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The Great Depression and the New Deal (1928-1941) The Great Depression and the New Deal (1928-1941)

The Great Depression and the New Deal (1928-1941) - PowerPoint Presentation

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The Great Depression and the New Deal (1928-1941) - PPT Presentation

Lesson 2 Americans Suffer Learning Objectives Examine the spread of unemployment in Americas cities Analyze the effects of the Great Depression on farmers Analyze the impact of human and geographical factors that created the Dust Bowl ID: 611599

depression americans poverty great americans depression great poverty america economic rural cities struggles times hardship hard farmers unemployment shakes

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Slide1

The Great Depression and the New Deal (1928-1941)

Lesson 2

Americans SufferSlide2

Learning Objectives

Examine the spread of unemployment in America’s cities.

Analyze the effects of the Great Depression on farmers.

Analyze the impact of human and geographical factors that created the Dust Bowl.

Describe how the Great Depression affected family life and the lives of African Americans and Mexican Americans.

The Great Depression and the New Deal (1928-1941)

Lesson 2

Americans SufferSlide3

Key Terms

bread line

Hoovervilles

tenant farmers

Dust Bowl

Okiesrepatriation

The Great Depression and the New Deal (1928-1941)

Lesson 2

Americans SufferSlide4

Economic Hardship Shakes the Cities

The stock market crash signaled the end of boom times and the beginning of hard times. As investors mourned their losses, Americans watched the economy stagger into the Great Depression. In the cities and on the farms, desperate poverty gripped the nation. Even after prosperity returned, those who lived through the crisis would remember the pain and worries of the depression. Tested by extreme hardship, this generation of Americans forged a character and will strong enough to overcome economic ruin and restore prosperity.Slide5

Economic Hardship Shakes the Cities

Unemployment Leaves Families Struggling

Poverty Becomes a Reality for Many

The Challenges of HomelessnessSlide6

Economic Hardship Shakes the Cities

Unemployed men gathered outside a busy New York City unemployment office during the 1930s. New York police officers stood guard. Draw Conclusions Why do you think this unemployment office required guarding?Slide7

Economic Hardship Shakes the Cities

Analyze Graphs How many millions of people lost their jobs between 1928 and 1933? During which years did unemployment increase the most?Slide8

Rural America Struggles with Poverty

In cities and towns across the nation, Americans faced a terrible plight. The numbers of the unemployed, homeless, and hopeless increased like a casualty list in some great war. In rural America, people fared no better. In fact, sometimes their condition was even worse. Farmers had been suffering even before the Great Depression. Falling commodity prices and accumulating debt had made it a struggle for farmers to keep their heads above water. Many failed to stay afloat and sank so deep that they lost their farms.Slide9

Rural America Struggles with Poverty

Crop Prices Fall

Losing the Family Farm

The Dust Bowl

Moving Wherever Work Can Be FoundSlide10

Rural America Struggles with Poverty

Draw Conclusions Why did commodity prices fall after 1919, even though the Great Depression was years away?Slide11

Rural America Struggles with Poverty

Dairy farmers poured out their milk as part of a 1932 protest. Infer What can you infer about the price farmers received for milk in 1932?Slide12

Rural America Struggles with Poverty

Analyze Maps Which two states appear to have been hardest hit by erosion? What is unusual about California's location compared to other destinations?Slide13

Rural America Struggles with Poverty

Combined with the severe drought, how did the planting of wheat lead to the loss of topsoil and the dust storms?Slide14

Hard Times Hit Most Americans

One of the ironies of the depression was the word itself. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, an economic slump was called a “panic” or a “crisis.” President Hoover used the word depression to describe the state of affairs because he thought it sounded less severe than the other terms. But before long, Hoover’s “depression” gave way to the “Depression” and then the “Great Depression.” The term described not only a state of mind, but also an economic reality. It showed a despondent America, filled with people overwhelmed by seemingly inescapable poverty. Not only did the depression make victims of the men and women who lost jobs, it also was an economic and emotional crisis that profoundly affected U.S. society.Slide15

Hard Times Hit Most Americans

Families Suffer During the Depression

Poor Minorities Suffer DisproportionatelySlide16

Hard Times Hit Most Americans

Wealthy individuals often had to accept menial jobs to make a living. After losing his wealth in the stock market crash, former millionaire Fred Bell sold apples on a street corner.Slide17

Quiz: Economic Hardship Shakes the Cities

What does it mean to say that factory workers sometimes went “from unemployed to unemployable”?

A. They started off wanting to work but changed their minds.

B. They took on a ragged appearance that kept employers from hiring them.

C. They physically broke down and were no longer able to handle difficult work.

D. They rejected the reduced hours and shortened workweeks offered by their employers.Slide18

Quiz: Rural America Struggles with Poverty

Which region experienced the most severe effects of the Dust Bowl?

A. the Midwest

B. the Pacific Coast

C. the southern Great Plains

D. the Appalachian HighlandsSlide19

Quiz: Hard Times Hit Most Americans

Why did some Americans push for Mexican American and Asian American repatriation?

A. Housing in the Southwest was extremely limited.

B. Some white people wanted to eliminate minority competition for jobs.

C. Mexican Americans and Asian Americans mostly came from Oklahoma, so they were outsiders in the Southwest.

D. Mexican Americans and Asian Americans were mostly sharecroppers who were thrown off the land they had been farming.