The correct answers- He offered them the opportunity to enlist in the Civilian Conservation Corps. He provided food and shelter to the veterans during their marches.
Roosevelt did not decrease the benefits that veterans were receiving, nor did he order the army to violently remove the veterans from Washington.
He also did not sign a bill authorizing early payment to veterans, although he did support such a bill and it was eventually passed by Congress in 1936.
The Bonus Army marches were a series of protests by World War I veterans who were seeking early payment of a bonus that was not due to be paid until 1945.
The protests took place in Washington, D.C., in 1932 and 1933. The first march was broken up by the army under the orders of President Hoover, but Roosevelt took a different approach to the second march.
He allowed the veterans to stay in Washington and provided them with food and shelter.
He also offered them the opportunity to enlist in the Civilian Conservation Corps, a New Deal program that provided jobs for unemployed young men.
Roosevelt's handling of the Bonus Army marches was seen as a sign of his compassion for the working class and his willingness to help those in need.
It helped to solidify his support among the American people and contributed to his re-election in 1936.