The Great Depression Essay

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    After doing some research on the Great Depression, I was able to learn a great deal on the causes that created this event and the policies implemented to try and end the depression. The Great Depression took place from 1929 and continued until the late 1930’s. It began in the United States, but quickly spread throughout much of the world over time. During this period, much of society were out of work, hungry, and homeless. In the heart of the city, people would stand in long lines at soup…

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    By the year 1933, the United States of America had already blundered through more than three years of the great depression. Factual evidence clearly illustrates the failure of the great depression, “More than 11,000 of 24,000 banks had failed, destroying the savings of depositors. Millions of people were out of work and seeking jobs” (Nation Archives). Additionally, many were working at jobs that barely provided an adequate wage to live off of. The value of the American dollar doped and had no…

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    Following the Wall Street Crash of 1929, the USA was in a state of crisis known as the Great Depression. It caused devastation worldwide due to the international loans that the USA had made worldwide. In the 1920s there was huge optimism over the future in America and therefore even ordinary people had invested in the stock market by taking loans from the banks. It also meant many people lost a large amount of money or assets after the Wall Street Crash because their shares in stock were…

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    1929, the United States was plunged into a depression that only seemed to worsen as the years drew on. The prosperous and riveting years before were forgotten as the country struggled in economic disparity. The country faced high unemployment rates, devaluation of the dollar, and bank failures along with a general sense of hopelessness. As Franklin Delano Roosevelt entered the presidential office, he promised the people relief from the Great Depression, recovery from the major economic collapse,…

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    the “Laissez Faire” policy gave assurance that the Depression would end soon but, in reality 6 million Americans were unable to acquire a job by 1931. Entire cities were filled with homeless people living and eating in unsanitary conditions. Millions of lives and jobs were ruined throughout the Great Depression. Not only were urban and modern jobs on the decline, rural work began to struggle even more. To reflect the tone of the Great Depression, a major drought started in the 1920s that caused…

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    The Great Depression definitely made everyone in America suffer, but many question who suffered more; the farmers in the Dust Bowl or the city dwellers, and that just depends on what aspect that you look at. The Dust Bowl farmers had a very rough time through the depression because they had no water, and they had no topsoil to even attempt planting a good crop. Although farmers elsewhere had issues because their crops were not selling for as much, they certainly did not have anywhere near the…

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    When the depression first began Herbert Hoover didn’t think the depression was going to last and he gave many speeches to help people regain their confidence and give them hope which he thought would improve the situation. He also invited businesses, financial, and labor leaders into the White House to encourage them to keep their businesses open and to do their best to prevent layoffs and keep wages stable. (1085) One of the things he did to create jobs was to start government construction jobs…

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    Life during the Great Depression was terribly hard for most Americans and the gap between those that “have” and those that “have-not”. Unemployment during 1932 rose from 5 million to a shocking 13 million by year end. The state of North Carolina was primarily rural, and therefore one that would feel the greatest sufferings. Franklin Delano Roosevelt would offer comfort by introducing what would be called “The New Deal”, in an effort to put people back to work and strengthen a very depressed…

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    of America. On this day, he gave his first inaugural address to the American people. He pledged “an end the bureaucratic stagnation that plagued the administration of his predecessor.” (Pbs). He promised to lift America out of the worst economic depression, it had ever seen with rapid action. Roosevelt won the Presidential nomination over Herbert Hoover by an outstanding margin. March 4th, 1933 marks one of the most important days in American history. It was a day that American people came…

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    On March 4, 1933 FDR became the 32nd president and it was up to him to devise a plan to help the nation get out of the Great Depression. He developed a proposal called the New Deal. The New Deal contained programs that provided funds and ideas to help fight the effects of the depression. For example, it would help aid those hungry, unemployed, homeless, broke, and etc. When the stock market crashed, more than 12 million Americans were unemployed and 1 million were absolutely broke. FDR’s New…

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