The 1930’s were a time of hope, despair and vulnerability for the United States. The Great Depression destroyed the American economy and left millions of people without money, homes, or food. American people deserted their foreclosed homes and found themselves living in Hoovervilles, which were shanty insufficient neighborhoods built in the suburbs of big cities. Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, the two most recognized members of The Barrow Gang, took advantage of the tanking economy by stealing cars, kidnapping children, robbing banks, and killing a total of thirteen people. The Barrow Gang captured the attention of many Americans during the Great Depression, both young and old, after becoming one of the most notorious larcenous
The 1930’s were a time of hope, despair and vulnerability for the United States. The Great Depression destroyed the American economy and left millions of people without money, homes, or food. American people deserted their foreclosed homes and found themselves living in Hoovervilles, which were shanty insufficient neighborhoods built in the suburbs of big cities. Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, the two most recognized members of The Barrow Gang, took advantage of the tanking economy by stealing cars, kidnapping children, robbing banks, and killing a total of thirteen people. The Barrow Gang captured the attention of many Americans during the Great Depression, both young and old, after becoming one of the most notorious larcenous