Ch. 22.2 Hardship and Suffering During the Depression
Section Objectives:
1. Describe how people struggled to survive during the Depression.
2. Explain how the Depression affected men, women, and children.
One American’s Story
-Who was Ann Marie Low?
· A girl living on a farm in North Dakota with her family, she was affected by the dust bowl.
-What hardship did she have to battle?
· The dust bowl.
1. The Depression Devastates People’s Lives
-What did the depression bring to millions of Americans?
· Hardship, homelessness, and hunger.
A. The Depression in the Cities
-What were shantytowns?
· Little towns consisting of shacks. People lived in rusted out cars, crates, and piano boxes.
-What were soup kitchens?
· Places that offered free or low cost food.
-What were bread lines?
· Lines of people waiting to receive food provided by charitable organizations or public agencies.
-Why did people in cities live in shacks and wait in bread lines?
· They lost their jobs and were evicted from their homes. Without money people had to find a new way to survive.
-How did competition for jobs impact race relations during the Great Depression?
· African Americans were lynched, and whites demanded Latinos in the Southwest be deported out of the country.
B. The Depression in Rural Areas
-Why were so many farmers losing their land?
· Falling prices and rising debt prevented farmers from being able to pay off loans.
· This resulted in mortgage holders taking their lands.
C. The Dust Bowl
-Why did many farm families leave their land during the Great Depression?
· Dust storms and evictions led farmers to leave the Great Plains region.
-What was the dust bowl?
· Dust storms throughout the Great Plains region that wreaked havoc in Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado.
2. Effects on the American Family
-How did the depression affect families?
· The Great Depression brought families closer together; they listened to the radio, or played board games.
· The Great Depression also put a lot of pressure on family life.
A. Men in the Streets
-How did the Depression affect men and their families?
· Many men deserted their families after being unable to find work for years.
· Some became hoboes or wonderers of the country looking for work.
-What was direct relief?
· Cash payments or food provided by the government to the poor.
B. Women Struggle to Survive
-How did the Depression affect women?
· Women managed household budgets, sewed, and canned food.
· Women also tried to work outside the home, but this was met with opposition from out of work men.
· Women were also starving because they were to ashamed to reveal their difficulties.
C. Children Suffer Hardships
-How did the Depression affect children?
· Children had poor diets, lack of health care, and serious health problems
· Schools began to shut down as tax revenues declined, leaving 300,000 children without an education.
· Many teenage children began to hop from freight car to freight car in search of work, adventure, and an escape from poverty.
· Many were also beaten by armed freight yard patrolmen.
D. Social and Psychological Effects
-How did the Depression change the social aspect of life for people?
· People did not go out as much; saving money became a primary focus.
· Strangers helped each other by sharing food, clothing, and a place to stay.
· Families helped each other bringing communities closer together.
-What psychological impact did the Depression have on people?
· Some people lost the will to live and committed suicide.
· Many were also committed to mental hospitals.