Title: The Great Depression
1The Great Depression
2I. The Coming of the Great Depression
- The Great Crash
- Between May 1928 and September of 1929 the
average price of stocks increased over 40 percent - trading grew from 2 or 3 million shares a day to
5 million as high as 10 or 12 million - brokerage firms encourage stock mania by offering
easy credit to those buying stocks - October 21 and October 23 alarming declines in
stock prices - both had recoveries
- J.P. Morgan and other big bankers bought up a
great deal of stock to restore public confidence
3The Great Crash Continued
- October 29, 1929 Black Tuesday
- all efforts to save the market fail
- sixteen million shares of stock traded (sold)
- industrial index dropped 43 points
- stocks in many companies became worthless
- In the months that followed, the market would
continue to decline - Market would be depressed for the next four years
and would not fully recover for over a decade - Not the only cause of the Great Depression
4Causes of the Depression
- Most historically attributes of the Great
Depression is that it was so severe and lasted so
long question then remains, why was it such a
bad one? - Lack of diversification in the American economy
- prosperity had depended on only a few basic
industries, most significantly the construction
of automobiles - when these industries began to decline, newer
industries (like plastics, chemicals, petroleum)
had not developed enough strength to compensate
for bigger industries decline
5Causes of the Depression Continued
- Maldistribution of purchasing power and the
weakness in consumer demand - as industrial and agricultural production
increased, the proportion of profits going to
farmers, workers and other potential consumers
was too small to create and adequate market for
the goods the economy was producing this lead to
demand not being able to keep up with supply aka
a surplus! - in 1929, after almost a full era of economic
growth more than half the families in America
still lived on the edge of or below the minimum
subsistence level too poor to buy the goods the
economy was producing - During the 1920s, as long as corporations had
continued to expand their capital facilities, the
economy had flourished by 1929 capital
investment had created more plant space than
could profitably be used, plants producing more
goods than consumers could purchase this lead to
mass layoffs depleting mass purchasing power
further - once fired, people have trouble finding
employment elsewhere because other companies
experiencing the same trend
6Causes of the Depression Continued
- Poor Credit Structure of the Economy
- farmers deeply in debt
- land mortgaged (tenancy)
- crop prices low
- small banks in trouble (especially ones tied to
agriculture) , consumers defaulting on loans,
many failed - big banks in trouble, too
- reckless investing
7Causes of the Depression Continued
- Decrease in International Trade
- European demand for goods began to decline
- European economy being destabilized by
international debt structure that emerged in the
aftermath of World War I - International debt structure
- Germany and Austria Hungary as incapable of
paying off reparations as Allies were able to pay
off debts - American govt refused to forgive or reduce the
debts instead they offer loans (like a credit
card) - Reparations being paid only by piling up new and
greater debts - High tariff rates make it near impossible for
European countries to sell their goods in
American Markets
8Thus Black Tuesday was not the cause of the
Great Depression, but rather a trigger or spark
in a chain of events that exposed longstanding
weaknesses in the American economy
9The Progress of the Great Depression
- Crisis would steadily worsen over the next three
years - Collapse of much of banking system would follow
the stock market crash - over 9,000 American banks either went bankrupt or
closed their doors between 1930 1933 - people depositing money lost over 2.5 billion
- 1/3 decrease in money supply / currency
- Role of the Federal Reserve if they acted more
responsibly, a severe depression might have been
avoided - GNP plummets from 104 billion in 1929 to 76.4
billion in 1932 (25 decline in three years) - Gross farm income dropped from 12 billion to 5
billion in four years (60 decline) - 1932 25 of the workforce unemployed, another
third of the workforce experienced cuts in wages
or hours or both
10II. The American People in Hard Times
- Unemployment and Relief
- Midwest and Northeast rocked with unemployment
- 1932 Cleveland, Ohio 50
- 1932 Akron, Ohio 60
- 1932 Toledo, Ohio 80
- Most Americans had been trained to believe that
every individual was responsible for his or her
own fate - many males took their poverty and joblessness as
signs of personal failure - men wandered the streets, day after day, looking
for jobs that did not exist
11Unemployment and Relief Continued
Fake Smile
- Limited govt and private assistance most govt
officials felt that any welfare system would
undermine the moral fiber of the country - Strange city scenery
- people waiting in long lines at the Salvation
Army for food hand outs - men sifting through garbage cans looking for food
- young men becoming nomads, wandering the
countryside on freight trains (HoBos
(Ho)meless and jo(B)less - Farm income down 60 between 1929 1932
- 1/3 of all farmers lost their lands
- one of the worst droughts in history
- Dust Bowl stretching from Texas to the Dakotas
- locusts
- black blizzards
12African Americans and the Depression
- 1930 Atlanta Black Shirts organization adopts the
slogan No Jobs for Niggers Until Every White Man
Has a Job! - as bad as whites had it, blacks had it worse
- whites began to take jobs previously held by
blacks janitors, street cleaners, domestic
servants - during the 1930s 400,000 blacks would leave the
South and journey to cities in the North - Traditional patters of Segregation and
disfranchisement survived the Depression largely
unchallenged - NAACP began to work diligently to win a position
for blacks within the emerging labor movement - Walter White encourages blacks not to work as
strikebreakers - Due to such efforts, over a half a million blacks
would be able to join the labor movement - 20 of the membership in the Steelworkers Union
13Scottsboro Boys
- No crime in American history-- let alone a crime
that never occurred-- produced as many trials,
convictions, reversals, and retrials as did an
alleged gang rape of two white girls by nine
black teenagers on a Southern Railroad freight
run on March 25, 1931. Over the course of the
two decades that followed, the struggle for
justice of the "Scottsboro Boys," as the black
teens were called, made celebrities out of
anonymities, launched and ended careers, wasted
lives, produced heroes, opened southern juries to
blacks, exacerbated sectional strife, and divided
America's political left. - By Douglas O. Linder (1999)
14Mexican Americans in Depression America
- 1930s there were approximately 2 million Latinos
in the United States (US Population in 1920
105 million, 1930 123 million, 1940 132
million) - Some wandered as agricultural migrants, most
lived in urban areas - similar to blacks in that whites soon demanded
menial jobs previously held by Latinos
unemployment quickly rose to levels higher than
whites - round ups and transports across the border
- ½ million Mexicans left the United States for
Mexico in the first years of the Depression - Limited access to hospitals, education, relief
programs
15Asian Americans in Hard Times
- even in California, where the largest Japanese /
Chinese American populations resided even well
educated Asians had trouble moving into
mainstream professions - 20 of all Nisei in LA worked at fruit stands
- like Blacks and Hispanics often forced out of
jobs to accommodate whites - Influx of whites from the Great Plains meant
general bad news for all minorities in California - Younger Japanese try to organize Japanese
American Democratic Clubs - Japanese encourages assimilation more so than
other minorities Japanese American Citizens
League - Chinese who left the Chinese community rarely
found jobs above the entry level
16Women and the Workplace in the Great Depression
- Depression served to strengthen the widespread
belief that a womans place was in the home with
the little work there was, both women and men
believed it should go to men - From 1932 to 1937 it was illegal for more than
one member of a family to hold a federal civil
service job - many married women found work simply because
their family needed them to - by the end of the Depression 20 more women were
working than had been doing so at the beginning
17Women and the Workplace in the Great Depression
Cont
- ½ of all black working women lost their jobs in
the 1930s - But, at the end of the 1930s 38 of all black
women were employed compared with 24 of all
white women this is because of black women, both
married and unmarried had always been more likely
to work than a white women - For feminists, Depression years were a time of
frustration end of National Womans Party
18Depression Families
- middle class families accustomed to steady growth
during the 1920s saw that replaced with
unemployment and uncertainty - consumer patterns developed during the 1920s
retreated - women often returned to sewing clothes for their
families - preserving food
- engaged in home business
- Average household population grows parents
living with kids, grandparents with grandkids - although divorce rate decreased (because of cost)
the break up of families increased - unemployed men escaping humiliation of being
unable to earn a living - marriage and birth rates declined for the first
time since the early 19th century
19III. The Depression and American Culture
- Depression Values
- American social values seemed to change
relatively little in response to the Depression - People remained committed to the traditional
American emphasis on the individual - The economic crisis did work to undermine the
traditional success ethic in America - many people began to look to the govt for
assistance - many blamed corporate monguls
- BUT in the end, the Depression did very little to
erode the success ethic - Nothing surprised foreign observers of America in
the 1930s as the apparent passivity of the
unemployed many unemployed were too ashamed to
show themselves in public - Dale Carnegies self help book How to Win Friends
and Influence People was one of the best selling
books of the decade.
20Artists and Intellectuals in the Great Depression
- focus of a collective social response to social
circumstances - Photographers hired by Federal Farm Security
Administration to take documentary photos - captured harsh conditions of farm families
- revealed savage impact of hostile environment
- Writers and playwrights attempted to capture
social injustice taking place - Erskine Caldwewll Tobacco Road, later became a
long running Broadway play - Richard Wright, African-American novelist
captured plight of urban ghetto Native Son - John Dos Passoss U.S.A. opening attacked modern
capitalism - John Steinbeck The Grapes of Wrath, Of Mice and
Men, Cannery Row, East of Eden
John Stienbeck
21Radio
- Most popular forms of mass entertainment were
those that served as a distraction to the harsh
reality taking place - Radios now a part of most homes, rural and urban
- Major social event
- Adventure stories Superman, Dick Tracy and The
Lone Ranger - Amos n Andy demeaning picture of urban blacks
- New type of comedy elaborately timed jokes
(George Burns, Jack Benny and Gracie Allen) - Soap Operas (sponsored by soap) complicated
stories about romance, intrigue and betrayal,
usually without overt social or political messages
22Radio Continued
- Radio programs broadcast live before audiences
in theatres and studios - Band concerts broadcast from dance halls, helped
jazz and swing bands achieve popularity - Some of the most dramatic moments of the 1930s
were a result of radio coverage of celebrated
events - the World Series
- major college football games
- the Academy Awards
- political conventions
- Hindenburg
- Orson Welles The War of the Worlds
- Encouraged families and individuals to center
their lives around the more around the home than
they had in the past
23The Movies
- one would think individuals would forgo spending
money on movie tickets in the middle of a
Depression, but by the mid 1930s Americans were
still watching movies in large numbers - Movies getting better sound and color
- Will Hays continued to ensure that movies carried
no sensational or controversial images - Louis B. Mayer (MGM) vs. Jack Warner (Warner
Brothers) escapist vs. reality - Director Frank Capra created feel good movies
with muted political and social messages - The advent of Walt Disney
- Women and minorities portrayed in stereotypical
roles
24The Popular Front and Left
- Popular Front coalition of antifascist groups
the most important of which was The American
Communist Party - claimed that the government was controlled by
business interests - Soviet Union instructs the ACP to soften up its
criticisms of US government (preparing for
potential war with Germany) - Communism is twentieth-century Americanism
- helped mobilize writers, artists and
intellectuals behind a pattern of social
criticism (great majority of writers had no
connection to Communist party) - The Lincoln Brigade, consisting of 3,000
volunteer soldiers goes to Spain to fight against
Franco (Ernest Hemmingway, For Whom the Bell
Tolls) - Social Issues
- successful in organizing the unemployed
- alone among political organizations in taking a
firm stance on racial justice - helped organize black sharecroppers in the South
25The Popular Front and Left
- ACP was not the open, patriotic organization it
tried to appear as took its orders from
Comintern in Russia - Socialist Party of America cited the economic
crisis as a failure of capitalism but by 1936
membership had fallen below 20,000 - Antiradicalism still a powerful force
Congressional committees headed by Hamilton Fish
and Martin Dies imprisoned communist organizers - BUT never in history did being part of the left
seem so respectable and even conventional among
workers, intellectuals and others - New Deal would embrace policies that would
challenge capitalist norms - Works Projects Administration
- Pare Lorentz and film documentaries that
celebrated New Deal programs and offered a harsh
critique of capitalist exploitation
26IV. The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover
- The Hoover Program
- When crisis first hit, Hoovers response was to
attempt to restore confidence in the economy - summoned leaders of business, labor and
agriculture to the White House and urged upon
them a program of voluntary cooperation for
recovery - But mid 1931 economic conditions had deteriorated
so much that the structure of voluntary
cooperation had collapsed and Hoover could not
stop them - industrialists began cutting production
- laying off workers
- slashing wages
Hoovervilles
27The Hoover Program Continued
- Hoover made weak attempts to use government
spending as a tool for fighting the Depression - proposed to Congress an increase in 423 million
in federal works programs (then a large sum of
money) - but not willing to spend enough over a long
enough period of time to do any good - not willing to tolerate deficits in the budget
- In 1932 at the depth of the Depression he
proposed a tax increase to help the government
avoid a deficit (!) - Before the crash, Hoover had begun to construct a
program to assist the troubled agricultural
economy. - 1929 Agricultural Marketing Act first time a
govt bureaucracy would be established to help
farmers maintain prices - Hawley-Smoot Tariff of 1930 contained protective
increases on 75 farm products and raised tariff
rates to the highest point in American history
(1,000 members of the American Economics
Association warn Hoover this is a bad idea but
he signs it anyway) - Neither helped farmers sufficiently
- Marketing Act relied on voluntary co-operation
and did nothing to limit production - Hawley-Smoot Tariff provoked foreign governments
to enact trade restrictions of their own in
reprisal which further diminished the market for
American agricultural goods (Retaliatory tariffs)
28A Deepening Crisis
- 1930 Democrats win control of the House
- Many Americans feel the President is personally
responsible for crisis - Shantytowns Hoovervilles (mocking president,
Hoover blankets, Hoover Flags, Hoover Hotels,
etc.) - Progressive reformers urged Hoover to pass more
policies dedicated to social reform, but instead
he used economic statistics that showed a slight
gain in 1931 as evidence that his policies were
working - May 1931 largest bank in Austria collapses and
panic spreads throughout Europe and into the US
when - European countries pull out their gold reserves
from US banks - European investors pull their US investments in
the market to pay off their loans - US economy reaches new lows
- Hoover comes up with a sound proposal to allow
countries having to pay reparations one year
moratorium on payments French and England
grudgingly agreed to accept it but it came too
late
29A Deepening Crisis Continued
- January 1932 Reconstruction Finance Corporation
(RFC) - government agency whose purpose was to provide
federal loans to troubled banks, railroads, and
other businesses - made funds available to local governments to
support public works projects and assist in
relief efforts - RFC was only permitted to lend funds to financial
institutions with sufficient collateral much of
its money went corporations or large banks - critics called it a breadline for big business
- RFC remained healthy by refusing to make loans to
the institutions that most desperately needed
them - of the 300 million available to support local
relief efforts, the RFC lent out only 30 million
in 1932 - of the 1.5 billion public works budget, it
released only 20
30Popular Protest
- During the early years of the Depression, most
Americans were too stunned or too confused to
raise many effective protests but by mid 1932,
radical and dissident voices were becoming loud
and pervasive - Farmers unrest
- call for a plan to help guarntee a return on
crops (similar to McNary-Haugen Bill) - Farmers Holiday Association call for a general
strike by farmers - ended in failure
- caused ripple effect all the way to Washington
election year
31Popular Protest Continued
- Most celebrated protest came from American
Veterans - 1924 Congress had approved the payment of 1,000
bonus to all those who had served in World War I
and that the money would be distributed by 1945 - by 1932 vets were demanding that the money be
paid immediately - Hoover refused to comply
- In June 2,000 vets formed the Bonus
Expeditionary Force marched to Washington, built
crude camps around the city and promised to stay
until Congress approved legislation to pay the
bonus - In July Hoover ordered police to clear the
marchers out of the abandoned buildings in which
they had been staying - Clearing the Bonus Marchers
- few marchers throw rocks a police, someone opened
fire, two veterans fell dead - Hoover considered the incident evidence of
radicalism and ordered the U.S. Army to assist
the police in clearing out the buildings - General Douglas MacArthur, George Patton and
Dwight D. Eisenhower use tear gas and bayonets to
clear out protesters - Chase them to their tent village and burned the
village down - More than 100 marchers were injured and a baby
died - Hoover now confirmed as aloof and out of touch
with American public great engineer who was the
symbol of success in the 1920s came to represent
the failure of the national govts ability to
deal effectively with its startling reversal of
fortune.
32The Election of 1932
- Republicans dutifully re-nominate Hoover to head
of Republican Party - Democrats nominate the governor of New York,
Franklin Delano Roosevelt - on Democrat ticket as VP in 1920 (lost)
- stricken with polio less than a year after would
never walk again without the use of crutches - returned to politics, became governor of New York
- Winning the election
- Roosevelt was able to avoid issues that had
divided Democrats in years past prohibition,
race, religion - Emphasized economic grievances that most
Democrats shared - In a dramatic break from tradition he flew to
Chicago to accept his partys nomination - I pledge you, I pledge myself, to a new deal for
the American people - Differences in candidates
- Hoover stoic / Roosevelt flashy cigarette
holder, hat, smile, excellent speaking skills - Depression Hoover blamed it on Europe /
Roosevelt called it a domestic problem blamed it
on Republicans - Roosevelt wins in a Landslide receives 57 of
the popular vote and won every state but five (in
the electoral college FDR 472, Hoover 59) - Democrats also take control of both houses of
Congress
33The Interregnum
- In February, just a month before the
inauguration a new crisis developed when the
American banking system began to collapse - depositors were withdrawing money
- one bank after another was closing its doors
- Harding continued to try to extract a promise
from Hoover to maintain current budget system
Roosevelt continually refused (this was prior to
the Twentieth Amendment) - March 4, 1993 the Day Roosevelt took office
Hoover was convinced the country was heading to
ruin, Roosevelt was beaming and buoyant
Roosevelt