The Great Depression Images.

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Presentation transcript:

The Great Depression Images

Buying on Margin No Margin $100 @ $10/share = 10 shares (none borrowed) If price drops to $5/sh -- lose $50 If price increases to $15/sh -- gain $50 Margin – 10% down $100 down + $900 borrowed = $1000 $1000 @ $10/sh = 100 shares versus 10 If price drops to $5/sh – lose $500 lose $900 borrowed lose $ 27 interest 30% per year $1427 loss If price increases to $15/sh – gain $500 Sell 100 shares for total $1500 Pay back borrowed 900 Pay interest 27 $573 profit

Stock

"To Our Illustrious President: Our Holy Books say: A poor man is like a dead man. You came and resurrected the poor man from the dead. You came and said: 'Wake up, forgotten man. I will give you new life. I will give you a new deal .' Like the prophet, Nathan, who said to King David: You have so many sheep and yet you want to take the last sheep of the poor man; so you said to the rich, to the Wall St. bankers: Leave the poor man his last sheep. Let him also live. All the rich men hate you for that. They know that you brought new hope to the poor plain man. They know that never again will the old times come back. May I end respectfully that your name, our illustrious President, will live forever." top of page

Dear Mrs. Rosevelt: I am 13 years old and will be 14 the 27 of this month. I am a victim of a shut in. I have been sick ever since the 12 of July. And have a very lonely place to stay. My parence's are very poor people. I cant even go to school yet with the other kids. And doubt if I can this year. I have nothing I can do but set around and I get so lonely I don't know what to do. And if you want to cheer me up and make me one of the happies boys in the world just send me some money to get a cheap raido. Ihave got proof by the neighbors that I am sick and have nothing to do. My parence names is Mr. + Mrs. A. J. M. My name is F. M. I live at Kismet. Many, many thanks if you would cheer me up that way I wouldn't spend it for nothing but a radio. It would pass my lonely time a way so much faster. I only ask for a cheep one. F. M. Kismet, Kansas

P. S. If I had any thing to do I wouldent ask you of it P.S. If I had any thing to do I wouldent ask you of it. It will be highly appreached. I am in the dust bowl. We didn't raise any crop this year. And we have to live off of the releif and theres no injoyment out of that. But were thankful for it. My mother is sick and under the doctor's care most of the time and my Grandma that lives with me is very poorly. And that keeps my heart broken all the time. And nothing to amuse myself with. thanks alot

Dear Mrs. Roosevelt I am writing to you for some of your old soiled dresses if you have any. As I am a poor girl who has to stay out of school. On account of dresses & slips and a coat. I am in the seventh grade but I have to stay out of school because I have no books or clothes to ware. I am in need of dresses & slips and a coat very bad. If you have any soiled clothes that you don't want to ware I would be very glad to get them. But please do not let the news paper reporters get hold of this in any way and I will keep it from geting out here so there will be no one else to get hold of it. But do not let my name get out in the paper. I am thirteen years old. Miss L. H. Gravette, Ark.

How does the US economy look today?

Bonnie & Clyde

May 6th, 1937

Dust Bowl Immigrants – The Okies

“Black Blizzard” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0PX9CwwOx_U

Hoovervilles

Hoover flags – empty pockets

Hoover blanket

Depression Attacks Family Life Men felt they had betrayed their families Men faced reduction in status – many look for work, others shame and despair – some deserted families Those who had jobs – constant fear of losing it, felt guilty Birthrates plummeted – lowest in US history Family discipline declined Some children quit school, others ran away Divorce went down – Why?

African-Americans During Depression

Minorities Suffer Hardships African Americans: Last to be hired, first to be fired In South threw A-A sharecroppers off the land Unemployment 50% Mexican-Americans: Whites demanded repatriation of M-A Encouraged or coerced Mexican immigrants and their naturalized children to return to Mexico. Hundreds of thousands pushed out of country