1 / 57

The Great Depression Begins 1929 - 1932 Chapter 17

The Great Depression Begins 1929 - 1932 Chapter 17. The Election of 1928.

jesse
Download Presentation

The Great Depression Begins 1929 - 1932 Chapter 17

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Great Depression Begins 1929 - 1932 Chapter 17

  2. The Election of 1928 • Herbert Hoover– Republican vs. Alfred Smith– Democrat (four-time governor of New York; first Roman Catholicto be nominated for president. Hoover GOP • The issue of Prohibition played a major role in the campaign. • Hooverfavored a ban on liquor sales. • Smith opposed the ban. Smith Dem

  3. Religious differences – major impact. • Catholicissue smear campaign on Smith. • Republicans took full credit for the prosperity of the 1920s; Hooverwon landslide victory.

  4. The Long Bull Market • The stock market- system for buying and selling shares of companies. • A long period of rising stock prices is known as a bull market. • Prosperous times during the 1920s caused many Americans to invest heavily in the stock market. Bull Market Section 1-8

  5. As the bull market continued to go up, many investors bought stocks on margin, making a small cash down payment. • This was considered safe as long as stock prices continued to rise. • If the stock began to fall, the broker could issue amargin calldemanding that the investor repay the loan immediately. Section 1-9

  6. Buying Stock "On Margin"

  7. In the late 1920s, new investors bid prices up without looking at a company’s earnings and profits. • Speculationoccurred when investors bet on the market climbing and sold whatever stock they had in an effort to make a quick profit.

  8. The Great Crash • By late 1929, a lack of new investors caused stock prices to drop, bull market to end, and a bear marketto take over. • Stockbrokers issued margin calls customers placed stocks up for sale stocks dropped further! • Stock prices fell drastically on October 29, 1929, Black Tuesday, resulting in$10 to $15 billion loss in value! Bear Market

  9. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was created by Wall Street Journal founder Charles Dow as a way of measuring the performance of the New York Stock Exchange. Today, it looks at the value of stocks in 30 of the top companies trading stock on the NYSE. It is also one index looked at when gauging how well the U.S. economy is performing.

  10. The Crash did not cause the Great Depression....BUT...undermined economy’s ability to hold out against other weaknesses. • * The stock market crash weakened banks. • * Banks lost money on investments, and speculators defaulted on loans. • Because the government did not insure bank deposits, customers lost their money if a bank closed. Section 1-13

  11. Bank runsresulted as many bank customers withdrew their money at the same time, causing the bank to collapse. Section 1-14

  12. M/C 1-3a

  13. Roots (Causes) of the Great Depression • Efficient machineryoverproductionprices/profits drop for industry loss of jobs. • Uneven distribution of wealthin the U.S. added to the country’s economic problems. • * 1929 - top 5%of American households earned 30 percentof the country’s income. • * More than two-thirds of the nation’s families earned less than $2,500 a year.

  14. Low wages added to the economic problems. • * Wagesdid not increase fast enough to keep up with the quick production of goods. • As sales decreased, workers were laid off. • Unemploymentadded to a chain reaction that further hurt the economy. Section 1-17

  15. Many Americans bought on the installment plan,making a down payment and paying the rest in monthly installments.(Too much credit debt!) • Paying off installment debts left little money to purchase other goods. • The Hawley-Smoot Tariffintensified the Depression by raising the tax on imports. • Americans purchased less from overseas because of the high cost. Section 1-18

  16. In return, foreign countries raised tariffs on American products, causing fewer to be sold overseas loss of more American jobs. • Instead of raising interest rates on loans to stop speculation, the Federal Reserve Boardmade the mistake of lowering the rates. • This encouraged banks to make risky loans and misled business owners into thinking the economy was still expanding. Section 1-19

  17. Great Depression M/C 1-1a

  18. M/C 1-2a

  19. Section 2-4

  20. The Depression Worsens • By 1933 thousands of banks had closed; millions of American workers were unemployed. • Unemployed workers stood at bread lines to receive free food or at soup kitchenswhere private charities gave a free meal to the poor. Section 2-5

  21. Depression-Era Soup Kitchens Soup Kitchen

  22. Americans unable to pay mortgage or rent lost their homes. • Those unable or unwilling to move had a court-ordered eviction notice delivered by a court officer or bailiffwho forced nonpaying tenants out onto the street. Section 2-6

  23. Many of the homeless built shacks in shantytowns, which they referred to as “Hoovervilles” because they blamed the president for their financial trouble. Hoovervilles

  24. Hoboswere homeless men who hitched rides on RR cars to search for work and/or a better life. "Riding the Rails" MakingTurtle Soup Hobos

  25. Hobo Signs The hundreds of thousands of hobos who roamed the country developed intricate symbols that they wrote on trees, fences, or buildings to warn or inform other hobos. Many became a part of American folklore. At the height of the Great Depression there may have been as many as 250,000 teenage hobos. F/F/F 2-Folklore

  26. As crop prices dropped in the 1920s, many American farmers left their fields uncultivated. • A terrible drought in the Great Plains, beginning in 1932, caused the region to become a “Dust Bowl.” Section 2-7

  27. Intro 1

  28. Many Midwestern farmers and Great Plains farmers lost their farms. • Thousands moved west to Californiahoping to find a better life, but most still faced poverty and homelessness. (“Okies”) “Okies” hoping for a better life in California Okies

  29. M/C 2-1

  30. Moment in History 2

  31. Escaping the Depression • Americans escaped Depression by going to movies and listening to radio. • Storylines - overcoming hardships and achieving success. • Walt Disney- first feature-length animated film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, in 1937. • Other films, likeWizard of Oz, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, and Gone with the Wind, contained stories of triumph over adversity and visions ofa better life. Section 2-10

  32. A young Walt Disney helped Americans survive the Depression Walt Disney

  33. Families gathered around the radio daily to hear news or listen to comedians like George Burns or drama series like the Lone Ranger. • Melodramas, called soap operas, became very popular with housewives. • Soap operas received their name because makers of laundry soaps often sponsored them. Section 2-11

  34. The Depression in Art • Homeless and unemployed Americans were subjects of art and literature during the 1930s. • Artists and writers tried to capture the real life drama of the Depression. • Thomas Hart BentonandGrant Woodemphasized traditional American values in their art. Section 2-13

  35. Young Corn (1931) Grant Wood Depression-Era Artist American Gothic (1930) Grant Wood

  36. Thomas Hart Benton The Ballad of the Jealous Lover of Lone Green Valley 1934

  37. JohnSteinbeck’s1939 novel The Grapes of Wrath told the story of an Oklahoma family fleeing the Dust Bowlto find a new life in California. • Steinbeck - like many writers of his time - wrote of poverty, misfortune, and social injustice. Section 2-14

  38. Novelist William Faulkner’sliterary technique, stream of consciousness, revealed characters’ thoughts and feelings before they spoke– thoughts they dared not reveal. • In his novels, he exposed hidden attitudes of Southern whites and African Americans in a fictional Mississippi county. Section 2-15

  39. Promoting Recovery • To promote economic recovery, President Hoover held a series of conferences bringing together heads of banks, railroads, big business, labor, and government. • Hoover received a pledge from industry to keep factories open and stop cutting wages. • After the pledge failed, Hoover increased public works– government-financed building projects. Section 3-5

  40. A factory financed by the Federal Government Factory

  41. Hoover asked the governors and mayors to increase public works spending. • At the same time, however, Hoover refused to increase government spending ortaxes. He feared that deficit spending would delay an economic recovery. Section 3-6

  42. Americans blamed the Republican Partyfor the Depression. • As a result, in the midterm congressional elections of 1930, the Republicans lost 49 seats and their majority in the House of Representatives. GOP DEM Section 3-7

  43. Pumping Money Into the Economy • President Hoover tried to persuade the Federal Reserve Board to put more currency into circulation, but the Board refused. • Hoover set up the National Credit Corporation (NCC), which created a pool of money to rescue banks, but it was not enough to help. Section 3-10

  44. By 1932 Hoover felt the government had to provide funding for borrowers. • He asked Congress to set up the Reconstruction Finance Corporation(RFC) to make loans to banks, railroads, and agricultural institutions. • The economy continued to decline when the RFC was too cautious in its loan amounts. Section 3-11

  45. Hoover opposed federal government participation in relief– money that went directly to very poor families. • Thought relief was the responsibility of state and local governments. • In July 1932, Congress passed the Emergency Relief and Construction Act to get money for public works and for loans to the states for direct relief. Section 3-12

More Related