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American Culture 1930-39

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American Culture 1930-39 I. The Stock Market Crash of 1929 The 1929 Stock Market Crash is well known as the most devastating crash in United States history. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: American Culture 1930-39


1
American Culture 1930-39
2
I. The Stock Market Crash of 1929
  • The 1929 Stock Market Crash is well known as the
    most devastating crash in United States history.
  • Which marked the beginning of the Great
    Depression.
  • It didnt happen on a single day
  • The stock market continued to plummet over the
    course of a few days
  • Setting in motion one of the most devastating
    periods in the history of the United States

3
II. Black Thursday
  • The most significant events started on Black
    Thursday, October 24, 1929
  • On that day, nearly 13 million shares of stock
    were traded.
  • It was a record number of stock trades for the
    U.S.
  • Marked the end of an upward trend on stock
    prices
  • On Black Thursday, the stock prices dropped so
    quickly, the stock ticker could not keep up
  • As the day progressed, the stock ticker lagged
    behind, failing to show the most up to date
    stock prices.

4
III. Top American Bankers Try to Save the Banking
System
  • On the next day, Friday, October 25, several of
    the nations largest bankers met to decide what
    they could do about the situation
  • Among the attendees were the heads of Morgan
    Bank, Chase National Bank, and National City Bank
  • The bankers ultimately decided to purchase a
    number of U.S. Steel shares above market price
  • The bankers who tried to thwart the 1929 stock
    market crash were unsuccessful

5
  • In those days, the stock market traded six days a
    week
  • The bankers move led to a slight increase in
    stock price on Saturday, October 26
  • Over the weekend many investors lost faith in the
    stocks and decided to sell their shares
  • When the markets reopened on Monday, October 28,
    1929, another record number of stocks were
    traded
  • The stock market declined more than 22
  • The situation worsened yet again on the infamous
    Black Tuesday, October 29, 1929
  • When more than 16 million stocks were traded
  • The stock market ultimately lost 14 billion that
    day.

6
IV. Causes of The Stock Market Crash
  • Rising stock markets
  • Throughout the 1920's, the New York Stock
    Exchange had risen dramatically faster than any
    time in the nation's history.
  • This sudden appearance of overnight
    multi-millionaires convinced many that the stock
    market was the easy way to future riches.
  • Indeed, during much of the 1920's, fortunes were
    made overnight by many investors who bought stock
  • frequently without little of their own money
  • sold it as it rose in value

7
  • Margin Loans
  • Refers to the practice of using borrowed money to
    pay for stocks in order to pay for much more
    stock than one could normally afford
  • An investor went to a bank and received a loan
    for the purpose of buying stock
  • The investor offered the stock to be purchased as
    collateral
  • Thanks to so many poor loans that were made for
    the purpose of buying stock, many banks were
    unable to cover their losses and were short of
    cash

8
  • Overproduction
  • Businesses boomed overnight in the 1920's
  • In order to assure buyers that they would not be
    left without items to buy, manufacturers produced
    at top capacity
  • What manufacturers did not realize was that while
    their output rose by 40
  • The wages of average workers rose only 25

9
  • Agricultural Depression
  • All through the 1920's, while those in the East
    Coast and Wall Street prospered, the American
    farm family suffered
  • During WWI while crop priced were high, many
    farmers went further into debt to buy more land
    and better farm equipment
  • When the war ended, crop prices plummeted
  • They had more bills to pay than they did before
    the war

10
  • European Depression
  • In the 1920's, Europe, source of several of our
    most important trading partners, was in a
    depression of its own
  • Paying for the unimaginable costs of WWI
  • The cost of WWI actually exceeded the amount of
    money in circulation in the entire world
  • European nations were forced to divert most of
    their national earnings into debt repayment
  • This had the effect of leaving little left over
    to trade with the United States

11
Great Depression Activity
  • Choose a partner.
  • One person plays the role of the interviewer and
    the other person plays the role of the
    interviewee.
  • Using your computers research the answers to the
    interviewers questions
  • Questions
  • Where were you living in the 1930s?
  • How old were you in the 1930s?
  • What do you remember most about the 1930s?
  • How did the Great Depression affect your family?
  • How was your life affected by the Great
    Depression?
  • What activities did you participate in during the
    1930s?
  • Are there any particular stories or experiences
    from these years that you can tell me?
  • What was a typical day like for you?
  • How was your life in the 1930s different than
    life today?
  • Is there anything else you would like to tell me
    about your life in the 1930s?

12
Great Depression Activity
  • Create a PowerPoint presentation for the
    interview
  • Each presentation must contain the following
  • A title slide
  • Each slide must contain
  • The question
  • The answer
  • A picture to aid in interpreting the
    interviewees answer

13
V. Historic Events
  • Dust Bowl
  • Tons of topsoil were blown off barren fields and
    carried in storm clouds for hundreds of miles
  • Its primary area of impact was on the southern
    Plains

14
  • Causes
  • Poor agricultural practices and years of
    sustained drought caused the Dust Bowl.
  • Plains grasslands had been deeply plowed and
    planted to wheat.
  • The droughts of the early 1930s deepened, the
    farmers kept plowing and planting and nothing
    would grow
  • The ground cover that held the soil in place was
    gone.
  • The Plains winds whipped across the fields
    raising billowing clouds of dust to the sky's
  • In some places the dust would drift like snow,
    covering farmsteads.
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