Chapter 14 – The Great Depression Begins Section 1 The Nation ’ s Sick Economy.
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Transcript of Chapter 14 – The Great Depression Begins Section 1 The Nation ’ s Sick Economy.
Economic Troubles on the Horizon
• Industries in trouble:– Mining and lumbering– Railroads– Radio– Steel– Automobiles
• All of these industrial weaknesses signaled a declining economy
Agriculture and the Farmers
• Prices for crops had been at an all-time high during WWI– Farmers had planted more and
taken out more loans to buy more equipment
– Government was buying food from the farmers at at a very high rate and cost
• After the war prices dropped by over 50%– A lot of farmers were unable to
repay their loans and lost their farms
Farmers cont…..
• Banks begin to fail because farmers couldn’t repay their loans
• McNary-Haugen Bill– Attempt by Congress to help farmers– Price-supports – the government
would buy surplus crops at guaranteed priced and sell them on the international market
• This bill was vetoed twice by President Coolidge
Living on Credit
• Credit – buy now pay later – usually with high interest rates
• Faced with rising debt, many consumers started cutting back on spending (slowed the economy)
Uneven Distribution of Income
• More than 71% of the population earned less than $2500 per year
• The rich were getting richer and the poor were getting poorer
Hoover Takes the Nation
• Election of 1928– Herbert Hoover v. Alfred E. Smith– Hoover wins the election easily and becomes the
31st president of the United States
Stock Market
• Americans who could afford it (and some who couldn’t) invested in the market
• Dow Jones Industrial Average – most widely used barometer of the stock market’s health– Measure based on the
prices of stocks from 20 large companies
Stock Market cont…
• Speculation – people were buying stocks and bonds on the chance of a quick profit while ignoring risks
• Buying on margin – paying a small percentage of a stock’s price as a down payment and borrowing the rest
• Both speculation and buying on margin caused stock prices to rise– They caused over-investment
because people bought more than they could pay for
The Stock Market Crashes
• Black Tuesday– October 29, 1929– A record 16.5 million shares
were sold– Millions more could not find
buyers– People who had bought stock
with loans were stuck with huge debt and unable to pay
Financial Collapse
• The stock market crash was the first sign of the Great Depression– Period between 1929 and
1940 in which the economy plummeted and unemployment skyrocketed
– The Great Depression was not just isolated to America – it was felt around the world
Bank and Business Failures
• Banks also invested in the stock market – and they too lost their money
• In 1929 around 600 banks closed – people could not get their money from the bank
• By 1933 11,000 of the nation’s 25,000 banks had failed and lost their money– Millions of Americans lost
all they had
Unemployment
• 1 out of every 4 Americans did not have a job by 1933
• Those who did have a job were working for very little money with very little hours
Hawley-Smoot Tariff
• 1930• Established the highest
protective tariff in United States history
• Designed to protect American farmers and manufacturers from foreign competition
• But had the opposite effect…..
Hawley Smoot Tariff cont…
• By reducing the flow of goods in to the U.S. other countries lost revenue – which they were using to repay their loans to the United States
• Also made unemployment higher
• World trade declined almost 50%
Causes of the Great Depression
• Tariffs and war debt policies• Crises in the farm sector• Availability of easy credit• Unequal distribution of
income
Depression in the Cities• People lost their jobs• Evicted from their
homes• Ended up with
nothing, wandering the streets
• Shantytowns – little towns consisting of shacks (built out of anything they could throw together for shelter)
Depression in the cities cont….
• Soup kitchens – offered free or low-cost food
• Bread lines – lines of people waiting to receive food – Usually provided by
charities or public agencies
Minorities during the Depression
• Often had it harder than did whites
• Suffered higher unemployment
• Lower pay• And racial violence
Depression in Rural Areas• Had one advantage
over living in the city:– Some farmers were
able to grow their own food
• However, with falling prices, rising debt, and the drought, many farmers lost their land
• Between 1929 and 1932 over 400,000 farms were lost through foreclosure
The Dust Bowl• Regions that were hardest hit:
– Kansas– Oklahoma– New Mexico – Colorado– Texas
• Farmers had cultivated so much land that there was nothing to hold the soil down
• Exhaustion of the land from overproduction
Dust Bowl cont….• Route 66
– Route to California followed by many devastated farmers and their families
– Became known as Okies– Black blizzards – the most severe
dust storms• Often reached all the way to
the East Coast cities
Women and Children during the Depression
• Women– Had to manage tight
household budgets; encountered opposition in holding jobs outside the home
• Children– Suffered from poor
diets and inadequate healthcare; many welfare programs and schools were shut down
The Legacy of the Depression• The Great Depression shattered many people’s
dreams. But in terms of mental health there are two lessons to be drawn from the experience.
1. It is clear that the suffering of the Great Depression became part of the national legacy. Fears of broken lives and ill health were handed down from parents to children.
2. The resiliency of a people, who banded together to help each other, with millions of anonymous acts of kindness illuminated an otherwise bleak landscape.
Herbert Hoover
• Elected president in 1928• His beliefs for the government:
– Laissez faire– Foster cooperation between business and labor– Individuals, charities, and private organizations should help the poor and
suffering out (not direct relief from the government)
Hoover’s Cautious Steps
• Asked employers not to cut wages
• Asked employers not to lay off workers
• Asked workers not to go on strike
• In the end, none of these steps were working
Boulder Dam
• Later renamed Hoover Dam• Started in 1930 – completed in 1936• 30 miles from Las Vegas• Provided jobs & water/electricity to SW
“Hoovervilles”
• Americans started calling all the shantytowns that had popped up “Hoovervilles”
• Directed at the president for not doing enough for the poor during the depression
Federal Home Loan Bank Act
• Law enacted in 1931• Lowered home
mortgage rates• Allowed farmers to
refinance their loans and avoid foreclosures
Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC)
• Agency established in 1932
• Provided emergency financing to banks, life insurance companies, railroads, and other large businesses
Bonus Army• Between 10,000 and 20,000
WWI veterans (1932)• Gathered in Washington to
demand their pay promised to them and their families for time served in WWI
• Most dispersed in peace• The ones that stayed are gassed
and pushed away with force• This incident made Americans
dislike Hoover even more
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
• Elected president in 1932
• Served longest term of all the presidents (12 years)
• 5th Cousin of Teddy Roosevelt
Roosevelt’s New Deal
• New Deal policies focused on three general goals:– Relief (for the needy) – the immediate
effort to help the one-third of the population that was hardest hit by the depression
– Economic recovery – the effort in numerous programs to restore the economy to normal health
– Financial reform – government intervention to stabilize the economy, and to balance the interests of farmers, business and labor
The First 100 Days
• March 4th – June 16th
• Roosevelt and Congress passed more than 15 major pieces of New Deal legislation
The “Bank Holiday”
• Roosevelt closed all the banks on March 5th
• Passed the Emergency Banking Act– Banks could only be re-
opened under the Treasury Departments supervision
– Federal loans were handed out as needed
• Helped restore the publics confidence in the nation’s banking system
Regulating Banking and Finance
• Glass-Steagall Act (1933)– Established the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC)– Provided federal insurance on each bank
account– Restored confidence to the customers with
the banks
Federal Securities Act (1933)
• Required corporations to provide complete information on all stock offerings
• Created the Securities and Exchange Commission to regulate stock market
Help for the Farmers
• Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)– Sought to raise crop prices
by lowering production– The government paid
farmers to leave some of their land fallow (unseeded)
– This lowered production which in turn raised crop prices
New Deal Projects
• Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)– Put young unemployed men to work building
roads, developing parks, planting trees, and helping in soil-erosion and flood-control projects
National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA)
• Established codes of fair practice for Industries and to promote industrial growth
• Example:– Public Works
Administration (PWA) - Provided money to states to create jobs chiefly in the construction of schools and other community buildings
Food Clothing and Shelter
• Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC)– Provided government loans to
homeowners who faced foreclosures• Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
– Furnishes loans for home mortgages and repairs
• Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA)– Provided direct relief for the needy
Deficit Spending
• Spending more money than the government receives in revenue
• FDR regarded deficit spending as a “necessary evil” to bring the United States out of the depression
The Supreme Court Reacts
• 1935 found the NIRA to be unconstitutional
• 1936 found the AAA to be unconstitutional and struck it down
FDR vs. Supreme Court• Supreme Court in the early
1930’s was more conservative (did not favor New Deal) & declared many programs unconstitutional
• In 1937 FDR proposed a Congressional bill to reorganize the Supreme Court calling for 6 new justices (And by law, he gets to appoint those justices!!!)
• Congress and press were outraged at his “Court-Packing” Bill – Why?
• Eventually he gets his way as several justices over the next 4 years retire
The Second Hundred Days
• Economy had improved during FDR’s first 2 years as president
• He still wanted more improvement– Unemployment rates remained high– Production still lagged behind 1920’s levels
• Roosevelt decided to launch a Second New Deal - another burst of activity aimed at providing more help for farmers and workers
Eleanor Roosevelt
• The First Lady (FDR’s wife)• Helped her husband out every chance she got
– very important part of the second new deal
Reelecting FDR
• 1936 presidential election– FDR (democrat) vs. Alfred Landon (republican)
• Overwhelming victory by FDR
Helping Farmers
• Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act– Paid farmers for cutting production
• 1938 – Second Agricultural Adjustment Act– Did not include a previous processing tax to pay
for farm subsidies
Works Progress Administration (WPA)
• Designed to help the nation’s youth, professionals, and other workers
• Headed by Harry Hopkins• Provided the unemployed
with jobs in construction, garment making, teaching, arts, and other fields
National Youth Administration (NYA)
• Created to provide education, jobs, counseling, and recreation for young people
• Also provided financial aid for high school, college, and graduate school
Wagner Act
• Reestablished the NIRA provision of collective bargaining
• Protected the rights of workers
• Allowed them to join unions without pressure from management
Social Security Act• 1935• 3 major parts:
– Old-age insurance for retirees 65 or older and their spouses
– Unemployment compensation system
– Aid to families with dependent children and the disabled
New Opportunities
• Several Women appointed to government positions
• Frances Perkins first female Cabinet Member (Secretary of Labor)
African-American Activism
• 1930’s saw growth of activism for African Americans
• Laid groundwork for Civil Rights Movement (1950’s-60’s)
• “Black Cabinet” – Group of influential African Americans to advise Roosevelt on racial issues.
President Fails to Support Civil Rights
• Roosevelt never committed to full civil rights for African Americans
• Did not want to upset Southern voters• NRA, CCC and TVA discriminated against
African Americans– Lower Wages– Few Jobs
Powell v. Alabama• 1932 Supreme Court Case• 9 African American men
were put on trial for raping two white women
• 8 of the 9 men were found guilty and sentenced to death in short 1 day trials
• The men didn’t have adequate legal counsel (a lawyer)
• Alabama ruled cases were legal
• Supreme Court disagreed, said that states must provide lawyers in capitol cases (death penalty)
Motion Pictures and Radio• Very profitable during the 1930’s• By 1940 65% of Americans were attending the
movies at least once a week• 90% of American households owned a radio
“Gone With The Wind”
• 1939• One of the most popular films
of all time• Dealt with the life of
plantation owners in the south
• Acted as a “get-a-way” from the everyday hardships of the Great Depression
Fireside Chats• Families usually spent
several hours a day together listening to the radio
• Allowed FDR to speak directly to the people.
• Spoke to them as if he were a friend, not the President.
• Comforted the common man
Grant Wood
• American painter• Painted “American
Gothic” – 1930• FDR appointed
writers and artists to paint murals to cheer up Americans
The Grapes of Wrath
• 1939• Written by John Steinbeck
– Also received assistance from the Federal Writer’s Project
• About the lives of a group of people from Oklahoma and their hardships during the Dust Bowl
New Deal Reforms
• During 2nd Term in office FDR sought to create a Third New Deal
• FDR did not favor deficit spending• Economy had slightly recovered, and Congress
pressured FDR to scale back the New Deal• Caused more unemployment• By 1939, FDR more concerned with Europe
(Hitler’s Rise in Germany)
Critics of New Deal
• Critics – Typically Conservatives– New Deal Made Federal Government too large– Government stifled free enterprise and individual
initiative
– Liberal Critics claimed that Roosevelt did not go far enough
Supporters of the New Deal
• Supporters – Typically Liberals– FDR Struck a reasonable balance between two
extremes (unregulated capitalism and overregulated socialism)
– Helped Country recover from economic difficulties
Deep Debt
• Federal Government had to go deeply into debt to provide jobs and help Americans
• Federal Deficit – 1934- $2.9 Billion– 1937-38 - $100 Million– 1939 - $2.9 Billion
Lasting Effects
• Workers Rights – National Labor Relations Board
• Acts as a mediator in labor disputes between Unions and Workers
• Still Around today
• Banks and Finance– FDIC – Banking regulations and protection– SEC – Monitors stock market
Lasting Effects
• Social Security– One of the most important legacies of New Deal– Old Age insurance and unemployment continues
to help families. – Impacted millions of Americans since 1935
• Rural Scene– AAA – Helped farmers keep farms. – Rural Electrification Administration (REA) –
Provided electricity to people in rural areas.
Lasting Effects
• Environment– Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) – Provided jobs
to thousands of workers in the region– Prevented floods in the Tennessee Valley– Provided cheap electricity to the region