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Crash and Depression “It came with a speed and ferocity that lef men dazed.”

Crash and Depression

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“It came with a speed and ferocity that left men dazed.”. Crash and Depression. Key Terms. Business Cycle -span in which the country grows and then contracts Dow Jones Industrial Average Hoovervilles 21 st Amendment Hawley-Smoot tariff. Section 1- The Stock Market Crash of 1929. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Crash and Depression

Crash and Depression

“It came with a speed and ferocity that left men dazed.”

Page 2: Crash and Depression

Key Terms

• Business Cycle

-span in which the country grows and then

contracts

• Dow Jones Industrial Average

• Hoovervilles

• 21st Amendment

• Hawley-Smoot tariff

Page 3: Crash and Depression

Section 1- The Stock Market Crash of 1929

• Market was up as high as 381 pts Sep. 1929

• The market began to fall, why?

• When the DJIA dropped what happened?

• Terrible Thursday, prices still fell rapidly more investors sold out, Oct 24

• Black Tuesday- Oct. 29, the Great Crash, total losses were around $30 Billion

Pg. 508-509

Page 4: Crash and Depression

• The crash affected?

• Unemployment and bank failures, why?

• An underlying cause of the Great Depression?

Pg. 510-513

Page 5: Crash and Depression

Rise of the FBI- J. Edgar Hoover

• First Director of FBI

• Public Enemies

• Sexuality

• Death

Page 6: Crash and Depression

Depression Era Gangsters- Pretty Boy Floyd- Charles Floyd

• Age 18- $3.50

• 5 years

• The nickname

• Kansas City Massacre

• Death by murder in Ohio?

Page 7: Crash and Depression

Baby Face Nelson- Lester Gillis

• Age 12, accidental shooting?

• Nickname

• Escaped

• Helped Dillinger escape?

• Little Bohemia Lodge

• Death in Illinois, 17 bullets

Page 8: Crash and Depression

Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow

• First meeting

• Robbing and killing

• The end of the duo, overkill in Louisiana

Page 9: Crash and Depression

John Dillinger• Early trouble with the law

• 10 years stealing, thanks dad

• Bank robberies

• Wooden gun escape

• Women in Red- Anna Sage

Page 11: Crash and Depression

• Discrimination increased

• Loss of jobs?

• Many were sent back to their countries

• Great Migration?

“We do not dare to use even a little soap, when it will pay for an extra egg or a few more carrots for our children.” An unemployed father in Oregon.

Pg. 517

Page 12: Crash and Depression

Surviving the Great Depression

• People during the Depression stopped buying on credit

• Farmers lost farms

• Penny Auctions?

Pg. 520-521

Page 13: Crash and Depression

• Humor?

• The 21st Amendment

• Effect on gangsters/crime?

Pg. 522

Page 14: Crash and Depression

The Election of 1932

• Hoover blamed for Depression

• Bonus Army- 20,000 WWI vets and families who camped in Washington DC

• 1945 pension

Pg. 526-527

Page 15: Crash and Depression

• As Gov of NY Franklin Roosevelt worked hard for relief for the homeless

• Election of 1932 FDR(D) against Hoover (R)

• The election’s biggest issue: responsibilities of the Federal Gov.

pg. 528

Page 16: Crash and Depression

THE NEW DEAL

“So first of all let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself”

Page 17: Crash and Depression

A New Deal

• New Deal- Relief, Recovery, Reform• National Debt- Total amount of borrowed

money the federal gov has yet to pay back• First Hundred Days?• “Bank Holiday”- inspect the financial health

of the banks• Glass-Steagall Banking Act 1933; FDIC

Federal Depositors Insurance Companypg. 537

Page 19: Crash and Depression

• Wife Eleanor was a big help

• “Brain Trust”- an informal group of intellectuals who helped devise New Deal Policies

• “Black Cabinet”- unofficial group of African American officeholders

• New Deal falters

Pg. 540-542

Page 20: Crash and Depression

Second New Deal

• New and Expanded Agencies

• Works Progress Administration

• Social Security Administration, how are we affected today?

• 1936 Election- FDR and Alfred Landon

Pg. 543-544

Page 21: Crash and Depression

Section 2- New Deal’s Critics

• Women- New deal did not protect domestic service; largest female occupation

• “give us some hours to rest in and some Sundays off and pay us more wages”

• “…There is nothing that can be done…to help you and others in this kind of employment.”

Pg. 546

Page 22: Crash and Depression

• Father Coughlin

• Huey Long

• Demagogues- leaders who manipulate with half truths and scare tactics

• Supreme Court Packing?

Pg. 547-548

Page 23: Crash and Depression

Section 3- Last Days of the New Deal

• Labor Unions- grew stronger under the New Deal

• Sit-down strikes- Supreme court outlawed them in 1939, they were too successful

• New Deal has effects on the culture

• Literature- Their Eyes were watching God 1937, Grapes of Wrath 1939

Pg. 554-556

Page 24: Crash and Depression

• Radio and Movies- Jack Benny, George Burns, Gracie Allen; provided a temporary escape for struggling Americans

• Tin Pan Alley?

• Lasting Achievements- Many New Deal agencies, bridges, dams, and buildings exist today

Pg. 558-559