The Crash and Effects-Part 2 - Presentation Transcript
The Consequences of the Wall Street Crash
Towns Not Much Better Off
Unemployment everywhere
1932 Cleveland: 50%, Toledo 80%
Parks @ nights filled w/ homeless
Thank you Mr. Hoover
Every town had bread & soup lines
Every town had a ‘Hooverville’ (ramshackle huts for homeless/migrants)
Families searched garbage dumps for food
Example: 1931 NYC 238 people admitted to hospital suffering from starvation. Forty-five died
‘ No one is starving.’
Herbert Hoover responding to dreary economic news
Unemployment in the USA, 1929-33
Focus Task: What were the human consequences of the Crash?
You have been asked to prepare an exhibition of photos which compares the life of Americans during the boom times of the 1920s with the depressed years of the 1930s. Choose two pictures from the 1920s and two from the 1930s which you think present the greatest contrast.
Explain your choice.
Do you think everyone suffered equally from the Depression? Explain your answer by referring to your notes.
Fin
PSDs for The great Depression
During the last three months I have visited … some 20 states of this wonderfully rich and beautiful country. A number of Montana citizens told me of thousands of bushels of wheat left in the fields uncut on account of its low price that hardly paid for the harvesting. In Oregon I saw thousands of bushels of apples rotting in the orchards. At the same time there are millions of children who, on account of the poverty of their parents, will not eat one apple this winter … I saw men picking for meat scraps in the garbage cans of the cities of New York and Chicago. One man said that he had killed 3,000 sheep this fall and thrown them down the canyon because it cost $1.10 to ship a sheep and then he would get less than a dollar for it … The farmers are being pauperized [made poor] by the poverty of industrial populations and the industrial populations are being pauperized by the poverty of the farmers. Neither has the money to buy the product of the other; hence we have overproduction and under-consumption at the same time.
Evidence of Oscar Ameringer to a US government committee in 1932
PSDs for The Great Depression
Last summer, in the hot weather, when the smell was sickening and the flies were thick, there were a hundred people a day coming to the dumps … a widow who used to do housework and laundry, but now had no work at all, fed herself and her fourteen-year-old son on garbage. Before she picked up the meat she would always take off her glasses so that she couldn’t see the maggots.
From New Republic magazine, February 1933
There is not an unemployed man in the country that hasn’t contributed to the wealth of every millionaire in America. The working classes didn’t bring this on, it was the big boys … We’ve got more wheat, more corn, more food, more cotton, more money in the banks, more everything in the world than any other nation that ever lived ever had, yet we are starving to death. We are the first nation in the history of the world to go to the poorhouse in an automobile
Will Rogers, an American writer, 1931. Rogers had a regular humorous column in an American magazine which was popular with ordinary people
PSDs for the Wall Street Crash
Counting the cost to rich Americans:
The Vanderbilt family lost $40 million
Rockefeller lost 80% of his wealth – but he still had 40 million left
The British politician Winston Churchill lost $500,000
The singer Fanny Brice lost $500,000
Groucho and Harpo Marx (two of the Marx Brothers comedy team) lost $240,000 each
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