1 / 66

Chapter 33 APUSH

Chapter 33 APUSH. The Great Depression and the New Deal. Herbert Hoover Believed that federal government should not try to fix people’s problems . He believed direct relief would destroy people’s self-respect.

heatherq
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 33 APUSH

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 33 APUSH The Great Depression and the New Deal

  2. Herbert Hoover Believed that federal government should not try to fix people’s problems. He believed direct relief would destroy people’s self-respect. He believed it would create a big government which would violate laissez faire. Franklin Roosevelt Believed government had a responsibility to help people in need and provide direct relief. Believed capitalism and laissez faire needed to be reformed. Governmental involvement in people’s lives was a good source for those in need. The Election of 1932

  3. 1932 ELECTION • Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt, beat the Republican, Herbert Hoover, who was running for reelection. • FDR promised relief for the unemployed, help for farmers and a balanced budget. • Prohibition, whether it should be repealed or not.

  4. 1932 ELECTION • FDR and Hoover at FDR’s inaugural • Americans believed FDR could get the country out of the depression and put people back to work……

  5. FRANKLIN AND ELEANOR ROOSEVELT • Democrats • FDR appealed to the common man because he was crippled • Eleanor became the eyes and ears for her husband • Promised to help the people through the Great Depression by direct governmental involvement

  6. CARTOON 1932

  7. DUST BOWL • The Dust Bowl was an ecological and human disaster that took place in the southwestern Great Plains region, including Oklahoma, in the 1930's. • It was caused by misuse of land and years of sustained drought. • Millions of hectares of farmland became useless, and hundreds of thousands of people were forced to leave their homes----many migrated to California. • As the land dried up, great clouds of dust and sand, carried by the wind, covered everything and the word "Dust Bowl" was coined.

  8. CARTOON 1932 1932 ELECTION • Many Americans were unsure exactly what FDR meant with his New Deal. • Interests group were lining up to protect their self-interests in FDR’s New Deal.

  9. CARTOON 1932

  10. PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION • One of the immediate concerns of FDR was to raise the self confidence of the people…….. • He had to get people back on their feet by putting them back to work……..

  11. chats FIRESIDE CHATS • President Roosevelt began the “fireside chats” on a weekly basis as a way to reassure the American people. • His comforting voice, calming words, confidence in the country and the American people helped restore faith of the American people in democracy.

  12. 100 DAYS 100 days • Roosevelt’s 100 days was very successful….FDR and Congress went to work providing for direct relief, recovery and reform. • From March of 1933 to June of 1933, Roosevelt sent 15 proposals to Congress and all 15 were adopted • Congress and President tried anything reasonable to overcome the Great Depression.

  13. NEW DEAL CARTOON FDR's NEW DEAL Govt. programs which provided direct relief to suffering Americans through govt. spending……… • Renew democracy • Restore confidence in the banking • Stimulate economy • Put people back to work. • Restore self confidence Social Engineers Brain Trust How?FDR’s 3 R’s • Relief: ease suffering of the needy • Recovery:begin economic growth • Reform: help prevent future economic crises

  14. NEW DEAL: ALPHABET AGENCIES Part of FDR’s New Deal……Agencies created by the US Govt. to bring about the 3 R’s……Relief, Recovery, and Reform.

  15. alphabet NEW DEAL: ALPHABET AGENCIES RELIEF: Ease Suffering of the Needy FERA / 1933Federal Emergency Relief Act Distributed $500 million of direct aid to unemployed workers such as food, clothing and grants of money to cities.

  16. alphabet NEW DEAL: ALPHABET AGENCIES RELIEF: Ease Suffering of the Needy WPA / 1933 to 1943 Works Progress Administration Employed 8.5 million workers in construction and other jobs, but more importantly provided work in arts, theater, and literary projects.

  17. WPA • Works Progress Administration (WPA), the New Deals main relief agency. • People employed by the WPA at its peak was more than 3 million • 2,500 hospitals • 5,900 schools • 13,000 playgrounds • 125,000 public buildings

  18. WPA

  19. alphabet NEW DEAL: ALPHABET AGENCIES RELIEF: Ease Suffering of the Needy • CCC / 1933 to 1942 • Civilian Conservation Corps • Sent 3 million young men to work camps to build bridges, replant forests and other conservation tasks. • Develop job skills and improve environment. • Removed surplus of workers from cities, provided healthy conditions for boys, provided money for families.

  20. CIVILIAN CONSERVATION CORPS • Created in April 1933. • Within 4 months, 1300 CCC camps were in operation. • 300,000 men in 1933 between ages 18 and 25 • Signed up for 6 months and made $30.00 a month. • 1933 and 1941 over 3,000,000 men served in the CCC . • Goal: Keep teenage young men off the street and away from the job market. • Develop job skills and improve environment

  21. Planted trees, built public parks, drained swamps to fight malaria, restocked rivers with fish, worked on flood control projects and a range of other work that helped to conserve the environment.

  22. alphabet NEW DEAL: ALPHABET AGENCIES RELIEF: Ease Suffering of the Needy HOLC / 1933 Home Owners Loan Corporation Prevented mortgage foreclosures. US Govt. bought up mortgages and refinanced them so that homeowners could pay their mortgages.

  23. NEW DEAL: ALPHABET AGENCIES RECOVERY: Begin Economic Growth NIRA / 1933National Industrial Recovery Act • Created NRA to enforce codes of fair competition, minimum wages, and to permit collective bargaining of workers.

  24. NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL RECOVERY ACT • Also called the National Recovery Act. • Helped businesses organize codes setting prices and minimum wage. • Put people back to work at decent jobs, wages and working conditions. • Businesses were not forced to join this. • Declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1935 because it violated laissez faire.

  25. NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL RECOVERY ACT

  26. NEW DEAL: ALPHABET AGENCIES RECOVERY: Begin Economic Growth AAA / 1933Agricultural Adjustment Act • Protected farmers from price drops and over production.. • US Govt. Paid farmers (subsidies) • not to grow crops, produce dairy products such as milk and butter or raise pigs and lambs. • Prevent another Dust Bowl, teach farmers methods of preventing soil erosion.

  27. alphabet NEW DEAL: ALPHABET AGENCIES RECOVERY: Begin Economic Growth • TVA / 1933Tennessee Valley Authority • Federal government built a series of dams to prevent flooding and sold electricity. • First public competition with private power industries.

  28. TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY • Develop a poor section of the Southeast U.S. • Stimulate the economy and produce cheap electricity. • Control floods, planting new forests. • Bring this section into the 20th century. • 94 percent of property owners and 98 percent of tenants did not have electricity. • 30 percent of property owners and 41 percent of tenants had no toilet facilities whatsoever

  29. TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY • 65 percent of property owners and 78 percent of tenants had to travel at least 300 yards to get their household water. • 8 percent of property owners and 3 percent of tenants owned radios (usually battery operated). • 39 percent of property owners and 23 percent of tenants had phonographs (including record players that were operated with a hand crank).

  30. TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY • 50 percent of property owners and 25 percent of tenants read newspapers. • 26 percent of property owners and 16 percent of tenants owned automobiles. • 7 percent of property owners and 4 percent of tenants owned trucks.

More Related