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Crash & Depression. Chapter 32 (Cont.). 4/2011. The Stock Market Crash. 1929. Section 1. The “Roaring 20’s” was coming to an end. Review: Stock Market Boom. Summary: Stock Market Bust. Black Thursday October 24, 1929. The Dow Jones Industrial Average peaked at $381 in September
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Crash & Depression Chapter 32 (Cont.) 4/2011
The Stock Market Crash 1929 Section 1
Black ThursdayOctober 24, 1929 • The Dow Jones Industrial Average peaked at $381 in September • By October 24th, stock prices began to fall • Example - GE went from $400 to $283
The Market Crashes Panic on Wall Street Investors crowd the sidewalk outside of the NYSE
Black Thursday - October 24, 1929 • Pres. Hoover - business “is on a sound and prosperous basis” • Group of bankers bought shares to stabilize prices • Not enough to stop the panic
Monday October 28, 1929 • Investors continued to sell • Prices continued to drop Investors continued to panic
Black Tuesday – October 29, 1929 • Tried to sell stocks at any price • Bankers called in their margins • Losses totaled $30 billion dollars
High of $381 Low of $34
The Ripple Effect of the Crash • Less people able to buy goods (decline of GNP) • Leads to contraction • Severe contraction = depression • This contraction was so severe, it is known as the Great Depression
The Great Depression -Stock Market Crash to WWII • Approximately 1/3 of US banks failed • Unemployment reached 25% • GNP went from $103 billion to $56 billion
The Worldwide Impact • Countries depended on the USA for capital, markets, and goods • Contractions began in Europe • Result - they could not buy American products • (Germany was particularly hard hit)
Underlying Causes of the Depression • All of the warning signs that were ignored from the 1920’s. • Lack of government oversight • Lack of government response Note: Natural disasters did not cause the Great Depression but effected severity of it
Natural Disasters From floods in the Northeast to droughts in the Midwest
Social Effects of the Depression • Hoovervilles • Hobos - approx. 1 million • Farm distress • low prices due to low demand • evictions and foreclosures
Hoovervilles Shantytown in Central Park
The Dust Bowl(1931-1940) • Drought and poor environmental practices • Effected Great Plains and the Midwest • Hardest hit were Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska • Top soil blew into the Atlantic Ocean • Created a desert in the center of the USA • Displaced millions of farmers
Poverty Increased Social Problems • Alcoholism, spousal abuse, child abuse, suicide, and violence increased • Health and nutrition decreased • Hoover claimed that no one starved but historians estimate as many as 1 million people died from the effects of the Depression
Poverty Increases Social Problems • Divorce, marriage, and birth rates declined • Homeless people moved in with relatives • “Last hired, first fired” • Lynchings increased • Japanese & Mexicans were deported
Scottsboro Boys • March, 1931 - 9 African Americans were accused of raping two white women • They were convicted and sentenced to die without even seeing a defense attorney • They were later exonerated but not until four of them had spent many years in jail Scottsboro Boys with National Guard
Survival • People helped one another • States provided relief • Local charities assisted millions • Those that survived never completely forgot what it was like to live through the Great Depression
Surviving the Great Depression • People helped each other • Farmers assisted each other • Penny auctions • Violence prevented some foreclosures
Surviving the Great Depression • Estimated 1,000,000 hobos rode the rails • Approx. 250,000 of them teenagers
Surviving the Great Depression Hobo Symbols
Surviving the Great Depression • Political movements like the Socialist and Communist Parties gained membership • Entertainment like this new board game provided a pleasant diversion
Signs of Change Prohibition was repealed in 1933
Signs of Change The Chrysler building was overshadowed by the Empire State Building in 1931
Signs of Change • By 1935 • Calvin Coolidge died • Al Capone was convicted of tax fraud • Babe Ruth retired • Lindbergh baby was kidnapped and found dead • America’s heroes were changing
President Hoover: • Assured the American people the economy was improving • Insisted it was a normal business cycle • Thought direct relief should come from charity • Asked business leaders to maintain wages voluntarily