1 / 15

The Great Depression

Explore the devastating effects of the Great Depression in the 1920s and 1930s, including the stock market crash, unemployment, poverty, and the Dust Bowl. Learn about President Hoover's response and FDR's New Deal.

mcecelia
Download Presentation

The Great Depression

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

  2. 20’s Keep Roaring • Americans make more than ever • 1922 National Income= $61 Bill. • 1929 National Income= $87 • Over 23 million cars were owned • (3/4 of worlds supply) • 1929 Stocks at all-time highs!

  3. Trouble on the Horizon • Unemployment on the rise • Farmers were losing land • Farming and rural areas suffered as crop prices fell by 40 to 60 percent. • Stock prices begin to drop

  4. 1929- The Great Crash • Investors all over the country rush to get their money out of the stock market • October 29 (Black Tuesday), the stock market collapsed, losing billions $$$ in value in one day • By December 1929, $40 billion in stock value had been lost

  5. The Economy Takes A Dive • Between 1929 and 1933, 100,000 businesses failed • Corporate profits fell from $10 billion to %1 billion • Between 1929-1933, over 6,000 banks failed with over 9 million saving accounts lost ($2.5 billion) • By 1933, 13 million workers were unemployed (25% of work force) and many were underemployed • Malnutrition increased, as did tuberculosis, typhoid, and dysentery

  6. Hoovervilles Seattle • Small towns within a city that were built with scrap materials • Almost 1 out of 4 Americans unemployed Portland (Where I-84 is today)

  7. Social Health • Decreased living condition • More people into less space • Divorce rate decreased • Could not afford it • Many men felt shame

  8. Increased Discrimination • Many married women are fired • Get more men jobs • Minorities (African-Americans, Hispanics, and Asian Americans) pushed out of jobs • 56% of African-Americans were unemployed in 1932 • Increased lynching • Scottsboro Boys • 9 African American youths accused of raping a white women • 8 of 9 convicted to die (no defense) • Communist Party supplies lawyers for an appeal and the convictions were overturned

  9. Dust Bowl • 440,000 left Oaklahoma • 300,000 left Kansas • Many moved to California for farm work

  10. Americans Look for Help • In 1932, 95 people died in NYC from starvation • Many American turned to soup kitchens and breadlines • Large numbers of homeless workers roamed the U.S., particularly the Southwest, seeking work

  11. Hoover’s Response • Believes that direct relief (welfare) would undermine America • Urged Americans to look toward churches and private charity for help • Met with business and labor leaders to reduce layoffs and strikes • Financed federal works projects, such as massive dams in the west (Bolder, Hoover, and Grand Coulee)

  12. Hostility to Hoover • Bonus Army (Bonus March)

  13. President Hoover Slogans: “The Worst is Past” and “Prosperity is Just Around the Corner” Accused FDR of seeking the destruction of capitalism Franklin D. Roosevelt Campaigned for cautious liberalism Rejecting Hoover’s conservatism and radical approach of socialists and communists Offered a New Deal for the “forgotten man” and promised a balanced budget along with economic reforms Election of 1932

  14. FDR WINS!

More Related