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The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

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The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn. The Economic Boom of the 1920s. Above: Mission Inn automobiles loaded with guests ready for a day excursion, 1923. Photo: Mission Inn Museum Collection. The Crash of 1929. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

The Great Depression, Riverside, and the

Mission Inn

Page 2: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

The Economic Boom of the 1920s

Above: Mission Inn automobiles loaded with guests ready for a day excursion, 1923.

Photo: Mission Inn Museum Collection

Page 3: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

The Crash of 1929

Right: Crowds gather

outside the New York

Stock Exchange as news of the

market crash spreads,

October 1929.

Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress

Page 4: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

A Ripple Effect throughout America

Above: Line of jobless men waiting for free food, circa 1930.

Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress

Page 5: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

Right: Portrait of President Herbert Hoover, a guest of the Mission Inn, 1939.

In 1929, President Hoover asked State Governors to carry out public works projects to help stabilize the climbing unemployment rate and crumbling economy.

Artist: Bonnie BrownPainting: Mission Inn Collection

Page 6: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 420

5

10

15

20

25

National unemployment statistics, 1922-1942.

In 1933, unemployment peaked at a record 24.3%

YEARSource: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

UNEMPLOYMENT

Page 7: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

Left: First Edition of John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath, a fictional account of two “Okies” moving west to California during the Great Depression.

Above: Author, John Steinbeck.

Photos courtesy of the Library of Congress and

A&E Biography.

Page 8: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

Above: Dorothea Lange self-portrait, 1934. Lange was known for her iconic photographs of dustbowl migrants during the Great Depression.

Right: One of Dorothea Lange’s most well-known photos, a migrant mother and her children, taken in California, 1936.

Photos courtesy of the Library of Congress

Page 9: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

Above: Postcard of the Mission Inn, circa 1925.Postcard: Mission Inn Museum Collection

Page 10: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

Below: Sketch of proposed Rotunda Internacionale Wing

by Architect G. Stanley Wilson, May 1929. Image: Mission Inn Museum Collection

Page 11: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

Right: Early construction on the Rotunda, early 1930.

View is looking towards 6th Street from Main Street.Photo: Mission Inn Museum Collection

Page 12: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

RIVERSIDE ENTERPRISE

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1930

CITY TO OBTAIN WORK FOR MEN

Plans to conduct an employment campaign for Riverside people who have been thrown out of work by depressed business conditions of 1930 were made at a meeting of representatives of welfare organizations with the building trades committee of the Riverside chamber of commerce yesterday afternoon…

Every property owner who has an odd job of any sort, from cleaning up the back yard to working on a ranch or in an orange grove, will be asked to turn in the information at headquarters. In response to these listings of employment, the central agency will send out a local resident whom local investigation has shown worthy and badly in need of work.

“A few hours of work at 50 cents an hour (about $7.00 in 2013) will not mean a great deal to most citizens of the city, but if a sufficient number of people cooperate in furnishing short jobs, it will tide over many permanent residents now unemployed,” [said] Duff Hansen, chairman of the chamber of commerce.

*Transcription of article. Original is available on microfilm through the Riverside Public Library Local History Collection.

Page 13: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

Right: Mission Inn owner Frank A. Miller’s Christmas Eve letter to his employees, regarding the economic downturn and poor business.

By December, 1930, the effects of the Great Depression were being felt by many businesses across America.

National unemployment was near 15% when this letter was written.

Letter: Mission Inn Museum Collection

Page 14: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

Photos: Mission Inn Museum Collection

The Rotunda Construction Project kept numerous Riverside residents employed during the first years of the Great

Depression. Despite dwindling business, Frank Miller hoped his major addition would prove a valuable long-term

investment.

Page 15: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

The Rotunda wing was completed in 1931, but despite Miller’s efforts, business at the Mission Inn never completely recovered.

However, Riverside fared better than most of the United States – not a single Riverside bank failed during the Great Depression.

Photos: Mission Inn Museum Collection

Page 16: The Great Depression, Riverside, and the Mission Inn

Looking North over the Mission Inn and Riverside, circa 1935.

Photo: Mission Inn Museum Collection