The Great Depression

Causes of the Depression

Prosperity Hides Troubles


1. Foreign trade hurt by tariffs.

2. Availability of easy credit.

3. Agricultural problems.

4. Distribution of wealth.


§ Greater separation between the rich and poor.

§ Key businesses are not making money.

§ Railroad, Mining, Lumber.

§ A key indicator that was on the decline was housing.

§ When housing starts to fall, so do jobs in many related industries, such as furniture manufacturing and lumbering.

§ Everyone was living on credit.

§ 70% of the nation’s families earned less than $2,500 per year (minimum amount needed for a decent standard of living).

Farmers had made huge profits during World War I.

1919 – Production $10 Billion

1921 – Production $ 4 Billion

The government response to this financial crisis faced by farmers

was to create price supports. Postwar production remained high because of mechanized farm equipment and more intensive farming methods. Price support would enable the government to buy surplus crops at guaranteed prices and sell them to the world market.

Hoover never ran for public office, but

became popular as the Head of the Administration during WWI and the

Secretary of Commerce under Harding and Coolidge. Americans voted overwhelmingly for Hoover, prosperity, and the continuation of

the Republican government.

Stock Market Crashes

Four million

people invested

in the stock

market, but

buying stocks

was not enough

for many.

October 29th, 1929 – Black Tuesday

Investors lost $30 billion, which signaled the beginnings of…

The Great Depression.

Unemployment went from 3% (1.6 million) to 25% (13 million). World Trade fell more than 40% because of the

Hawley-Smoot Tariff, the highest protective tariff in U.S. history.

The Great Depression Begins

After the crash everybody went to the bank to withdraw their

money, but many banks invested in the stock market…oops!

Of the 25,000 banks, 11,000 of them had failed because the

government did not protect or insure bank accounts.

Millions of people lost their savings accounts.

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The Great Depression

Americans Face Hard Times

H.H.H. of the Depression

Hardships Helping Out Hoover Tries – But Messes Up Big Time!

Misery & Despair Grip America’s Cities

Many people lost their jobs & were evicted from

their homes. Some slept in parks or sewer pipes.

People began living in shantytowns (little towns

made up of a bunch of shacks).

The poor dug through garbage cans, or begged.

Soup Kitchens offered free or low cost food.

Poverty Devastates Rural America

There was a huge drought in the 1930s across the Great Plains.

Farmers broke up the grassland and planted millions of acres

of farmland. Farmers overproduced on the land, making it

unsuitable for farming.

Farmers abandoned the land and the wind began to blow.

Dust blew everywhere, which is why this event is called the… Dust Bowl.

Few Americans Escape Hard Times

The depression had a tremendous social and psychological effect on people, which led to an increase in mental illness. Suicides went up by 30% because of the difficulties of the times.

Making ends meet was a daily struggle, and, in some cases, families broke apart under the financial strain.

People stopped going to the doctors because they could no longer

afford the “extras.” People no longer had money for entertainment,

so people began playing board games and listening to the radios.

300,000 became “Hoboes,” which were people who wandered the

country, hitching rides on railroad boxcars and sleeping under bridges.

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The Great Depression

Hoover’s Response Fails

Cautious Response To Depression Fails

President Hoover did NOT want to use direct relief because

he believed that it would lower self-respect and “moral fiber.”

Hoover believed that it is NOT the job of the federal government to give handouts to the public. Local and state government should help provide relief and jobs.

Hoover Adopts More Activists Policies

Hoover tried to help by doing the following:

§ Hoover Dam

§ Federal Farm Board

§ National Credit Corporation

§ Federal Home Loan Bank Act

Thousands of unemployed WWI veterans and their families set up camps in Wash., D.C.; to demand early payment of a bonus they were due. The bill was defeated by Congress, but most of the Bonus Army

refused to leave town.

Hoover called the army out to break up the Bonus Army’s

camps. The use of tanks and tear gas were being used

against the war veterans, which destroyed the little popularity that

Hoover had left.

One

baby was killed and

a child was blinded.