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Historical Timeline Financial crash Banks & factories close; farming collapses 1929 1931 1933 Franklin D. Roosevelt becomes president 1936 The “New Deal”:

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Presentation on theme: "Historical Timeline Financial crash Banks & factories close; farming collapses 1929 1931 1933 Franklin D. Roosevelt becomes president 1936 The “New Deal”:"— Presentation transcript:

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2 Historical Timeline Financial crash Banks & factories close; farming collapses 1929 1931 1933 Franklin D. Roosevelt becomes president 1936 The “New Deal”: Support for unemployment 1937 Of Mice and Men is published

3 The 1930s Depression: an economy with high unemployment, falling income, failing business, decline in production and sales. The Great Depression: a depression that took place during the 1930s in America

4 On Black Tuesday, October 29, 1929, the stock market crashed, triggering the Great Depression, the worst economic collapse in the history of the modern industrial world. It spread from the United States to the rest of the world, lasting from the end of 1929 until the early 1940s. With banks failing and businesses closing, more than 15 million Americans (one-quarter of the workforce) became unemployed. Our current economic depression has been compared by some to the Great Depression. The Great Depression

5 Heavy real estate losses Mass consumption or living above means Uneven distribution of wealth Uninsured banks Stock Market crash Leading Causes of Great Depression

6 Causes: Cheap land Over production on wheat The Dust Bowl The depression led to a drop in the market price of farm crops, which meant that farmers were forced to produce more goods in order to earn the same amount of money. Farming Depression (1920-1935)

7 A 97-million-acre piece of high, level land in the southern portion of the Great Plains Found in the states of Colorado, New Mexico, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. The Dust Bowl

8 The increase in farming activity across the Great Plains states caused the precious soil to erode. This erosion, coupled with a seven-year drought that began in 1931, turned once fertile grasslands into a ‘desert-like’ region. The Dust Bowl

9 From 1932-1936 the annual rainfall didn’t exceed 12 inches Low wheat prices and yields drove farmers from their lands Dust clouds lifted and settled over millions of acres Farmers and farmhands moved into California as migrant workers Seventy severe dust storms recorded in 1933 “The Drouth”

10 Atlantic Monthly article from 1930s: “Dust in the beds and in the flour bin, on dishes and walls and windows, in hair, eyes, teeth, and throats…” Ceilings collapsed under the weight of the accumulated dust mounds People remember hanging wet blankets across their windows and laying wet cloths over their faces when they went to sleep because of the dust Dust Was Everywhere

11 Map of the Dust Bowl

12 Migration: movement of people from place to place for permanent settlement Drought in the plains forced owners off farms The Grapes of Wrath (another Steinbeck novel) depicts this lifestyle Migrant Workers

13 Migrant farm workers Homeless/farmless due to drought and “Dust Bowl” Hundreds of thousands of farmers packed up their families and few belongings, and headed for California, which seemed like a promised land. The state’s mild climate promised a longer growing season and, with soil favorable to a wider range of crops, it offered more opportunities to harvest. “Oakies”

14 These poor mid-western farmers were despised and abused in California Very few found it to be the land of opportunity and plenty of which they dreamed. “Oakies”

15 Factories and mills closed Manufacturing cut in half Unemployment rose from 3.2 % to 24.9% Banks ran out of money Mortgages foreclosed Homelessness and poverty “Riches to Rags” For Sale Effects of the Great Depression

16 Malnutrition Doubt and fear Most severe for men (women’s jobs actually rose) Children had to be more self-reliant Whites took over jobs held by minorities Living Conditions

17 President Hoover: Tried to stress self-reliance and to restore confidence but grew unpopular as conditions worsened President Roosevelt: elected in 1932 “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself” Fireside chats (radio show) helped boost morale Began The New Deal – programs run by government to aid people affected by the Great Depression The Government Responds

18 1939: unemployment still at 15% Outbreak of WWII caused expansion of national defense This stimulated jobs and growth Federal Government expanded its role in social and economic areas (through The New Deal) The End of the Depression

19 Look up the following words in the dictionary and write their definition on your own piece of paper: Itinerant Junctures Debris Morosely Brusquely FOR HOMEWORK


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