Title: The Politics of Boom and Bust, 1920
1Chapter 32
- The Politics of Boom and Bust, 19201932
2I. The Republican Old Guard Returns
- Warren G. Harding, inaugurated in 1921, looked
presidential - Found himself beyond his depth in the presidency
- He was unable to detect moral halitosis in his
evil associates - He could not say no and designing politicians
leeched on to this weakness - Washington could not tell a lie, Harding could
not tell a liar - He promised to gather around him the best minds
of the party
3I. The Republican Old Guard Returns (cont.)
- Hardings best minds
- Charles Evans Hughes
- Masterful, imperious, incisive, brilliant
- Brought to the position of secretary of state a
dominating conservative leadership - Andrew W. Mellon
- New secretary of the Treasury
- Herbert Hoover
- Famed feeder of the Belgians and wartime food
administrator - Became secretary of commerce
4I. The Republican Old Guard Returns (cont.)
- Raised his second-rate cabinet to first-rate
importance - Especially in drumming up foreign trade for US.
manufactures. - Hardings worst minds
- Senator Albert B. Fall
- A scheming anticonservationist
- Appointed secretary of the interior
- As guardian of the nations natural resources, he
resembled the wolf hired to protect the sheep
5I. The Republican Old GuardReturns (cont.)
- Harry M. Daugherty
- A big-time crook in the Ohio Gang
- Was supposed to prosecute wrongdoers as attorney
general.
6II. GOP Reaction at the Throttle
- Harding was a perfect front for enterprising
industrialists - New Old Guards
- Hoped to crush the reforms of the progressive era
- Hoped to improve on the old business doctrine of
laissez-faire - They simply wanted the government to keep its
hands off business, - But for the government to guide business along
the path to profits - They achieved their purpose by putting the courts
and administrative bureaus in safekeeping of
fellow stand-patters
7II. GOP Reaction at the Throttle(cont.)
- Harding lived less than three years as president
- But appointed four of the nine justices
- His fortunate choice for chief justice was
ex-president Taft, who performed his duties ably
but was more liberal than some of his cautious
associates - The Supreme Court axed progressive legislation
- It killed a federal child-labor law
- Stripped away many of labors hard-won gains
- Rigidly restricted government intervention in the
economy
8II. GOP Reaction at the Throttle(cont.)
- Landmark case Adkins v. Childrens Hospital
(1923) - It reversed its own reasoning in Muller v. Oregon
(see p. 645) - Which declared women to be deserving of special
protection in the workplace - And invalidated a minimum-wage law for women
- Reasoning because women now had the vote (19th
Amendment), they were the legal equal of men and
could no longer be protected by special
legislation. - These two cases framed a debate over gender
differences - Were women sufficiently different from men that
they merited special legal and social treatment? - Or were they effectively equal in the eyes of the
law and undeserving of special protections and
preferences?
9II. GOP Reaction at the Throttle(cont.)
- Corporations could once more relax and expand
- Antitrust laws were often ignored, circumvented,
or feebly enforced by friendly prosecutors - The Interstate Commerce Commission came to be
dominated by men who were personally sympathetic
to the managers of the railroads - Big industrialists strived to reduce the rigors
of competition - Associations that ran counter to the spirit of
existing antitrust legislation, their formation
was encouraged by Hoover
10II. GOP Reaction at the Throttle(cont.)
- Hoovers efficiency
- Led him to condemn the waste resulting from
cutthroat competition - His commitment to voluntary cooperation led him
to urge businesses to regulate themselves rather
than be regulated by big government.
11p729
12III. The Aftermath of War
- Wartime government controls on the economy were
swiftly dismantled - The War Industries Board disappeared
- With its passing, progressive hopes for more
government regulation of big business evaporated - Returned railroads to private management in 1920
- Some hope for permanent nationalization
- Congress passed the Esch-Cummins Transportation
Act - Encouraged private consolidation of the railroads
13III. The Aftermath of War(cont.)
- Pledged the Interstate Commerce Commission to
guarantee their profitability - New philosophy was to save the railroads from the
country. - Government tried to get out of the shipping
business - The Merchant Marine Act (1920) authorized the
Shipping Board to dispose of much of the hastily
built wartime fleet - The Board operated the remaining vessels without
conspicuous success - Under the La Follette Act (1915) , American
shipping could not thrive in competition with
foreigners.
14III. The Aftermath of War(cont.)
- Labor limped along badly in the postwar decade,
lack of government support - Bloody strike in the steel industry in 1919
- The Railway Labor Board ordered a wage cut of 12
in 1922 - General Daugherty claimed on the strikers an
injunction - Needy veterans reaped lasting gains from the war
- Congress (1912) created the Veterans Bureau to
operate hospitals and provide vocational rehab.
15III. The Aftermath of War(cont.)
- Veterans organized into pressure groups
- The American Legion was distinguished for its
militant patriotism, rock-ribbed conservatism,
and zealous antiradicalism. - Aggressive for veterans benefit
- Critics denounced a holdup bonus for the
millions of veterans - Won in 1924 the passage of the Adjusted
Compensation Act - Gave former soldiers a paid-up insurance policy
due in 20 years - Adding 3.5 billion to the cost of the war
16IV. America Seeks Benefits Without Burdens
- Making peace with the fallen foe
- The United States, having rejected the Treaty of
Versailles, was technically at war with Germany,
Austria, and Hungary - In July Congress passed a simple joint resolution
that declared the war officially over - Isolation was enthroned in Washington
- Continued to regard the League as an unclean
thing - Harding at first even refused to support the
Leagues world health program
17IV. America Seeks Benefits Without Burdens (cont.)
- Secretary Hughes secured for American oil
companies the right to share in oil exploitations - Disarmament was an issue for Harding
- Had businessmen to finance the ambitious naval
building program during the war - Washington Disarmament Conference 1921-1922
- Invitations went out to all but Bolshevik Russia
- The double agenda included naval disarmament
- The situation in the Far East
- Hughes declared a ten-year holiday on the
construction of battleships - He proposed scaled-down navies of America and
Britain ratio 553. The third was for Japan.
18IV. America Seeks Benefits Without Burdens (cont.)
- A Four-Power Treaty the pact bound Britain,
Japan, France and the United States to preserve
the status quo in the Pacific. - Gave Chinathe Sick Man of the Far Eastthe
Nine-Power Treaty (1922), whose signatories
agreed to nail wide-open the Open Door in China - No restrictions
- Placed on small warships
- Congress made no commitment to the use of armed
force. - Kellogg-Briand Pact
- Secretary of state Frank B. Kellogg won the Nobel
Peace Prize for his role Kellogg signed the Pact
with the French foreign minister.
19IV. America Seeks Benefits Without Burdens (cont.)
- The new parchment peace was delusory
- Defensive wars were still permitted
- The pact was a diplomatic derelict and virtually
useless - It reflected the American mind (1920s)
- Willing to be lulled into a false sense of
security - This same attitude showed up in the neutralism of
the 1930s.
20p731
21Figure 32-1 p731
22V. Hiking the Tariff Higher
- Businesspeople sought to keep the market to
themselves by throwing up tariff walls - Fordney-McCumber Tariff Law
- Lobbyists wanted to bust the average from 27 to
38.5, almost as high as Tafts Payne Aldrich
Tariff of 1909 (see Appendix.) - Duties on farm produce were increased
- Flexibility the president could increase or
decrease duties as much as 50 - Harding was more friendly to increases than
reductions.
23V. Hiking the Tariff Higher(cont.)
- In six years they authorized 32 upward charges
- During this same time, the White House ordered
only 5 reductions - The high-tariff course set off a chain reaction
- European producers felt the squeeze
- Impoverished Europe needed to sell its
manufactured goods to the United States - America needed to give foreign countries a chance
to make a profit - International trade, Americans were slow to
learn, is a two-way street. -
24V. Hiking the Tariff Higher(cont.)
- They could not sell to others in quantity unless
they bought from them in quantityor lent them
more U.S. dollars - Erecting tariff walls was a game that two could
play - The whole European-American tariff situation
further deepened the international economic
distress, providing one more rung on the ladder
by which Adolf Hitler scrambled to power.
25VI. The Stench of Scandal
- Loose morality and get-rich-quickism of the
Harding era resulted in a series of scandals - Scandals
- 1923 Colonel Charles R. Forbes, caught with hand
in the till, was forced to resign as head of the
Veterans Bureau - Looted the government of 200 million, chiefly in
the building of veterans hospitals - He was sentenced to two years in a federal
penitentiary - Teapot Dome scandal
- Involved priceless naval oil reserves at Teapot
Dome (Wyoming) and Elk Hills (California)
26VI. The Stench of Scandal(cont.)
- Secretary of the interior Albert B. Fall induced
his careless colleague, the secretary of the
navy, to transfer these valuable properties to
the Interior Department - Harding indiscreetly signed the secret order
- Fall quietly leased the lands to oilmen Harry F.
Sinclair and Edward L. Doheny, - But not until he received a bribe (loan) of
100,000 from Doheny and about three times that
amount in all from Sinclair - Teapot Dome finally came to a whistling boil
- Fall, Sinclair, and Doheny were indicated 1924
- Case dragged on until 1929
- Fall was found guilty of taking a bribe,
sentenced to one year in jail
27V. The Stench of Scandal(cont.)
- The two bribe givers were acquitted while the
bribe taker was convicted - Sinclair served several months in jail for having
shadowed jurors and for refusing to testify
before a Senate committee. - The acquittal of Sinclair and Doheny undermined
faith in the courts. - Scandal of Attorney General Daugherty
- A Senate investigation (1924) of illegal sale of
pardons and liquor permits - Forced to resign, tried in 1927, but released
after the jury twice failed to agree.
28V. The Stench of Scandal(cont.)
- Harding was spared the full revelation of these
iniquities - He embarked on a speechmaking tour across the
country all the way to Alaska - On return he died in San Francisco on August 2,
1923 - The brutal fact is that Harding was not a strong
enough man for the presidencyas he himself
privately admitted. - Such was his weakness that he tolerated people
and conditions that subjected the Republic to its
worst disgrace since the days of President Grant.
29p733
30VII. Silent Cal Coolidge
- Vice President Coolidge was sworn into office by
his father - He embodied the New England virtues of honesty,
morality, industry, and frugality - He seemed to be a crystallization of the
commonplace - Had only mediocre powers of leadership
- His speeches were invariably boring
- True to Republican philosophy, he became the
high priest of the great god Business
31VII. Silent Cal Coolidge(cont.)
- His philosophy was a hands-off temperament
- His thrifty nature caused him to sympathize with
Secretary of the Treasury Mellons effort to
reduce taxes and debts - Coolidge slowly gave the Harding regime a badly
needed moral fumigation - Coolidge was not touched by the scandals.
32p734
33VIII. Frustrated Farmers
- Farmers in a boom-or-bust cycle in the post-war
decade - Peace brought
- End to government guaranteed high prices and
massive purchases by other nations - Foreign production reentered the stream of world
commerce - Machines
- Threatened to plow the farmers under over their
own overabundant crops
34VIII. Frustrated Farmers(cont.)
- The gasoline-engine tractor was working a
revolution on American farms - They could grow bigger crops on larger areas
- Improved efficiency and expanded agricultural
acreage helped to pile up more price-dampening
surpluses - A withering depression swept through agricultural
districts in the 1920s, when one farm in four was
sold for debt or taxes. - Schemes abounded for bringing relief to the
hard-pressed farmers - A bi-partisan farm bloc from the agricultural
states coalesced in Congress in 1921 and
succeeded in getting some helpful laws passed.
35VIII. Frustrated Farmers(cont.)
- The Capper-Volstead Act
- Exempted farmers marketing cooperatives from
antitrust prosecution - The McNary-Haugen Bill (1924-1928)
- Sought to keep agricultural prices high by
authorizing the government to buy up surpluses
and see them abroad - Government losses were to be made up by a special
tax on the farmers - Congress twice passed the bill,
- But frugal Coolidge twice vetoed it
- Farm prices stayed down, and farmers political
temper-atures stayed high, reaching a fever pitch
in the election of 1924.
36p735
37IX. A Three-Way Race for the White House in 1924
- Election of 1924
- Nominated Silent Cal at their convention in
Cleveland in the summer of 1924 - Democrats had more difficulty choosing a
candidate in their convention in New York - The party was split between wets and drys
- Urbanites and farmers
- Fundamentalists and Modernists
- Northern liberals and southern stand-patters,
immigrants and old-stock Americans.
38IX. A Three-Way Race for the White House in 1924
(cont.)
- The Democrats failed by one vote to pass a
resolution condemning the Ku Klux Klan - Deadlocked for an unprecedented 102 ballots, the
convention turned to John W. Davis - Now wide-open for a liberal candidate
- Senator Robert (Fighting Bob) La Follette
sprang forth to lead a new Progressive party - He gained the endorsement of the American
Federation of Labor - He enjoyed the support of the shrinking Socialist
party, - But his majority constituency were the
price-pinched farmers
39IX. A Three-Way Race for the White House in 1924
(cont.)
- La Follettes new Progressive party
- Fielding only a presidential ticket, with no
candidates for local office - Proved only a shadow of the robust Progressive
coalition of prewar days - Its platform called for government ownership of
railroads and relief for farmers - It lashed out at monopoly and antilabor
injunctions - Urged a constitutional amendment to limit the
Supreme Courts power to invalidate laws passed
by Congress.
40IX. A Three-Way Race for the White House in 1924
(cont.)
- Election returns
- La Follette polled nearly 5 million votes
- Cautious Cal and the oil-smeared Republicans
over-whelmed Davis, 15,718,211 to 8,385,283 - The electoral count stood at 382 for Coolidge,
136 for Davis, and 13 for La Follette, all from
his home state of Wisconsin (see Map 32.1)
41Map 32-1 p736
42X. Foreign-Policy Flounderings
- Isolation continued to reign in the Coolidge era
- The Senate would not allow America to adhere to
the World Court - Coolidge only halfheartedly and unsuccessfully
pursued further naval disarmament - American outward looking
- The armed interventionism in the Caribbean and
Central America - American troops were withdrawn (after an
eight-year stay) from the Dominican Republic in
1924 - They remained in Haiti (1914-1934).
43X. Foreign-Policy Flounderings(cont.)
- America was in Nicaragua intermittently since
1909 Coolidge briefly removed them in 1925 in
1926 he sent them back where they stayed until
1933 - American oil companies clamored for a military
expedition to Mexico in 1926 - Overshadowing all other foreign-policy problems
in 1920s was the issue of international debts - Complicated tangle of private loans Allied war
debts and German reparations payments (see Figure
32.2) - In 1914 America had been a debtor nation to the
sum of 4 billion - By 1922, it had become a creditor nation to the
sum of 16 billion.
44X. Foreign-Policy Flounderings(cont.)
- American investors loaned some 10 billion to
foreigners in the 1920s - The key knot in the debt tangle was the 10
billion that the U.S. Treasury had loaned to the
Allies - Uncle Sam held their IOUsand he wanted to be
paid - The Allies protested that the demand for
repayment was grossly unfair - The French and the British pointed out, with much
justice, that they had held up a wall of flesh
and bone against the common foe, until the
Americans were ready to enter - America, they argued, they should write off its
loans as war costs
45X. Foreign-Policy Flounderings(cont.)
- The real effect of their borrowed dollars had
been to fuel the boom in the already roaring
wartime economy in America, where nearly all the
purchases had been made - Final straw, protested the Europeans, was that
Americas postwar tariff walls made it almost
impossible for them to sell their goods to earn
the dollars to pay their debts.
46Figure 32-2 p737
47XI. Unraveling the Debt Knot
- Germanys war debts
- America insisted on getting its money back
- The French and British demanded 32 billion in
reparations payments - The Allies hoped to settle their debt with the
United States - Debt cancellations
- Some statesmen wanted the debts to be scaled down
or even canceled - Calvin Coolidge turned aside any suggestions of
debt cancellation.
48XI. Unraveling the Debt Knot(cont.)
- The Dawes Plan (1924)
- Was largely negotiated by Charles Dawes, about to
be Coolidges running mate - It rescheduled German reparations payments
- And opened the way for further American private
loans to Germany - The whole financial cycle now became still more
complicated - As U.S. bankers loaned money to Germany,
- Germany paid reparations to France and Britain,
- And the former Allies paid war debts to the
United States.
49XI. Unraveling the Debt Knot(cont.)
- When that well dried up after the great crash of
1929, the jungle of international finance quickly
turned into a desert - President Herbert Hoover declared a one-year
moratorium in 1931 - except honest little Finland, which struggled
along making payments until the last of its debt
was discharged in 1976 - The United States never did get its money, but it
harvested a bumper crop of ill will.
50p738
51XII. The Triumph of Herbert Hoover, 1928
- 1928 presidential race
- Coolidge decided not to run again
- Herbert Hoover became the candidate
- Nominated on a platform of both prosperity and
prohibition - Democrats nominated Alfred C. Smith
- Al(cohol) Smith, soakingly and drippingly wet
when the country was devoted to the noble
experiment of prohibition - He seemed to be abrasively urban
- He was Roman Catholic
52XII. The Triumph of Herbert Hoover (cont.)
- Radio played prominently in this campaign for the
first time - It helped Hoover more than Smith
- Hoover decried un-American socialism
- And preached rugged individualism
- Never having been elected to public office , he
was thin-skinned in the face of criticism - He did not adapt readily to necessary
give-and-take of political accommodation - His real power lay in his integrity
- His humanitarianism
- His passion for assembling the facts
-
53XII. The Triumph of Herbert Hoover (cont.)
- His efficiency
- His talent for administration
- His ability to inspire loyalty in close
associates - They called him the Chief.
- He was the best businesspersons candidate
- Self-made millionaire, he recoiled from anything
suggesting socialism, paternalism, or planned
economy, - Yet as secretary of commerce, he had exhibited
some progressive instincts - He endorsed labor unions
- He supported federal regulation of the new radio
broadcasting industry - He flirted with the idea of government-owned
radio.
54XII. The Triumph of Herbert Hoover (cont.)
- Indications of low-level campaigners
- Religious bigotry against Smiths Catholicism
- The White House would become a branch of the
Vaticancomplete with Rum, Romanism, and Ruin - The South shied away from city slicker Al Smith
- Election returns
- Hoover triumphed in a landslide
- He bagged 21,391,993 popular votes, to 15,016,169
for Smith - Hoover electoral count of 444 to Smiths 87.
- Big Republican victory Hoover swept five former
Confederacy states and all Border States(see Map
32.2).
55p739
56Map 32-2 p739
57XIII. President Hoovers First Moves
- Hoovers administrations responses to the
unorganized wage earners and the disorganized
farmers - The Agricultural Marketing Act (June 1929)
- Designed to help the farmers help themselves,
largely through producers cooperatives - It set up the Federal Farm Bureau with a
revolving fund of ½ billion dollars at its
disposal - Money was lent generously to farm organizations
seeking to buy, sell, and store agricultural
surpluses.
58XIII. President Hoovers First Moves (cont.)
- In 1930 the Farm Board created
- The Grain Stabilization Corporation and the
Cotton Stabilization Corporation - Primary goal to bolster sagging prices by buying
up surpluses - They were suffocated by an avalanche of farm
produce - Hoover during the campaign promised to call
Congress into session to bring about limited
change in the tariff.
59XIII. President Hoovers First Moves (cont.)
- The Hawley-Smoot Tariff (1930)
- By the time it was through both houses of
Congress - Turned out to be the highest protective tariff in
the nations peacetime history - The average duty on nonfree goods was raised from
38.5 to nearly 60 - To angered foreigners, it was a blow below the
trade belt - It seemed like a declaration of economic warfare
on the entire outside world - It reversed a promising worldwide trend toward
reasonable tariffs
60XIII. President Hoovers First Moves (cont.)
- It plunged both America and other nations deeper
into the terrible depression that had already
begun - It increased international financial chaos and
forced the United States further into the bog of
economic isolationism - And economic isolationism, both at home and
abroad, was playing directly into the hands of a
hate-filled German demagogue, Adolf Hitler.
61XIV. The Great Crash Ends the Golden Twenties
- The speculative bubble
- Few people sensed that the permanent plateau of
prosperity would soon break - Prices on the stock exchange continued to spiral
upward - And created a fools paradise of paper profits
- There were a few prophets who tried to sound
warnings - The catastrophic crash came in October 1929
- Partially caused by the British who raised
interest rates
62XIV. The Great Crash Ends the Golden Twenties
(cont.)
- Foreign investors and wary domestic speculators
began to dump their insecurities - Tensions built up to the panicky Black Tuesday of
October 29, 1929 - 16,410,030 shares of stocks were sold in a
save-who-may scramble - Wall Street became a wailing wall as gloom and
doom replaced boom - Suicides increased alarmingly
- Losses in blue chips securities were unbelievable
- By the end of 1929 stockholders lost 40 billion
in paper values (see Figure 32.3).
63XIV. The Great Crash Ends the Golden Twenties
(cont.)
- The stock-market collapse heralded a business
depression - At home and abroad
- The most prolonged and prostrating in American or
world experience - No other industrialized nation suffered so
severely - End of 1929 4 million workers were jobless
- Two years later the figure had about doubled
- Hungry and despairing workers pounded the
pavements in search of work - The misery and gloom was incalculable
- Over 5000 banks collapsed in the first three
years - Carrying down with them the savings of tens of
thousands of ordinary citizens.
64XIV. The Great Crash Ends the Golden Twenties
(cont.)
- Countless thousands lost their home and farms to
foreclosure - Breadlines formed, soup kitchens dispensed food
- Families felt the stress, as jobless fathers
nursed their guilt and shame at not being able to
provide for their families - Breadless breadwinners blamed themselves for
their plight - Mothers nursed fewer babies.
65p741
66Figure 32-3 p741
67p742
68XV. Hooked on the Horn of Plenty
- What caused the Great Depression?
- Overproduction
- Both farm and factory
- The depression of the 1930s was one of abundance,
not want - It was the great glut or the plague of plenty
- The nations ability to produce goods had clearly
outrun its capacity to consume or pay for them - Too much money was going into the hands of the
wealthy - Who in turn invested it in factories and other
agencies of production. - Nothing going into salaries and wages
revitalizing purchasing power.
69XV. Hooked on the Horn of Plenty(cont.)
- Overexpansion
- Of credit through installment-plan buying
overstimulated production - Normal technological unemployment
- Economic anemia abroad
- Britain and the Continent had never fully
recovered - A chain-reaction financial collapse in Europe
- A drying up of international trade
- European uncertainties over reparations, war
debts, and defaults on loans owed to America. - Many of these conditions had been caused by Uncle
Sams own narrow-visioned policies.
70XV. Hooked on the Horn of Plenty(cont.)
- Nature a terrible drought scorched the
Mississippi valley in 1930 - Thousands of homes and farms were sold at auction
for taxes - Farm tenancy or rentala species of peonagewas
spreading among both whites and blacks - By the 1930s the depression had become a national
calamity - A host of citizens had lost everything
- They wanted to workbut there was no work.
71XV. Hooked on the Horn of Plenty(cont.)
- Americas uniqueness no longer seemed so
unique, nor its Manifest Destiny so manifest - The depression was a baffling wraith that
Americans could not grasp - Initiative and self-respect were stifled
- Many slept in tin-and-paper shantytowns cynically
named Hoovervilles - The very foundations of Americas social and
political structure trembled.
72p743
73XVI. Rugged Times for Rugged Individualists
- Hoovers exalted reputation as a wonder-worker
and efficiency engineer crashed - He would have shined in the prosperity-drenched
Coolidge years - Now the Great Depression proved to be a task
beyond his engineering talents - He was distressed by the widespread misery
- As a rugged individualist he shrank from the
heresy of government handouts.
74XVI. Rugged Times for Rugged Individualists
(cont.)
- He was convinced that industry, thrift, and
self-reliance were the virtues that made America
great - He feared that a government doling out doles
would weaken, perhaps destroy, the national fiber - Relief by local government agencies broke down
- Hoover finally had to reluctantly turn from his
doctrine of log-cabin individualism - And accept the proposition that the welfare of
the people in a national catastrophe is a direct
concern of the national government.
75XVI. Rugged Times for Rugged Individualists
(cont.)
- He worked out a compromise between
- The old hand-off philosophy
- And the soul-destroying direct dole then being
used in England. - He would assist the hard-pressed railroads,
banks, and rural credit corporation - That if financial health were restored at the top
of the economic pyramid - Unemployment would be relieved at the bottom on a
trickle-down basis. - Partisan critics sneered at the Great
Humanitarian
76XVI. Rugged Times for Rugged Individualism (cont.)
- Most of the criticism of Hoover was unfair
- His efforts probably prevented a more serious
collapse - His expenditures for relief, revolutionary for
the day, paved the path for the enormous federal
outlays of his New Deal successor, Franklin
Roosevelt.
77p744
78XVII. Hoover Battles the Great Depression
- Hoovers trickle-down philosophy
- He recommended that Congress vote immense sums
for useful public works - He secured from Congress appropriations totaling
2.25 billion for such projects - Most imposing of the public enterprises was the
gigantic Hoover Dam on the Colorado River - It was a huge man-made lake for the purposes of
irrigation, flood control, and electric power - He sternly fought all schemes that he thought
were socialistic.
79XVII. Hoover Battles the Great Depression (cont.)
- Conspicuous was the Muscle Shoals Bill
- Designed to dam the Tennessee River
- He vetoed this measure primarily because he
opposed the governments selling electricity in
competition with its own citizens in private
companies. - In 1932 Congress responded to Hoovers appeal
- Established the Reconstruction Finance
Corporation (RFC) - It was designed to provide indirect relief
- By assisting insurance companies, banks,
agricultural organ-izations, railroads, and even
hard-pressed state and local governments
80XVI. Hoover Battles the Great Depression (cont.)
- But to preserve individualism and character,
- There would be no loans to individuals.
- The pump-priming loans were no doubt of
widespread benefit - Projects that it supported were largely
self-liquidating - The government profited to the tune of many
millions of dollars - Giant corporations benefited
- The irony is that the thrifty and individualistic
Hoover actually sponsored the project - It actually had a strong New Dealish flavor.
81XVI. Hoover Battles the Great Depression (cont.)
- Norris-La Guardia Anti-Injunction Act (1932)
- It outlawed yellow-dog (antiunion) contracts
- And forbade the federal courts to issue
injunctions to restrain strikes, boycotts, and
peaceful picketing. - Hoover did inaugurate a significant new policy
- By the end of his term he had started down the
road toward government assistance for the needy
citizensa road that Franklin Roosevelt would
travel much farther.
82XVI. Hoover Battles the Great Depression (cont.)
- Hoovers woes
- Increased by a hostile Congress
- The Republican majority proved highly
uncooperative - In 1930 the Democrats controlled the House
- Insurgent Republicans couldand didcombine with
opposition Democrats to harass Hoover - Some of the presidents troubles were
deliber-ately manufactured by Congress.
83p745
84XVIII. Routing the Bonus Army in Washington
- Veterans of World War I were also hard-hit
victims of the depression - Bonus through the Hawley-Smoot Tariff
- What did the government owe them for their
services in 1917-1918? - Many veterans were prepared to go to Washington
- To demand the immediate payment of their entire
bonus - The Bonus Expeditionary Force (BEF), some
20,000, went to the capital summer of 1932 - They erected shacks on vacant lotsa gigantic
Hooverville - After two were killed, Hoover ordered the army to
evacuate the unwanted guests.
85XVIII. Routing the Bonus Army in Washington
(cont.)
- The Bonus Army
- Led by General Douglas MacArthur
- With bayonets and tear gas
- And with far more severity than Hoover had
planned - The brutal episode brought down additional abuse
on the once-popular Hoover. - The time was ripening for the Democratic
Partyand Franklin D. Rooseveltto cash in on
Hoovers calamities.
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87XIX. Japanese Militarists Attack China
- Militaristic Japan stole the Far Eastern
spotlight - In September, 1931 the Japanese imperialists
lunged into Manchuria - America had strong sentimental stake in China,
but few significant economic interests - Americans stunned by this act of naked aggression
- It was a flagrant violation of the League of
Nations covenant - And other international agreements solemnly
signed by Tokyo - Not to mention the American sense of fair play.
88XIX. Japanese Militarists Attack China (cont.)
- Washington rebuffed initial attempts in 1931 to
secure American cooperation in applying eco-
nomic pressure on Japan - Washington and Secretary of State Henry L.
Stimson decided to fire only paper bullets - The so-called Stimson doctrine
- Proclaimed in 1932
- Declared that the United States would not
recognize any territorial acquisitions achieved
by force - Righteous indignationor a preach-and-run
policywould substitute for solid initiatives.
89XIX. Japanese Militarists Attach China (cont.)
- The verbal slap did not deter the march of the
Japanese militarists - They bombed Shanghai in 1932
- With shocking losses to civilians
- There was no real sentiment for armed
intervention among depression-ridden Americans,
who remained strongly isolationists during the
1930s - Collective security died and World War II was
born in 1931 on the Manchuria plains. - The Republic came closer to stepping into waters
of internationalism than American prophets would
dare to predict in the early 1920s.
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91XX. Hoover Pioneers the Good Neighbor Policy
- Hoover and relations with Americas southern
neighbors - Hoover was interested in the often-troubled
nations below the Rio Grande - After the stock market crash of 1929
- Yankee economic imperialism became less popular
- Hoover became an advocate of international
goodwill - Strove to abandon the interventionist twist given
by the Monroe Doctrine of Theodore Roosevelt
92XX. Hoover Pioneers the Good Neighbor Policy
(cont.)
- He negotiated a treaty with Haiti, later
supplanted by an executive agreement, that
provided withdrawal of American platoons by 1934 - In 1933 the last marine leathernecks sailed
away from Nicaragua after an almost continuous
stay of some twenty years - Hoover, the engineer in politics,
- Happily engineered the foundation stone of the
Good Neighbor policy - Upon them rose an imposing edifice in the days of
his successor, Franklin Roosevelt.
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