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THE GREAT DEPRESSION

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Upbeat musicals- Gold Diggers of 1933. Comedy- Marx Brothers ... of Labor- Frances Perkins. May, 1933- Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE GREAT DEPRESSION


1
THE GREAT DEPRESSION
2
BULL MARKET
  • The Roaring 20s saw the stock market go up
  • Bear Market- stock market goes down
  • Speculation- trying to turn a quick profit
  • Margin Buying- Purchasing stocks with borrowed
    money

3
STOCK MARKET CRASH
  • Oct. 24, 1929- Black Thursday
  • Oct. 29, 1929- Black Tuesday
  • Investors begin selling stocks, causes prices to
    plunge
  • Officials say it is only minor setback
  • Average income is cut in half

4
RESULTS OF CRASH
  • Factories close
  • Workers lose jobs
  • People cannot repay loans
  • Run on banks lead to their collapse
  • Overall economy is in decline

5
CAUSES OF DEPRESSION
  • World economy in depression
  • Easy credit- leads to debt
  • Farmers and others in trouble
  • Smoot-Hawley Tariff of 1930
  • Business Cycle

6
EFFECTS
  • Unemployment rises
  • Breadlines
  • Shantytowns- Hoovervilles
  • Farm Crisis- Foreclosures

7
POPULAR CULTURE
  • Movies with sound
  • Upbeat musicals- Gold Diggers of 1933
  • Comedy- Marx Brothers
  • Disney cartoons- Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck

8
  • Radio- Lone Ranger, Little Orphan Annie, and the
    Shadow
  • Comic Books- Superman and Tarzan
  • Readers Digest
  • William Faulkner- The Sound and the Fury

9
HOOVERS RESPONSE
  • Rugged Individualism- success through individual
    effort and private enterprise
  • Private charities and local communities should
    assist, not federal government
  • Public Works- Hoover Dam
  • Agricultural Marketing Act of 1929- creates
    Federal Farm Board

10
  • Federal Farm Board- buy up surplus wheat, corn,
    cotton, etc. , government could store and sell at
    later time
  • Home Loan Bank Act- money for savings banks,
    building and loan associations, and insurance
    companies to allow low-interest mortgages

11
  • 1932- Reconstruction Finance Corporation
  • Lent money to railroads, insurance companies, and
    banks
  • Begins shift to government involvement in economy

12
PROTESTS
  • Hoover becomes unpopular
  • Communists and Socialists parties grow
  • Protests become violent (Ford Auto Plant)

13
BONUS ARMY
  • May 1932- World War I veterans stage protest in
    Washington, D.C.
  • Demanded early payment of pensions
  • After Congress rejects idea, some protesters stay
  • Hoover orders army to disperse veterans

14
  • General Douglas MacArthur commands
  • Hundreds injured and three killed
  • Anger at Hoover grows

15
ELECTION OF 1932
  • Rep.- Herbert Hoover
  • Dem.- Franklin Roosevelt
  • Roosevelt calls for major policy changes
  • Wants more government involvement- the New Deal
  • Roosevelt wins and Democrats strengthen
    majorities in Congress

16
THE NEW DEAL
17
ROOSEVELT ADMINISTRATION
  • Brain Trust- group of advisers
  • First 100 days- 15 relief and recovery measures
  • Bank holiday- closed every bank until determined
    solvent
  • Emergency Banking Act- government will examine
    all banks and then only financially sound can
    reopen

18
FIRESIDE CHATS
  • Roosevelt goes on radio from the White House
  • Explains bank holiday
  • Would continue from time to time

19
NEW DEAL PROGRAMS
  • Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)-
    insures bank deposits up to 2500
  • Farm Credit Administration (FCA)- provides
    low-interest, long-term loans to farmers
  • Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC)-
    low-interest, long-term mortgage loans

20
DIRECT RELIEF
  • Relief for unemployed- reformers have pushed for
    since Progressive Era
  • Sec. of Labor- Frances Perkins
  • May, 1933- Federal Emergency Relief
    Administration (FERA)
  • Headed by Harry Hopkins
  • Americans resent- want jobs, not handouts

21
  • Civil Works Administration (CWA)- organized to
    create jobs such as raking leaves and picking up
    litter
  • Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)- employed young
    men to plant trees, clear brush, develop
    campgrounds
  • Money was then sent home to help families

22
RECOVERY PROGRAMS
  • FDRs short-term remedy was relief, long-term
    remedy was recovery
  • Many New Deal programs based on theories of
    economist John Maynard Keynes
  • Keynes believed that government spending was
    needed to create jobs and boost investment

23
INDUSTRIAL RECOVERY
  • 1933- Congress passes National Industrial
    Recovery Act (NIRA) in order to stimulate
    industrial and business activity
  • NIRA creates two new agencies- Public Works
    Administration (PWA) and National Recovery
    Administration (NRA)
  • PWA, under Secretary of Interior Harold Ickes,
    provided jobs by contracting for public works
    projects

24
NRA
  • NRA, under Hugh Johnson, promotes codes of fair
    competition among businesses
  • Businesses agree to work together to stabilize
    prices, wages, hours, and production levels
  • NRA suspends anti-trust laws
  • Guaranteed workers right to organize

25
  • People lose confidence in NRA
  • 1935- declared unconstitutional by Supreme Court

26
AAA
  • 1933- Congress passes Agricultural Adjustment Act
    which established the Agricultural Adjustment
    Administration (AAA)
  • Paid farmers to reduce their crops (subsidies)
  • Supreme Court declares unconstitutional

27
TVA
  • 1933- Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) created to
    build 38 dams and several power stations to
    provide electricity, flood control, and
    recreational facilities for the region
  • Best known of New Deal programs and most
    successful

28
CRITICISM OF NEW DEAL
  • Both liberals and conservatives criticized the
    New Deal
  • Liberals argued it did not go far enough in
    providing assistance to needy
  • Conservatives felt it went too far in government
    intrusion

29
CONSERVATIVE
  • American Liberty League- largely composed of
    Republican business interests and disenchanted
    Democrats, led by Al Smith
  • Complained that the New Deal was destroying the
    Constitution and free enterprise
  • Felt it would lead nation into bankruptcy

30
LIBERAL
  • Wanted more government involvement- Francis
    Townsend promotes idea of old-age pensions
  • Huey Long, the Kingfish, proposes
    Share-Our-Wealth
  • Sought to challenge Roosevelt as third-party
    candidate- but was assassinated in 1935

31
SECOND NEW DEAL
  • 1934- Democrats pick up more congressional seats
    in mid-term elections
  • Encourages New Dealers to propose more programs
  • 1935- Works Progress Administration (WPA) begins
    under Harry Hopkins
  • CWA had ended previous year, unemployment was
    still high

32
  • WPA employs people to build airports, bridges,
    public buildings, and roads
  • National Youth Administration (NYA)- gives young
    people between ages of 16 and 25 part-time jobs
    to help them stay in school

33
SOCIAL SECURITY
  • Social Security Act passed in 1935
  • Provided unemployment insurance for workers
  • Provided pensions for retired people over 65
  • Provided payments to blind and disabled
  • Paid for by payroll tax on employers and
    employees wages

34
OTHER PROGRAMS
  • Rural Electrification Administration
    (REA)-extends power lines to rural areas
  • Revenue Act of 1935 (Wealth Tax Act)- increases
    taxes on richest people
  • Corporations had to pay tax on any profit over
    10

35
ELECTION OF 1936
  • Dem.- Franklin Roosevelt
  • Rep.- Alf Landon
  • Republicans criticize New Deal for ignoring
    Constitution
  • Roosevelt wins by large margin
  • Democrats forms coalition of farmers, southern
    whites, city dwellers, industrial workers, and
    northern blacks

36
ROOSEVELT AND THE SUPREME COURT
  • Roosevelt asks Congress for the power to appoint
    one new justice for each one 70 years old or
    older, up to 6 new justices
  • Critics call it a court-packing scheme and say
    that it would upset balance between branches of
    government
  • Congress refuses
  • By 1945, 8 of 9 are Roosevelt appointees

37
LABOR
  • Wagner-Connery Act guarantees labors right to
    organize and to collective bargaining
  • 1935- John L. Lewis, head of United Mine Workers
    (UMW), and other union leaders form Congress of
    Industrial Organizations (CIO) to compete with
    the AFL

38
CIO
  • The CIO represents all workers in a given
    industry- United Auto Workers (UAW)
  • CIO welcomes blacks, immigrants, and female
    members
  • Winter of 1936-37 UAW strikes against General
    Motors
  • Use sit-down strike
  • Union membership grows

39
FARMERS
  • 1937- Farm Security Administration (FSA) makes
    low-interest, long-term loans to tenant farmers
    and sharecroppers
  • 1938- Congress passes a second AAA
  • Gets farmers to continue production cutbacks
  • Critics complain of high cost of subsidies

40
MIDTERM ELECTIONS
  • Recession occurs in 1937
  • Midterm elections- critics say New Deal not
    working
  • Roosevelt seeks to oust conservative Democrats
    who did not support his programs
  • Republicans gain seats in Congress
  • New Deal ends in 1939

41
DUST BOWL
  • Severe drought hits the Great Plains during the
    1930s
  • Okies- people who left to go to California for
    jobs

42
ART AND LITERATURE
  • Margaret Mitchell- Gone With the Wind
  • John Steinbeck- The Grapes of Wrath
  • Regionalists- artists who stressed local themes
    in their paintings- Grandma Moses and Grant
    Wood
  • Wood- American Gothic
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