commission
encouraged the public to donate funds to the relief effort. It also gave Secretary of
Commerce Herbert Hoover near-absolute authority to organize and oversee its
response. Hoover used this authority to weave together federal resources, American
National Red Cross volunteers, and the private sector to carry out the relief and
recovery program.
The concentration of power and the blending of the governmental and private
sectors in Hoover’s hands enabled the relief effort to be carried out expeditiously and
creatively. President Coolidge’s empowerment of Hoover alone as director of the
flood response clarified to federal, state, and local officials and the public who was
in charge.
However, this administrative structure was not without costs. There was little
direct federal oversight of actual relief provision. So, for example, when local and
state relief workers behaved illegally, they were not held accountable. Furthermore,
the concentration of power in a single set of hands enabled Secretary Hoover to
undertake inadvisable actions with nearly no constraints.
This report is intended to provide background or contextual information and will
not be updated.

Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
The Mississippi River Flood of 1927 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Federal Disaster Response, Relief, and Reconstruction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
An Assessment of the Executive Branch’s Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

Disaster Response and Appointment of a
Recovery Czar: The Executive Branch’s
Response to the Flood of 1927
Introduction
In the wake of the destruction caused by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the press
and policymakers have looked to the past for examples of federal responses to natural
disasters that might serve as models for emulation today. A number of newspaper
articles have referred to the executive branch’s response to the 1927 Mississippi
River flood.1 Some Members of Congress have expressed an interest in creating a
cabinet-level “czar” to administer Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita relief
programs.2 Since the federal response to the flood of 1927 featured Secretary of
Commerce Herbert Hoover as the director of the flood response and wielding
immense executive powers, this episode in federal history may be of particular
interest to Congress.
In order to aid policymakers in their consideration of this matter, this report
provides an overview of the 1927 flood, and the federal governmental response
thereto. In short, the federal response was primarily an executive branch response.
President Calvin Coolidge created a quasi-governmental commission that included
members of his Cabinet and the American National Red Cross.3 This commission
encouraged the public to donate funds to the relief effort and utilized federal
resources, American National Red Cross volunteers, and the private sector to carry
out the relief and recovery program. The commission also gave Secretary of
Commerce Herbert Hoover near-absolute authority.
The concentration of power and the blending of the governmental and private
sectors in Hoover’s hands enabled the relief effort to be carried out expeditiously and
creatively. President Coolidge’s empowerment of Hoover alone as director of the
flood response clarified to federal, state, and local officials and the public who was
1 E.g., James R. Lutze, “After the Floods — Not Enough Federal Help in 1927 or 2005,” The
News & Observer
, Sept. 13, 2005, p. A13; Daniel Schorr, “What Would Herbert Hoover
Do?” Christian Science Monitor, Sept. 16, 2005, p. 9; David Greenburg, “No Deal,” Boston
Globe, Oct. 2, 2005, p. D1; and Timothy Walch, “We Could Use Another Man Like Herbert
Hoover,” History News Network, Oct. 17, 2005, at [http://hnn.us/articles/16985.html].
2 E.g., Yochi J. Dreazon and Christopher Cooper, “Bill Would Create ‘Czar’ for Katrina
Reconstruction,” Wall Street Journal, Oct. 12, 2005, p. B2.
3 On purely governmental interagency coordinating entities, see CRS Report RL31357,
Federal Interagency Coordinative Mechanisms: Varied Types and Numerous Devices, by
Frederick M. Kaiser.

CRS-2
in charge. As will be seen, historical accounts and assessments of the federal flood
response failed to locate any instances of jurisdictional confusion or power struggles
between agencies.
However, this administrative structure was not without costs. There was little
direct federal oversight of actual relief provision. So, for example, when local and
state relief workers behaved illegally, they were not held accountable. Furthermore,
the concentration of power in a single set of hands enabled Secretary Hoover to
undertake inadvisable actions with nearly no constraints.
The Mississippi River Flood of 1927
Nineteen-twenty-seven was not the first year that the Mississippi River
overflowed. The river
had its own natural cycle, usually flooding in the spring and again in early
summer ... then settling back into its bed during late summer .... People who lived
along [the river] came to measure time not simply in years, but in [great] flood
years — 1858, 1862, 1867, 1882, 1884, 1890, 1897, 1903, 1912, 1913, 1922.4
In 1879, Congress had created the Mississippi River Commission, which worked
with the Army Corps of Engineers to build levees to hem in the Lower Mississippi
River along its thousand mile course through six states.5 In 1926, the Corps’ Chief
of Engineers reported that the collection of levees “is now in condition to prevent the
destructive effects of floods.”6
From late August 1926 through the spring of 1927, unusually heavy
precipitation fell upon the Mississippi River Valley. “From January 1 to April 30,
1927, enough rain fell in various sections of [the Mississippi River basin7] to cover
the entire territory to a depth of 10.79 inches.”8 By September of 1926, the heavy
rain, in combination with other factors, such as deforestation due to logging in these
4 Pete Daniel, Deep’n As It Come: The 1927 Mississippi River Flood (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1977), pp. 4-5.
5 The Upper Mississippi River is over 900 miles long and flows from St. Anthony Falls in
Minneapolis, MN. to the mouth of the Ohio River in Cairo, IL. There begins the Lower
Mississippi River. United States Geology Survey, “Mississippi River,” in Status and Trends
of the Nation’s Biological Resources
, vol. 1 (Washington: GPO, 1998), pp. 352-356.
6 United States Army Corps of Engineers, Annual Report of the Chief of Engineers for 1926:
Mississippi River Commission
(Washington: GPO, 1926), p. 1793, as cited in Ibid., p. 6.
7 The Mississippi River basin is the great expanse of territory — extending into 31states and
two provinces of Canada — that is drained by the Mississippi River and its tributaries (the
rivers that flow into it), such as the Missouri, Ohio, Arkansas, White, and Red Rivers.
United States Geology Survey, “Mississippi River,”pp. 351-384.
8 The American National Red Cross, The Mississippi Valley Flood Disaster of 1927: Official
Report of Flood Operations
(Washington: American National Red Cross, 1927), p. 4.

CRS-3
areas, caused the river to overflow its banks and levees in many places.9 This
flooding, though, was modest — localities and volunteers handled the clean up and
necessary repairs and upgrades to levees. In the following month, as more
precipitation made its way into the Upper Mississippi River, the volume of water
moving downstream toward the Gulf of Mexico became immense. More rain storms
and the spring melt off of snow added to the flow, which spilled over riverbanks in
numerous states.
In April 1927, the Mississippi River began bursting levees.10 The first was at
Dorena, MO., where on April 16, 1,200 feet of levee crumbled.11 Five days later,
massive crevasses opened in levees in Mounds Landing, MS. and then Pendleton,
AR.; hundreds of millions of gallons of water violently washed over the land. The
flood had begun and its end was not declared until late July. People were drowned
in the fields and in their homes. The rush of the water was so immense and violent
that it permanently altered the topography in areas. Near the levee break at Mounds
Landing, for example, the flood left a 65 acre lake that remains to this day.12
In all, levees in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Missouri broke in 145
places. Over 26,000 square miles of land in seven states inhabited by some 930,000
persons were flooded.13 The damage was immense — 41,487 buildings were
destroyed, 162,017 homes flooded, and over $100 million [about $1.12 billion in
2005 dollars14] in crops and farm animals destroyed.15 It is unclear how many
persons were killed — accounts vary widely — but, it seems clear that at least 246
died.16 The total costs of the flood, though unclear, were huge.
9 Fewer trees meant fewer roots to absorb the rain, which made its way into the river. Daniel,
Deep’n As It Come, p. 7.
10 For photographs and first-person accounts of the flood of 1927, see Daniel, Deep’n As It
Come
, chapters 2-5.
11 John M. Berry, Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed
America
(New York: Simon & Schuster/Touchstone, 1998), p. 194. On the rains and river
spillovers that preceded the levee breaks, see Ibid., pp. 169-194.
12 Barry, Rising Tide, p. 279.
13 The American National Red Cross, The Mississippi Valley Flood Disaster of 1927, p. 5.
14 Calculations of cost figures of 1927 in today’s dollars was done through the Federal
Reserve Bank of Minneapolis’ Consumer Price Index calculator, which may be found at
[http://www.minneapolisfed.org/Research/data/us/calc/index.cfm]. Throughout the report,
bracketed figures will refer to the present day equivalents of 1927 expenditures.
15 The American National Red Cross, The Mississippi Valley Flood Disaster of 1927, pp.
4-6.
16 The estimate of 246 dead comes from the Red Cross. The American National Red Cross,
The Mississippi Valley Flood Disaster of 1927, p. 6. Many factors account for the diverse
estimates; among them is the lack of a firm count of the hundreds of men working on the
levees. When crevasses erupted, walls of water poured forth, drowning men and sweeping
their bodies dozens of miles away. John M. Barry, Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi
Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America
(New York: Simon & Schuster/Touchstone,
1998), pp. 202, 202, 241, 285-286, and 330.

CRS-4
The Red Cross estimated direct economic losses at $246,000,000 [$2.75 billion
in 2005]. The U.S. Weather bureau put direct losses at $355,147,000 [$3.97
billion]. Unofficial but authoritative estimates exceeded $500,000,000 [$5.59
billion]; with indirect losses, the number approached $1,000,000,000 [$11.18
billion], large enough in 1927 to affect the national economy.17
Federal Disaster Response, Relief,
and Reconstruction
The federal government’s response to the disaster was a mixture of pre-New
Deal minimalist federal governance and, to use recent parlance, “governing by
network.”18 The federal government would make no immediate appropriations to the
affected area.19 Instead, it would utilize federal resources and coordinate networks
of federal, state, private, and not-for-profit organizations to deliver relief services.
The President’s Cabinet would direct the relief effort in close consultation with the
American National Red Cross [herein, “Red Cross”]. Thus, flood response policy
was centralized, but, its execution was decentralized.20
In 1927, there was no federal disaster-response agency. Instead, the federal
government had a partnership with the Red Cross, a congressionally-chartered quasi-
governmental entity, established for a number of purposes, including the carrying out
of “a system of national and international relief in time of peace, and to apply the
same in mitigating the suffering caused by pestilence, famine, fire, floods, and other
great national calamities, and to devise and carry out measures for preventing the
same.”21 Under the charter, the President of the United States was to appoint six
members, one of whom was to serve as chairman, of the eighteen-person central
committee. The other five members were to be “named by him from the
Departments of State, War, Navy, Treasury, and Justice.”22 While the law did not
17 Barry, Rising Tide, p. 286.
18 On governing by network today, see Stephen Goldsmith and William D. Eggers,
Governing by Network: The New Shape of the Public Sector (Washington: Brookings
Institution Press, 2004).
19 Although the Army Corps of Engineers had committed its annual funds, in autumn 1927,
President Coolidge ordered it to spend $7 million [$78.3 million]. In 1928, Congress
appropriated funds to cover this shortfall (P.L. 70-7), to help reimburse localities for
expenditures related to flood relief (P.L. 70-181), and to assist affected farmers (P.L. 70-
393). Congress also passed the Jones-Reid Flood Control Act, which increased the federal
role in river management and authorized $325 million [$3.7 billion] in appropriations.
20 Bruce Lohof, Hoover and the Mississippi Valley Flood of 1927: A Case Study of the
Political Thought of Herbert Hoover
(dissertation, Syracuse University , 1968), chapter 5.
21 P.L. 58-4 (1905); 36 U.S.C. 300102.
22 P.L. 58-4. In 1947, the charter was amended to expand the board to have 50 members,
termed “governors.” (P.L. 80-47). The President of the United States was empowered to
appoint eight of the governors, one of whom serves as its “principal officer.” The other
seven governors are to be “officials of departments and agencies of the United States
(continued...)

CRS-5
provide a position for the President himself, Coolidge had been asked and agreed to
serve as President of the Red Cross.
On April 22, 1927, President Calvin Coolidge issued a proclamation to the
nation. He declared, “The Government is giving such aid as lies within its powers
.... But the burden of caring for the homeless rests upon the agency designated by
Government charter to provide relief in disaster — the American National Red
Cross.”23 He made no mention of emergency appropriations. Rather, Coolidge, as
President of the United States and the Red Cross, asked for the public to donate $5
million [$55.9 million in 2005 dollars] to the Red Cross. Additionally, the President
created a quasi governmental commission to assist the Red Cross in the relief effort.
Coolidge appointed Herbert Hoover, Secretary of Commerce, as chairman.
Hoover was an apt choice — he had been elected to the Central Committee of
the Red Cross by the incorporators and he had experience managing post-World War
I relief and reconstruction efforts in Europe. Hoover was directly assisted by James
L. Fieser, acting chairman of the Red Cross. The remainder of the commission,
whose roles, according to President Coolidge, were to lend expert advice and
expedite resource provision, included the secretaries of the Departments of the
Treasury, War, and Navy, and the members of the Red Cross Central Committee.24
That same day — April 22 — the commission [herein, the “Hoover Flood
Commission”] met for the first time and made three major decisions. First, it
effectively turned over direction of the Red Cross’s relief effort to Secretary
Hoover.25 Second, it appointed Henry M. Baker, disaster relief director for the Red
Cross, as the actual administrator of the response effort. As “dictator,” Baker would
do the work to execute Hoover’s directions.26 Third, the Flood Commission agreed
that each of the affected states should appoint a “dictator;” this individual would
serve as the point-person for the state, and who would see to it that state resources
22 (...continued)
Government, whose positions and interests qualify them to contribute to carrying out the
programs and purposes of the corporation.” While the law no longer provides for the
President to serve as President of the Red Cross, he is considered by the Red Cross the
“honorary chairman.” See 36 U.S.C. 300104 and American Red Cross, Our Report to the
American People
(Washington, Red Cross, 2004), p. 10.
23 Coolidge’s proclamation, interestingly, was issued on the stationery of the Red Cross.
The text of the proclamation may be found in “Text of President Coolidge’s Appeal for
Funds to Help Red Cross in Aiding Flood Refugees,” New York Times, Apr. 23, 1927, p. 1.
24 Herbert Hoover, “Establishment of Mississippi Valley Flood Disaster Red Cross
Committee — Statement,” April 22, 1927. As with Coolidge’s proclamation, Hoover’s
press release was released on Red Cross stationery.
25 This was done when the members of the Central Committee of the Red Cross, who were
part of the Hoover Committee, directed Fieser to use his power of director of the Red
Cross’s flood response to use his powers at Hoover’s direction. Lohof, Hoover and the
Mississippi Valley Flood of 1927
, p. 99.
26 “President Sends Hoover to Expand Red Cross Relief,” New York Times, Apr. 24, 1927,
p. 9.

CRS-6
were provided to the centrally directed response.27 These decisions made Hoover, to
use recent nomenclature, the “czar” for federal disaster response, likely the first.28
This concentration of a wide array of governmental powers in a single set of
hands enabled the federal government to respond rapidly without bureaucratic
impediments. If Hoover asked for a federal resource, the Hoover Flood Commission
would see that it was provided.29 The Memphis30 flood response headquarters served
as an “administrative pump.” A hodgepodge of resources from the many partners in
the relief effort flowed in, as did advice from the Hoover Flood Commission and
local relief workers. The headquarters, which was divided into operational units,
including purchase and supply, river transportation and rescue work, rail
transportation, and so forth, served as a processor. Baker sat at the heart of the
federal government and Red Cross partnership.
Representatives from every federal agency [involved], from the Army to the
Public Health Service, and several governors soon sat near Baker’s desk. When
Baker needed something, he called to the appropriate man, who took care of it.
Thirty yards away a Red Cross purchasing agent conducted a nearly continuous
reverse auction; he stood on a platform and shouted out supplies and quantities
needed, and dozens of suppliers shouted back bids.31
Out of the pump flowed streams of coordinated responses. A single, official channel
of communication — “Field Operations Letters” — was established; through it, the
headquarters delivered relief plan directions to local personnel and groups by
telephone calls and radio communications directed to regional Red Cross offices. 32
Furthermore, coordinating the federal response with the Red Cross gave the
relief effort the power to draw upon thousands of already-trained Red Cross
volunteers in affected areas. These volunteers on the scene provided information to
the Hoover’s headquarters for use in planning and coordinating the response, and
utilized relationships they had with affected residents and governments to help
execute the response. Federal, state, and quasi-governmental entities and private
citizens and businesses were linked to form an “administrative machine.”33
27 Barry, Rising Tide, p. 275.
28 A review has failed to locate any earlier instances of a single federal administrator being
empowered to utilize the powers of multiple departments in response to a natural disaster.
29 Hoover, Fieser, and General Edgar Jadwin of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers left the
evening of April 22 on a train to Memphis, TN, where they would set up the first command
center. Hoover would visit flooded areas and direct relief efforts for 60 of the next 71 days.
Barry, Rising Tide, pp. 262, 273.
30 The first headquarters was set up in Memphis. The headquarters was moved to New
Orleans on May 26 to better contend with the damage caused by the southerly flow of water.
Lohof, Hoover and the Mississippi Valley Flood of 1927, p. 101.
31 Barry, Rising Tide, p. 274.
32 Lohof, Hoover and the Mississippi Valley Flood of 1927, pp. 102-103.
33 Bruce Lohof, Herbert Hoover, “Spokesman of Humane Efficiency: The Mississippi Flood
(continued...)

CRS-7
The President, for his part, let the Hoover Flood Commission run relief
administration. He issued a further plea for another $5 million in donations to the
Red Cross on May 2.34 Hoover, though, directed the expenditure of the funds,35 often
shipping allotments to local Red Cross chapters to expend according to their
directions.
The scale of the relief effort was massive. Approximately 640,000 displaced
persons36 were aided by the Red Cross; 307,208 stayed in over 150 Red Cross
camps, many for up to four months; the remainder of evacuees stayed elsewhere, but,
received food from the Red Cross. The Red Cross provided those in the camps with
food, tobacco, medical care, clothing, and some entertainment. Evacuees, typically,
lived in tents donated by the Department of War, and had access to simple bathing
and toilet facilities. They received rudimentary medical care; some entertainment
and courses in home economics were provided.
While the relief operations were of considerable breadth, federal recovery and
reconstruction efforts were quite modest.37 The Army Corp of Engineers, after some
delay, repaired the levees. Hoover encouraged affected states to incorporate state
reconstruction corporations. He also strongly encouraged banks in affected areas and
the captains of industries of the day to provide working capital for the banks by
buying stock in them. His plan was for state reconstruction corporations to lend
money to farmers, sell these loans to the Federal Intermediate Credit Corporation,
and use the proceeds to make more loans.38 The Red Cross, meanwhile, helped
citizens rebuild some of their homes, and provided them with seeds, farm
implements, basic household furnishings, and other items to help them regain the
ability to sustain themselves.
33 (...continued)
of 1927,” American Quarterly, vol. 22, no. 3, autumn 1970, p. 692. For a more extended
treatment of flood administration, see Lohof, Hoover and the Mississippi Valley Flood of
1927
, chapter 5, “The Hoover Machine.”
34 The text of Coolidge’s request may be found in “Text of the President’s Flood Relief
Appeal,” New York Times, May 3, p. 2.
35 “Hoover Grants Melville, Which Asked Nothing, $150,000,” New York Times, Sept. 10,
1927, p. 9.
36 While the Red Cross’s report refers to persons driven from their homes as “refugees,” this
report prefers the terms “displaced persons” and “evacuees” and leaves “refugees” to be
used to refer to individuals who have fled their home nations.
37 As President Coolidge later told Congress, “The Government is not the insurer of its
citizens against the hazards of the elements. We shall always have flood and drought, heat
and cold, earthquake and wind, lightning and tidal wave, which are all too constant in their
afflictions. The Government does not undertake to reimburse citizens for loss and damage
incurred under such circumstances. It is chargeable, however, with the rebuilding of public
works and the humanitarian duty of relieving its citizens of distress.” President Calvin
Coolidge, “President’s Annual Message,” as reprinted in 69 Congressional Record 107
(1927).
38 These lending entities had $13 million [$145.4 million] to lend. Barry, Rising Tide, pp.
366-369.

CRS-8
By mid-July, waters had receded some and the Hoover Flood Commission
began shutting down the Red Cross camps. The headquarters of the flood response
was moved to Washington, DC, where it was disbanded by early autumn.39
However, Hoover continued to work with the Red Cross to provide aid for affected
areas through the end of the year.40
An Assessment of the Executive
Branch’s Response
The public donated and the Red Cross delivered over $21 million [$234.9
million] in aid. The federal government provided, perhaps, $10 million [$111.8
million] in resources and manpower — nearly $32 million [$346.7 million] in all.41
On the whole, the response and relief provided by the federal government and
Red Cross appear to have been well executed. The concentration of great power in
the person of Secretary Hoover enabled quick and creative responses. By April 23,
1927, U.S. Coast Guard boats were rescuing citizens trapped in trees and on rooftops,
bridges, and high grounds, the U.S. Army had shipped thousands of tents, cots, and
blankets to areas where Red Cross camps were being set up, and the Navy had
received Hoover’s request to dispatch boats and rescue crews.42 In an age when
telephones were few and personal wireless telephones nonexistent, Hoover, just 11
days after the flood committee had first met, reported to President Coolidge that the
relief effort that “we have coordinated under the Red Cross ... the personnel,
equipment, and supplies of the federal departments.” He further informed the
President that the Red Cross headquarters had “coordinated ... with the local
citizens’ [flood] committees, Red Cross chapters, State officials, Departments of
Health, National Guard, [and the] American Legion and others...”43.
The blending of governmental and private resources enabled creative responses.
For example, the Red Cross Rescue Fleet was cobbled together from privately-owned
yachts, commercial barges, boats belonging to federal agencies such as the U.S.
Army, Navy, Coast Guard, and river steamships.44 Railroads were employed to move
both materials, manpower, and evacuees.45 Hoover also brought into the mix the
39 Lohof, Hoover and the Mississippi Valley Flood of 1927, pp. 101.
40 “$1,000,000 to Flood Victims,” New York Times, Dec. 21, 1927, p. 30.
41 Ibid., pp. 170-173.
42 “Cabinet Members Ask for $5,000,000 for Flood Relief,” New York Times, Apr. 23, 1927,
p. 3; and Memorandum to the Secretary of the Navy from Herbert Hoover, Apr. 23, 1927,
provided to author by the Herbert Hoover Library of West Branch, Iowa.
43 As quoted in Lohof, Hoover and the Mississippi Valley Flood of 1927, pp. 107-108.
44 American Red Cross, Our Report to the American People, p. 36.
45 E.g., “Hoover convinced railroads — the Illinois Central, the Missouri Pacific, the Texas
Pacific, the Southern, the Frisco — to provide free transportation for refugees and cut rates
(continued...)

CRS-9
Rockefeller Foundation, which provided public health assistance to affected
counties.46
Additionally, President Coolidge’s employment of a Cabinet-based commission
helped clarify to the public and local, state, and federal officials who was in charge
of the flood response. Secretary Hoover was widely known throughout the nation,
and the President made sure that everyone got the message that Hoover was in charge
by utilizing the bully pulpit — he issued a presidential proclamation to the press.
That same day — April 23 — Hoover and Fieser made contact with governors to let
them know that the federal government and Red Cross would jointly direct all
activities. The scholarly and press accounts on the flood response cited above reveal
no jurisdictional disputes between federal agencies or between federal and state
agencies. Again, Hoover created an “administrative machine.”
That said, the federal response has been faulted on at least four points. First,
while the employment of governmental and private sector resources allowed for
creative responses, it also opened the door to potential abuses. For example, Hoover,
reportedly, empowered Baker to order the seizure of privately owned boats by relief
workers.47 Thus, with no executive order or statute, private individuals were
authorized to take the property of others. To whom individuals affected and
aggrieved by civilian exercise of federal powers would protest or appeal is simply
unclear.48
Second, decentralized execution meant that the federal government had little
oversight of the actual operations of the relief camps. Two significant incidents
illustrate the limitations of this method of administration. First, critics accused the
Red Cross of being slow to respond to the spread of venereal diseases among camp
residents.49 Second, in some Red Cross camps, local officials brutalized Black
evacuees and disallowed them to leave the camps.50 In each of these instances, the
45 (...continued)
on freight during the emergency.” Barry, Rising Tide, p. 275.
46 Barry, Rising Tide, p. 331.
47 “President Sends Hoover to Expand Red Cross Relief,” p. 9.
48 For an introduction to the complex legal nature of the Red Cross, see Wesley A. Sturges,
“The Legal Status of the Red Cross,” Michigan Law Review, vol. 56, no. 1, Nov. 1957, pp.
1-32.
49 Daniel, Deep’n As It Come, pp. 87, 118-119.
50 Under the sharecropper relationship, a farmer would work land owned by another person
and turn over to the landowner the products thereof. The landowner would sell the
agricultural products and give the farmer a “share” of the proceeds. Under such an
arrangement, many Blacks in the South had fallen into near or outright peonage. Farmers
fell into debt when landowners would charged them for various items and services — such
as loans for seed — and provided small returns. Bound by debt, farmers could not leave the
land. After the flood of 1927, landowners had a strong interest in seeing that their
sharecroppers returned to their fields. Therefore, they often employed threats of violence
and called upon state and local governments to help them force farmers to return to work.
Robyn Spencer, “Contested Terrain: The Mississippi Flood of 1927and the Struggle to
Control Black Labor,” The Journal of Negro History, vol. 79, no. 2, spring 1994, pp. 170-
181; and Barry, Rising Tide, pp. 303-335.

CRS-10
federal government had no one at these sites to provide accurate reports on the
conditions or put a halt to these actions.51
Third, directions from headquarters and Hoover to field operations were very
explicit as to the goals desired. In one instance, Hoover wired a regional
representative in New Iberia, LA, on May 1. He ordered it to erect a camp to hold
10,000 persons and gave instructions on the proper construction and installation of
the facilities, including tent platforms, latrines, pipelines, wells, and power lines.52
However, these same directions provided little direction as to the appropriate means.
Locals were to figure it out themselves. Free to use whatever means they felt
necessary to achieve these ends, local relief workers, in many instances, forced Black
males, sometimes at gun point, to participate in flood response work.53 In short,
workers carrying out ostensibly federal work were not federal workers, and did not
have to follow federal administrative laws.

Finally, there is the matter of power concentration in the hands of a Cabinet-
level czar. As head of the Hoover Flood Commission, head of the Red Cross flood
relief effort, and the public face of flood relief — thanks to his tireless public
relations efforts — Secretary Hoover held an immense amount of administrative and
political power.54 And, he was permitted to wield this power for over three months
— April through July of 1927 — for the President had given the Hoover Flood
Commission the authority to direct disaster response, relief, and reconstruction.
While this empowered him to do much good work, Hoover also made glaring
mistakes, and made matters worse by refusing to admit his errors and make amends.
Critically, nobody, the President excepted, could force Hoover to change course.55
For example,
! There is evidence that Hoover was aware of the mistreatment of
Blacks in the camps and the shortcomings of his credit provision
plan. Yet, he did little to fix these problems.56
! In late May of 1927, the Secretary decided that the farmers of the
area should plant soybeans, instead of cotton. He directed the Red
Cross, which received public donations for the flood response, to
buy enough soybean seed for 400,000 acres. When informed by
agricultural scientists that soybeans were not an advisable crop
choice for the affected areas, Hoover disregarded this counsel and
51 More problematic is that President Coolidge empowered Hoover to issue reports on the
progress of flood recovery. With an eye on a run for the presidency in 1928, this gave
Hoover a strong incentive to be less than objective about inadequate results. Thus, he would
often claim that six or fewer persons died once he was put in control of flood response. This
figure is not deemed credible. See Barry, Rising Tide, p. 289.
52 Lohof, Hoover and the Mississippi Valley Flood of 1927, pp. 140-141.
53 Ibid., pp. 365-395.
54 Hoover’s leadership of the response to the flood helped vault him from a non-contender
into the presidency.
55 The 69th Congress adjourned March 4, 1927 and the 70th Congress began December 5,
1929. The President refused to call Congress back for a special session during the interim.
56 Farmers lacked assets — which were destroyed or washed away by the flood — to pledge
as collateral inhibited their ability to access the credit. Barry, Rising Tide, pp. 365-395.

CRS-11
contacted banks to urge them to loan monies to farmers for soybean
crops.57
! A destitute victim departing a relief camp might receive no more
than “tickets that entitled him to railway fare [back to his home city],
and to a tent if his house was gone, tickets that gave him lumber,
seeds, implements [for gardening], and a mule or cow.”58 Many
newspapers ran sharp editorials that faulted the federal government’s
rehabilitation efforts. They argued that the federal government,
which was running a massive surplus, should provide direct aid to
flood victims in order to help them regain self-sustenance. Hoover
disagreed — he thought flood victims had received enough to get
back on their feet.59 Unfortunately, even these modest resources did
not reach those in need. Red Cross officials distributed some
evacuees’ allotments to the planters for whom they worked. Some
planters charged evacuees for the goods.60
In summation, President Coolidge’s version of a disaster response and recovery
czar enabled quick and apparently efficient utilization of governmental and private
sector resources and personnel. It also, though, gave a single administrator a large
quantity of power with only presidential oversight, and, in some instances, that power
appears to have been used inadvisably
57 Ibid., p. 366.
58 Herbert Hoover, The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover: The Cabinet and the Presidency, 1920-
1933
(New York: MacMillan Company, 1952), vol. 2, p. 130.
59 Many displaced persons disagreed. “Victims of Flood Still Plead for Aid,” New York
Times
, July 3, 1927, p. E1.
60 Barry, Rising Tide, 370-374.