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Life During the Great Depression. Of the 6000 people hoping to get jobs on this day in New York, 135 were hired. Reaches all time high of 25% Reaches.

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Presentation on theme: "Life During the Great Depression. Of the 6000 people hoping to get jobs on this day in New York, 135 were hired. Reaches all time high of 25% Reaches."— Presentation transcript:

1 Life During the Great Depression

2 Of the 6000 people hoping to get jobs on this day in New York, 135 were hired. Reaches all time high of 25% Reaches all time high of 25% In Harlem it was 50% In Harlem it was 50% Unemployment lines grow Unemployment lines grow Unemployment

3 Breadlines and Soup Kitchens Breadline: A line of people waiting to receive food given by a charitable organization or public agency.

4 “I was walking along the street at that time, and you'd see the bread lines. The biggest one in New York City was owned by William Randolph Hearst. He had a big truck with several people on it, and big cauldrons of hot soup, bread. Fellows with burlap on their shoes were lined up all around Columbus Circle, and went for blocks and blocks around the park, waiting.” - Yip Harburg in Studs Terkel’s Hard Times

5 Limited Work “I’d get up at five in the morning and head for the waterfront. Outside the Spreckles Sugar Refinery, outside the gates, there would be a thousand men. You know dang well there’s only three or four jobs. The guy would come out…’I need two guys for the bull gang. Two guys to go into the hole.’ A thousand guys would fight like a pack of Alaskan dogs to get through there.” - Ed Paulson, quoted in Studs Terkel’s Hard Times

6 Hooverville Sprawling neighborhoods of shacks Sprawling neighborhoods of shacks Shantytowns Shantytowns Named after Pres. Hoover Named after Pres. Hoover People blamed him for the Great Depression People blamed him for the Great Depression “We thought American business was the Rock of Gibraltar. We were the prosperous nation, and nothing could stop us now. A brownstone house was forever. You gave it to your kids and they put marble fronts on it. There was a feeling of continuity. If you made it, it was there forever. Suddenly the big dream exploded. The impact was unbelievable.” Yip Harburg in Studs Terkel Hard Times

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9 “ There is not a garbage-dump in Chicago which is not diligently haunted by the hungry. Last summer the hot weather when the smell was sickening and the flies were thick, there were a hundred people a day coming to one of the dumps. A widow who used to do housework and laundry, but now had no work at all, fed herself and her fourteen year old son on garbage. Before she picked up the meat, she would always take off her glasses so that she couldn't see the maggots.” -Edmund Wilson, New Republic (February, 1933)

10 In Search of Work Some - begged - relied on bread lines - sold apples Others took to the road - known as hoboes - some fathers left and never came back

11 themselves Women and Children left to Fend for themselves

12 Life of a Hobo A Hobo is a person that travels to work. A tramp is a person that travels and won’t work. A bum is a person that will neither travel or work.

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16 Men Wanted Jobs not Handouts

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19 Can the American Dream Survive?


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