Title: The Great Depression
1Chapter 13
2Section 1
- The Crash and Its Aftermath
3October 24, 1929 New York Stock Exchange Crashes
- Stocksa share in business ownership
- Price and value constantly fluctuates
- People began to sell their stocks
- Tuesday, October 29 Black Tuesday
- Over 30 billion was lost in the last week of
Oct. 1929
4Why Did the Crash Occur?
- Stock Market Speculation
- Speculationa risky business venture involving
buying or selling property in the hope of making
a large, quick profit - Marginto pay only a fraction of a stocks value
and borrow the rest of the money for the stocks - If the loan was not repaid, the stockbroker
gained ownership of the stock - Stocks made large gains between 1927 and 1929
5The Beginning of the End
- By 1929, brokers lent out 6 billion
- As stock prices fell in the fall of 1929, brokers
wanted the loans repaid - Loans could not be repaid so brokers sold the
stocks - Prices of major stock fell 75
- Banks had lent to stockbrokers and banks
wanted to be repaid - Brokers did not have the to repay so banks
took out of customers savings deposits - Now the common person had no
6The Onset of the Depression
- Depressiona period of extended and severe
decline in a nations economy, marked by low
production and high unemployment - Unemploymentthe condition of being out of work
- Depression spread throughout the world
7The Causes of the Great Depression
- Depressed Farms and Industries
- In the 1920s, farming, textile, mining,
railroad, automobile, construction industries all
declined - Wages dropped and/or laid workers off
- People couldnt afford manufactured goods
- Wealth Distribution
- Growing gap in wealth between rich people and
ordinary people
8The Causes of the Great Depression (cont.)
- Monetary Policy
- Inept monetary policy
- Supply of money in circulation was not large
enough to allow the economy to bounce back
- Decline in Foreign Trade
- Less international trade
- High tariffs on foreign goods
9Hoovers Response
- Initial Reaction to the Depression
- Hoover was president 1929-1933
- People had less faith in the economy which hurt
the chance for recovery - Agricultural Marketing Act
- Farm Boardlent money to farmers to help them set
up cooperative marketing associations
10The Depression Deepens
- 193232,000 businesses folded
- 1929average family income was 3,200
- 19351,600
- 1932unemployment was 25
- Growing poverty and hardships
- Charity funds became inadequate
11Too Little Too Late
- Reconstruction Finance Corporation
- Feb. 1932
- Largest federal program of economic aid
- 2 billion
- Emergency Relief Act
- July 1932
- Additional 300 million to state governments for
unemployment relief
12Mounting Protests
- Resentment grew as the Depression continued
- Veterans of the Great War (WWI)
- Traveled from Portland, Oregon to D.C.
- 1932
- 17,000 travelers
- Wanted advancement payments
- July 28, Hoover sent the Army to clear the
veterans from the federal buildings - 100 people injured
13The Election of 1932
- Hoover was the Republican candidate
- Franklin D. Roosevelt was the Democratic
candidate - FDR won by a landslide
14Section 2
15Dust Storms
- April 14, 1935
- Biggest Dust Bowl
- Great Plains
- 1932-1939
- Dust storms throughout Great Plains
- Dakotas, NE, KS, OK, NM, eastern CO, TX Panhandle
16On the Farms
- Farmers received low prices for crops
- Thousands of farmers lost their lands
- Okies were Great Plains farmers
- Foreclosurethe legal procedure for reclaiming a
piece of property when the buyer is unable to
keep up the mortgage payments - Penny auctionssale of property for pennies to
friends who then return the property later
17- Migration of the Okies
- Okies drifted anywhere they might find a job
- CA
- Farm owners lowered wages
- Okies lived on the outskirts of farm towns
18- Tenant Farmers
- Most lived in the South
- African Americans
- Did not own land they farmed
- Evicted from the farms
- Tenant farmers had to look for work
- Mexican American Workers
- Discriminated against
- Labeled illegal aliens (had no right to live or
work in the U.S.A.) - CA, TX, southwest U.S.A.
- City officials often wanted to send all people of
Mexican descent back to Mexico - Repatriationreturn to a persons country of
birth or citizenship
19In the City
- 1933, average of 25 people were unemployed
- Buffalo 30
- Chicago and Cleveland 50
- Toledo 80
- Beggars and panhandling
- Absence of activity
20Unemployed Workers
- Factory owners laid off workers and/or reduced
wages - Many paid workers were no better off than those
who received aid from the government - Moved in with relatives
21Hoovervilles and the Homeless
- Hoovervilles
- Makeshift cities on the fringes of metropolitan
areas - 2 million lived in Hoovervilles
- Garbage scraps for foods
- Helping others became part of life
22The Better-Off
- Some landlords let unemployed tenants stay for
free - Tenants/landlords shared food
- Most of the wealthy before the Depression were
able to make ends meet - Live a comfortable life but not as luxurious
- Some people bought stocks for low prices
- Most people lost and material possessions
but even worse was the loss of hope and pride
23In the Family
- The father lost status and self-esteem
- Fathers no longer could support their families
- The Womens World
- Women suffered less upheaval
- Economizing kept families from starvation
- Revived traditional home crafts (canning veggies,
drying food, sewing clothes) - Started home businesses (laundry, baking goods,
etc.)
24The Womens World (cont.)
- Jobs outside the home continued (retail sales,
clerical work, etc.) - Many job opportunities remained open to women
during the Great Depression
25Growing Up in the Thirties
- Some families often lost their fathers
- Became hoboes and traveled across the U.S.A. in
trains (hobo camps formed) - Some families grew closer together
- Stronger bonds
- Inner strength
26- The Great Depression was a time of psychological
and spiritual depression as well as economic
depression. - There was a lack of hope and faith in the future.
27Section 3
- Life During the Depression
28Gone With the Wind Smashes Sales Records
- Novel by Margaret Mitchell
- Instant success
- During and after the Civil War
- Readers momentarily escaped from their own
troubled time - 1937, won Pulitzer Prize
- 1939, made into a movie
29The Car Craze Continues
- Automobiles gave people a sense they could
physically escape their problems - Status symbola possession thought to reflect a
persons wealth, prestige, or superior position
in society
30The Car Craze Continues (cont.)
- Cars for Show
- Cars were status symbols
- Wealthy kept cars during Depression
- On the Move
- 2 lane roads across the U.S.A.
- Tourism was 3rd largest industry
- Trailers
- Automobile industry grew
- Early 1930s, over 1/2 of U.S.A. families owned a
car
31Escape From Household Drudgery
- Electricity spread
- Market for household appliances grew
- Refrigerator, washing machines, electric iron
- Eased burdensome household chores
32Escape Through Entertainment
- The Silver Screen
- Glitz and glamour
- Black and white
- Color-film later in 1930s
- Gone With the Wind
- mid-1930s, average week 60-90 million people saw
movies
33The Silver Screen (cont.)
- Talkies
- Movies with sound
- Early 1930s
- Often times movies were not smooth
- Words and movement did not match up
- Musicals
- Dancing
- Singing
- Singing
- Music
- All put together for one show
34The Golden Age of Radio
- Radio was an important piece of furniture
- By end of 1930s, 30 million people owned a radio
- Family entertainment
- Form of escape from the Depression
35The Golden Age of Radio (cont.)
- Mass mediathe methods by which information and
entertainment are transmitted to large numbers of
people - Newspaper
- Television
- Radio
- magazines
36Voices That Would Not be Stilled
- The Mirror of Lit.
- Wrote about the mass struggles of people
- Struggles of ind.
- Evaluated effect. Of society
- John Steinbeck (The Grapes of Wrath)
- John Dos Passos
37Statements in the Arts
- Artists called for social change
- Show bleakness of Depression Era
- Thomas Hart Benton, Edward Hopper, Grant Wood
- Playwrights and theater directors
- Visions for a just world
- Documentary photograph
- U.S. stripped of hopes and dreams during the
Depression