Review Exercise 20’s and 30’s

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Market Crashes The market crash in October of 1929 happened very quickly. In September, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, an average of stock prices.
Advertisements

The Great Depressio n. President Herbert Hoover Stock Market.
Review Exercise 20’s and 30’s
The Great Depression EQ: How did the Great Depression affect the lives of Americans?
The Great Depression Chapter 5 Lesson 20 TCAP Coach.
The Great Depressio n. In the 1930s the United States went into a severe economic state.
The Great Depression The optimism of the 1920’s concealed problems in the American economic system and attitudes about the role of government in controlling.
Great Depression Review. What were the signs the Depression was around the corner? Industry wasn’t as strong Failing famers Rising prices of goods Credit.
The Great Depression The Great Depression Black Tuesday & the Great Crash bull market – rising stock prices (way too fast)  plummeted to bear market.
The Great Depression. The Roaring Twenties Following the end of WWI, Americans were ready for life to go back to normal. Following the end of WWI, Americans.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 2 Americans Face Hard Times Examine the spread of unemployment in America’s cities. Discuss the impact.
The 1920s and 1930s. The Roaring Twenties  During World War I, many Americans moved to cities. They worked in factories or other businesses.  Technology.
A.Causes of the depression 4. Suffering world economy – Europe has been in a depression since the end of the Great War in Consumer Debt – too.
CHAPTER 28 Section 1:The Postwar Era Section 2:Postwar Prosperity Crumbles Section 3:Political Tensions After World War I Section 4: Fascist Dictatorships.
The Great Depression Production fell, unemployment rose, and the economy went into a period of dramatic decline.
Dust Bowl Great Depression Out of the Dust and Bud, Not Buddy.
Rising Unemployment In 1933, the unemployment rate was about 25% up from 3% in 1929 The young, elderly, and minorities were hit hardest. African Americans.
In the 1920s, millions of people bought stocks (a share of a company owned by individuals or groups) on speculation. Speculation means that they bought.
Unit 5: The Great Depression and the New Deal 5-1: The U.S. economy crashes.
The Great Depression Causes and Impact. Remember… 1920’s were a time of optimism and spending. People wanted “stuff.” People use borrowed money to buy.
THE IMMEDIATE EFFECTS OF THE DEPRESSION IN AMERICA.
America in the 1930s Part one The Great Depression.
The 1920s and 1930s.
Review Great Depression and the New Deal
The Great Depression: Causes & Effects
The Great Depression & The New Deal
Chapter 14 The Great Depression
Hardship and Suffering During the Great Depression
The Great Depression.
Effects of the Depression
Effects of the Depression
Americans Face Hard Times
The Great Depression.
Standard 17.
The Great Depression: Causes and Effects
Objectives Examine the spread of unemployment in America’s cities.
Welcome! Please grab a copy of today’s activity off the table as you come in! Copy down your homework Get started on your poster!
The Great Depression ( ) Essential Question:
The Great Depression: Causes and Effects
The Great Depression Begins
Was the Great Depression of the 1930s inevitable (expected)?
The Great Depression & The New Deal
The Great Depression: Causes and Effects
PDN In your notes respond to the following question:
The Great Depression: Mr. Gouge
Depression, the New Deal & Hope in New Mexico
THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND THE NEW DEAL Cause and Effect
The Great Depression.
The Great depression
The Great Depression ( ).
What is the Great Depression?
Jeopardy Vocabulary Causes of the G.D. Impact of G.D. New Deal
Chapter 23 Section 1 Hoover and the Crash The Great Depression.
Great Depression USH-6.3.
Effects of the Depression
Objectives Examine the spread of unemployment in America’s cities.
What Economic Problems of the Late 1920s Caused the Great Depression?
DO NOW: Silently write down as many things as you know or can remember learning or reading about the Great Depression!
Hoover and the Great Depression
THE GREAT DEPRESSION.
Analyze the causes and consequences of the Great Depression
Objectives Examine the spread of unemployment in America’s cities.
The Great Depression ( )
The Great Depression: Causes and Effects
Chapter 25 The Great Depression Vocabulary
Hardship & Suffering During the Great Depression
Hard Times.
United States History & Government 11th Grade Boys & girls
Complete all of standard 18 vocab
Great Depression USH-6.3.
Presentation transcript:

Review Exercise 20’s and 30’s Juleah Aiken, Jimmy Pitts, McCaela Adesso, Lixsel Vergara

4 reasons The drought Bank failures Stock market crash of 1929 Reduction in purchasing across the board American economic policy with europe

graphs

Graph #2

pictures

4 statistics "In America the unemployment rate reached nearly 25% at its peak." - thegreatdepression.co.uk "Nearly 50% of the children of the great depression did not have adequate food, shelter, or medical care.“ - - stocks-simplified.com The Dust Bowl: There was a terrible drought which has turned soil into dust. During the Great depression a period of severe dust storms causing major damage to farms. Millions of acres of farmland became useless and hundreds of thousands of people became homeless World War 2 eventually pulled the US out of the depression by creating new jobs Between 1929 and 1932 the annual income of an average American family dropped by 40% During the Great Depression bankers became so unpopular that bank robbers, such as Bonnie and Clyde, became American folk heroes

Rural life Drought Neighbors helped each other Everyone was poor

City life Unemployment or pay cuts Unheated, unsanitary homes Terror everywhere

Problems of the rich Stock market crash Rich got richer, at the expense of the poor

Problems of the middle class Unemployment Difficult to find ways to make money

African American conditions The Great Depression of the 1930s worsened the already bleak economic situation of African Americans. They were the first to be laid off from their jobs, and they suffered from an unemployment rate two to three times that of whites. In early public assistance programs African Americans often received substantially less aid than whites, and some charitable organizations even excluded blacks from their soup kitchens. – Encyclopedia Britannica

Poor conditions/ deserving poor The poor were hit the hardest. By 1932, Harlem had an unemployment rate of 50 percent and property owned or managed by blacks fell from 30 percent to 5 percent in 1935. Farmers in the Midwest were doubly hit by economic downturns and the Dust Bowl. Schools, with budgets shrinking, shortened both the school day and the school year. - http://www.nps.gov/archive/elro/glossary/great-depression.htm They had to live in places called “Hooverville” and they were known for the horrible conditions.

Types of help offered Federal Emergency Relief Administration Civilian Conservation Corps Works Progress Administration Home Owners Loan Corporation

Eating tight Diet centered around vegetables Little meat (except for chicken) Bread

evictions Rent Strikes Eviction Resistance Leads to the United States Housing Act passed by congress in 1937 Establish public housing program

Starvation conditions Stealing "Relief lines" Children would chew on their hands until they bled "Have nots" were most suceptible to starvation

Survival tactics Hand me down clothing make one loaf of bread last a week Restrict spending to the minimum. Buy only from friends in local businesses who in turn would buy your wares. Save as much as possible but not in banks. reduce having sexual intercourse to reduce having babies

Dust bowl Between 1930 and 1940, the southwestern Great Plains region of the United States suffered a severe drought Dry land farming on the Great Plains led to the systematic destruction of the prairie grasses. Winds whipped across the plains, raising billowing clouds of dust. The sky could darken for days, and even well-sealed homes could have a thick layer of dust on the furniture

Hoover policies Herbert Hoover (1874-1964), a Republican, was president when the Great Depression began. He infamously declared in March 1930 that the U.S. had “passed the worst” and argued that the economy would sort itself out. The worst, however, had just begun and would last until the outbreak of WWII (1939). Herbert Hoover was a laissez faire president and that FDR brought us out of the depression. Herbert Hoover broke with the previous laissez-faire policy for dealing with recessions and depressions. In the last week of October 1929, he urged the Fed to extend $300 million in quantitative easing

Extras – red cross The Red Cross and the government set up stations that gave food and other necessities such as clothes to the needy. Big and efficient Had to help cope with the drought