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Ch. 32 Life During the Depression 12 December 2013
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The Depression Worsens By 1933, 9,000 Banks had failed. In 1932, 30,000 Companies went out of business. 25% Unemployment rate
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Unemployed, Hungry??? Bread Lines – Where citizens lined up to receive a free handout of food Soup Kitchen – Relied on private charities set up to give poor people a meal
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Homes / Apartments Families or individuals who could not pay their rent or mortgages lost their homes (foreclosures) Shantytowns – New communities founded by newly homeless people put up shacks on unused or public lands. Shantytowns were commonly referred to as Hoovervilles. Wanders – Unemployed Americans who began to wander around the country, walking, hitchhiking, or riding the railcars. Hobos - Wanderers who would sneak past railroad police to slip into open boxcars on freight trains for a ride to somewhere else. Hobos would camp in “Hobo Jungles” usually situated near rail yards.
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The Dust Bowl From the beginnings of homesteading on the Great Plains, farmers gambled with nature. – Uprooted wild grasses that held the Soil’s Moisture. Replaced with Wheat Fields Crop Prices farmers leaving their fields uncultivated. 1932, a terrible drought struck the Great Plains. – With no grass or wheat to hold moisture soil turned to dust. From the Dakotas to Texas, America’s pastures and wheat fields became a vast “Dust Bowl.” As the drought continued the number of dust storms greatly increased Many farmers lost their lands to the bank and headed to California.
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Escaping the Depression Movies – Walt Disney – Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs; – MGM - Wizard of OZ Books - John Steinbeck – added flesh and blood to journalists reports of poverty and misfortune. Wrote “The Grapes of Wrath.” – Photos – Margaret Bourke-White – photojournalist whose striking pictures showed the ravages of the drought. Radio – Offered entertainment on a more personal level. – The Lone Ranger and George Burns – Soap Operas – short dramas allowed listeners to escape into a world more exciting than their own. Sponsors were often makers of laundry soaps.
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Great Depression vs. Great Recession TopicsGreat Depression2008 - 2010 Recession Bank Failures9,096 – 50% of Banks (Jan. 1930 – Mar 1933 57 – 0.6% of Banks (Dec 2007 – May 2009) Unemployment Rate25%9.8% Economic Decline-26.5% (1929 – 1933)-3.3% (Q2 2008 – Q1 2009) Biggest Decline in Dow Avg-89.2% (Sept 1929 – July 1932) -53.8% (Oct 2007 – March 2009) Change in Prices-25% (1929 – 1933)+0.5% (Dec. 2007 – March 2009) Emergency Spending Programs 1.5% of GDP for 1 Year2.5% of GDP for 2 Years Government ResponsesRaise taxes, cut spendingBank Bailouts, Stimulus Plan Increase in Money Supply by Fed 17% (1933)125% (Sept 2008 – May 2009)
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