great depression

35

Upload: drs412

Post on 29-Oct-2014

11 views

Category:

Health & Medicine


4 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Great depression
Page 2: Great depression

1929-1939• Stock market

crash

• Didn’t realize the effect it would have

• No money to replenish what was borrowed

Many found being broke humiliating.

Page 3: Great depression

The Roaring 20’s• The new concept of

“credit” • People were buying:

– Automobiles

– Appliances

– Clothes

• Fun times reigned– Dancing

– Flappers

– Drinking

Page 4: Great depression

Why was this bad?• Credit system

– People didn’t really have the money they were spending

• WWI– The U.S. was a major

credit loaner to other nations in need

– Many of these nations could not pay us back

Page 5: Great depression

The Stock Market• People bought stocks

on margins– If a stock is $100 you

can pay $10 now and the rest later when the stock rose

• Stocks fall– Now the person has

less than $100 and no money to pay back

Page 6: Great depression

And then….

• With people panicking about their money investors tried to sell their stocks– This leads to a huge decline

in stocks– Stocks were worthless now

• People who bought on “margins” now could not pay

• Investors were average people that were now broke

Page 7: Great depression

• Herbert Hoover was president at the start

• Philosophy: We’ll make it!

• What He Did: Nothing

• The poor were looking for help and no ideas on how to correct or help were coming

Page 8: Great depression

• Farmers were already feeling the effects– Prices of crops went down– Many farms foreclosed

• People could not afford luxuries– Factories shut down– Businesses went out

• Banks could not pay out money• People could not pay their taxes

– Schools shut down due to lack of funds

• Many families became homeless and had to live in shanties

Page 9: Great depression
Page 10: Great depression

Many waited in unemployment lines hoping for a job.

Page 11: Great depression

People in cities would wait in line for bread to bring to their family.

Page 12: Great depression

Some families were forced to relocate because they had no money.

Page 13: Great depression

“Hooverville”• Some families were

forced to live in shanty towns– A grouping of shacks

and tents in vacant lots

• They were referred to as “Hooverville” because of President Hoover’s lack of help during the depression.

Page 14: Great depression
Page 15: Great depression
Page 16: Great depression

A drought in the South lead to dust storms that destroyed crops.

“The Dust Bowl”

Page 17: Great depression

The South Was Buried

• Crops turned to dust=No food to be sent out

• Homes buried

• Fields blown away

• South in state of emergency

• Dust Bowl the #1 weather crisis of the 20th century

Page 18: Great depression
Page 19: Great depression

Two Families During the Depression

Page 20: Great depression

A Farm Foreclosure

Page 21: Great depression

Some families tried to make money by selling useful crafts like baskets.

Page 22: Great depression

*FDR*• When he was

inaugurated unemployment had increased by 7 million.

• Poor sections (like Harlem) had 50% of the pop. unemployed

• Instated the “New Deal”

• Yea! Frankie!

Page 23: Great depression

• People everywhere were effected by the depression

• It wasn’t till President Roosevelt took over and tried to put the economy back together that people even saw a glimmer of hope

Page 24: Great depression
Page 25: Great depression

Major Historical Happenings...

• Jim Crow Laws

• Scottsboro Trials

• Recovering from the Great Depression

• Racial Injustice

• Poor South

Page 26: Great depression

Jim Crow Laws• After the American Civil War most

states in the South passed anti-African American legislation. These became known as Jim Crow laws.

• These laws included segregation in…– Schools -- Hospitals

– Theaters -- Water fountains

– Restaurants

– Hotels

– Public transportation

– Some states forbid inter-racial marriages

Page 27: Great depression

• These laws were instituted in 1896 and were not abolished till the late 1950’s (even then still not completely).

Page 28: Great depression

• 9 young African-American men (13-20) accused of raping 2 white girls in 1931

• Immediately sentenced to death

• Trials went on for nearly 15 years before all the men were dismissed

Page 29: Great depression

• Started on a train bound for Memphis

• Several white men boarded and picked a fight with the black men

• Whites were forced off train by the 12 black men. The white men reported the the black men had raped two white girls on the train to authorities

• They were immediately arrested and tried in front of an all-white jury.

Page 30: Great depression

The trials caused a huge uproar amongst the black community.

Page 31: Great depression
Page 32: Great depression

• Wrote To Kill a Mockingbird in 1960

• Based the story on her life growing up in Monroeville, Alabama

• TKAM was the only novel she ever wrote

Page 33: Great depression

• The character of “Dill,” Scout and Jem’s playmate in the novel was based upon Lee’s actual neighbor, Truman Capote

• Capote is famous for amongst other things, In Cold Blood and Breakfast at Tiffany’s.

• It has been said that he gave Lee Mockingbird as a gift.

Page 34: Great depression

• In 1962 the novel was turned into a film starring Gregory Peck.

• It received a humanitarian award and several Academy Award nominations

Page 35: Great depression