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The Great Depression: The Perfect Storm

The Great Depression: The Perfect Storm. “About the time we can make the ends meet… somebody moves the ends.” - Herbert Hoover. The Stock Market. The value of stocks on Wall St. continuously rose, and even tripled between 1925 and 1929. This actually indicates something was wrong.

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The Great Depression: The Perfect Storm

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  1. The Great Depression:The Perfect Storm “About the time we can make the ends meet… somebody moves the ends.” - Herbert Hoover

  2. The Stock Market • The value of stocks on Wall St. continuously rose, and even tripled between 1925 and 1929. • This actually indicates something was wrong. • Due to the wild success of the markets, speculation became a popular activity. • This is when you buy stocks low and then sell them when a profit can be turned. • Since the market was so safe many bought on margin: • Investors could borrow money from brokers with only a small down payment on the whole value. • Most stocks were purchased with money investors didn’t actually have.

  3. Problem with the Stock Market • In the 1920s stocks reflected the demand in a company, not the company’s actual value. • By late 1929 the value of stocks had risen much higher than the actual production of companies. • Brokers knew this, and when prices started to fall they all sold and made the problem worse. • When brokers and investors defaulted on their loans, the banks were left with the debts of the crash. • Over $30 Billion lost on Tuesday October 29, 1929. • The worst tragedy was that people who never invested lost their money too when the banks went under.

  4. Irresponsibility of the 20’s • The actions taken by government created a deeper problem. • Most companies overproduced, when the markets crashed they were left with warehouses full of goods nobody would buy. • High tariffs that had protected U.S. business made it impossible to trade with other countries. • Lowering of taxes on wealthy had created a “Pyramid of Wealth” • Nearly all the nation’s money belonged to a small number of people.

  5. The Pyramid of Wealth Number of People: Percentage of Wealth: 2 % Upper Class 15 % Middle Class 90 % Upper Class 83% Lower Class 8% Middle Class 2 % Lower Class

  6. The Farmer Suffers • Farmers had NOT experienced the wealth of the 20s • They were forced to take many loans to update their equipment and keep up at the time. • Massive droughts hit in 1931 and 1933, and a plague of locusts ravaged crops in 1932.

  7. THREE Mistakes Made by President Hoover • Raised tariffs even higher to protect struggling American businesses. • Destroyed the much needed trade. • RFC: (Reconstruction Finance Corp.) • Through the RFC he gave major businesses and banks over $2 Billion • Only gave the money to companies that could pay it back, which most would’ve survived the depression anyway. • Hoover repeatedly vetoed bills that were intended to provide direct aid to struggling Americans. • He believed the average American would ultimately become dependent on the govt. if he simply gave them money.

  8. Americans Begin to Hate Hoover • Hoovervilles: shacks, shanty-towns where poor Americans were forced to live when they lost their homes. • Term of resentment for Hoover, since they blamed him. • The Bonus Army: WWI soldiers that were promised bonus checks after the war. • They wanted their checks early, but Congress would allow it • Bonus Army protestors camped outside the White House • Hoover eventually ordered the National Guard to force them to leave and burned their tents when they refused to leave.

  9. Hoovervilles in Chicago

  10. Bonus Army Makes Headlines Across U.S.

  11. Social Impact of the Depression • Birth rate and divorces went down during the Depression. • This is because families couldn’t afford either. • More strict child labor laws were created • The government wanted to protect jobs for older Americans who were supporting families. • High School enrollment increased since kids couldn’t get jobs as easily. • The NYA (National Youth Administration) actually paid students to stay in school

  12. Minorities During the Depression • Women: More women entered the work force as the need for money increased for each family. • As more men were laid off and women went to work, traditional roles within the home were reversed. • Unfortunately the Civil Rights movement struggled during the Depression. • FDR even tolerated job discrimination within government programs such as the CCC, and allowed segregation to continue without any attempt at reform. • Lynching became more popular in the South during the Depression.

  13. Popular Culture During the Depression • Serious situations of the depression caused many artists to focus on realistic subjects. • John Steinbeck: Wrote Grapes of Wrath and Of Mice and Men. • Grapes of Wrath: was about Oklahoma farmers in the Dust Bowl during the depression. • Of Mice and Men: was about migrant farmhands trying to find work during the depression. • Margaret Mitchell: wrote Gone with the Wind. • About rebuilding life in the South after the Civil War. • Scarlet Ohara’s inner strength is supposed to represent Americans during the depression.

  14. Popular Culture Cont. • Talkies: first movies with synchronized sound • Movie industry flourished during the depression. • Movies focused on fairy tales and happy situations • First movie stars and celebrities like Clark Gable, Mae West, Ginger Rogers, Fred Astaire, Shirley Temple, etc… • First soap operas developed over the radio. • Comic books and superheroes became popular. • Snow White and the Seven Dwarves became the first full length animated movie by Disney.

  15. Mae West

  16. Clark Gable – Gone with the Wind (1939)

  17. Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers

  18. Crime During the Depression • Bank robbers became famous during this period since many Americans resented the banks after the stock market crash. • For an 18 month period robbers like John Dillinger, “Baby Face Nelson”, Bonnie and Clyde, and Machine Gun Kelly raided banks and harassed police departments from Michigan to Texas. • Eventually the FBI would be formed as a result of the interstate crime sprees.

  19. John Dillinger – “Public Enemy Number One”

  20. Bonnie and Clyde Barrow

  21. George “Babyface” Nelson

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