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Great Depression

Great Depression. Europe. Fordney-McCumber Tariff (1922) put in place by Harding. Britain and France cannot pay back their debt. Turn to Germany who was unable to pay. France sends troops to Germany. Charles Dawes suggests the Dawes Plan.

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Great Depression

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  1. Great Depression

  2. Europe • Fordney-McCumber Tariff (1922) put in place by Harding. • Britain and France cannot pay back their debt. • Turn to Germany who was unable to pay. • France sends troops to Germany. • Charles Dawes suggests the Dawes Plan. • U.S. loans Germany 2.5 billion to pay back France and Britain who pay U.S. • Paid with our own money!

  3. Economy of the 1920's • Economic growth: • Consumer spending increases – buying goods on credit. • The Gross National Product rose. • Auto industry #1 • Electricity quadrupled • Laissez-faire government policies. • Stock Market Growth: • Speculation- making risky stock investments for quick turnaround profits. • Buying on the Margin- paying a small percentage of a stock’s price as a down payment and then barrowing the rest.

  4. Danger signs • Huge corporations still dominated • Personal debt • Speculation and Buying on the Margin led to stock debt and risky investments • Overproduction led to a rising unemployment • Wages remained stagnant even when profits rose

  5. Herbert Hoover 1928 • Republican • Mining engineer from Iowa • Secretary of Commerce under both Harding and Coolidge. • Quiet Reserved • Won election because of the years of prosperity under Republican leadership (roaring 20s). • “We in America are nearer to the final triumph over poverty than ever before.” • Defeated much more experienced Alfred E. Smith • Four terms as Governor of New York.

  6. The Stock Market Crashes • September of 1929 – stock prices peaked and then fell. • October 29, 1929 – known as Black Tuesday • The bottom fell out of the stock market • 16.4 million shares sold (NEW RECORD!!!) and $33 billion in assets were lost. • Dow Jones average fell from 381 to 198!

  7. How the Crash affects everyone • 1. Businesses were unable to pay off bank loans and defaulted. • 2. Consumers also began to default on their loans • 3. People tried to withdraw their money from banks (bank runs). In turn, banks had to call in loans, but couldn’t get much money back. • 4. Unpaid loans and Bank Runs forced 5,500 banks out of business • 5. 9 million saving accounts were lost • 6. Businesses cut production because people were not spending money • 7.Production cut, unemployment rises (12million people lose jobs) • 8. The Gross National Product dropped from $103 billion to $56 billion.

  8. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8aUW8AF_qw Hardships • To protect the American economy, Congress passed the Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act (1930). • Highest tariff to date – not the desired effect • Rise of “Shantytowns” (AKA Hoovervilles). • Little towns (mostly shacks) sprang up in cities • Soup Kitchens and Bread Lines • Poorer conditions for African Americans and Hispanics. • Higher unemployment and less pay. • Deportation of Hispanics

  9. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNXTKVxOmfk Hardship • Women return to work for lower pay, but face resentment. • Children starving, serious health problems • Schools close • Returning to work • Became “Hoover Tourists” - travelling the country by rails (for free) • Men – hopelessly trying to find work. • Many abandoned their families • As many as 300,000 transients would travel the country looking for work.

  10. Rural Problems • 1929-1932 – 400,000 farms were closed to foreclosure • Return to tenant farming • Over-production exhausted the land and led to the “Dust Bowl”. • Drought • Top soil would be pulled free in dust storms. • Land couldn’t be farmed. • Families packed up, left their land behind and became migrant workers. • Came to be known as “Okies” • Moved West to California and the Pacific Coast.

  11. Hoover's actions • Hoover moved cautiously. • Americans believed in “rugged individualism” • Families take care of themselves and their own • Hoover opposed federal welfare (AKA direct relief). • The needy needed to turn to charities and local organizations. • Federal Government was to direct relief methods. • Bureaucracy would be too expensive and stifle individual liberties.

  12. Hoovers Actions • Just after crash he called together leaders to help fix the situation – ineffective. • Boulder Dam (Hoover Dam) – public service project. • Provides flood control and electricity to the area. • Paid for by the profits it would generate. • Regular water supply t cities in the area. • SUCCESS!

  13. Change • Anti-Hoover Sentiment won the Democrats Congress in 1930. • Hoover wanted cooperation. • Set up groups such as: National Credit Corporation and others to remedy specific troubles areas. • Federal Home Loan Act (1932) – lowered mortgage rates for homeowners and allowed farmers to refinance. • Reconstruction Finance Corporation (1932) – was to aid large business , like banks and railroad companies, in hope the profits would “Trickle down.” • Was not enough.

  14. Hoover's Death Nell • 10,000 – 20,000 WW1 vets. And their families (AKA the Bonus Army) travelled to D.C. • Supported the Patman Bill – which was to pay veterans who had not been properly compensated for their war time efforts. • Hoover did not support them or the bill (but allowed them to protest peacefully). • June 17th, Bill was voted down – 2,000 veterans remained after ordered to leave. • Soldiers were sent out on July 28th. • Poor treatment of veterans by Hoover’s soldiers. • Franklin Delano Roosevelt was handed the Presidency.

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