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The Great Depression 1929: Photos by Photographer Dorothea Lange

The document summarizes the key economic events and factors that led to the Great Depression in the United States beginning in 1929. It describes how various industries like agriculture, railroads and steel struggled in the 1920s. It then explains how the stock market crash of 1929 signaled the beginning of the Great Depression as stock prices plummeted, banks collapsed and unemployment skyrocketed in the following years. A combination of easy credit, high tariffs, unequal income distribution and low demand despite high production contributed to the economic crisis.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
66 views15 pages

The Great Depression 1929: Photos by Photographer Dorothea Lange

The document summarizes the key economic events and factors that led to the Great Depression in the United States beginning in 1929. It describes how various industries like agriculture, railroads and steel struggled in the 1920s. It then explains how the stock market crash of 1929 signaled the beginning of the Great Depression as stock prices plummeted, banks collapsed and unemployment skyrocketed in the following years. A combination of easy credit, high tariffs, unequal income distribution and low demand despite high production contributed to the economic crisis.

Uploaded by

Ronduck
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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THE GREAT

DEPRESSION
1929

Photos by photographer Dorothea Lange


THE NATION’S SICK
ECONOMY
As the 1920s advanced, serious problems
threatened the economy while
Important industries struggled, including:

• Agriculture
• Railroads
• Textiles
• Steel
• Mining
• Lumber
• Automobiles
• Housing
• Consumer goods
FARMERS STRUGGLE
• No industry suffered as
much as agriculture
• During World War I
European demand for
American crops soared
• After the war demand
plummeted
• Farmers increased
production sending
prices further downward
Photo by Dorothea Lange
CONSUMER SPENDING
DOWN
• By the late 1920s,
American consumers
were buying less
• Rising prices, stagnant
wages and overbuying on
credit were to blame
• Most people did not have
the money to buy the
food of goods factories
produced
GAP BETWEEN RICH &
POOR
• The gap between rich
and poor widened
• The wealthiest 1% saw
their income rise 75%
• The rest of the
population saw an
increase of only 9%
• More than 70% of
American families
earned less than $2500
per year
Photo by Dorothea Lange
THE STOCK MARKET
• By 1929, many Americans
were invested in the Stock
Market
• The Stock Market had
become the most visible
symbol of a prosperous
American economy
• The Dow Jones Industrial
Average was the barometer
of the Stock Market’s worth
• The Dow is a measure
based on the price of 30
large firms
STOCK PRICES RISE
THROUGH THE 1920s
• Through most of the
1920s, stock prices
rose steadily
• The Dow reached a
high in 1929 of 381
points (300 points
higher than 1924)
• By 1929, 4 million
Americans owned
stocks
New York Stock Exchange
SEEDS OF TROUBLE
• By the late 1920s,
problems with the
economy emerged
• Speculation: Too many
Americans were engaged
in speculation – buying
stocks & bonds hoping for
a quick profit
• Margin: Americans were
buying “on margin” –
paying a small percentage
of a stock’s price as a
down payment and
borrowing the rest
The Stock Market’s bubble was
about to break
THE 1929 CRASH
• In September the Stock Market
had some unusual up & down
movements
• On October 24, the market took
a plunge . . .the worst was yet
to come
• On October 29, now known as
Black Tuesday, the bottom fell
out
• 16.4 million shares were sold
that day – prices plummeted
• People who had bought on
margin (credit) were stuck with
huge debts
By mid-November, investors
had lost about $30 billion
THE GREAT DEPRESSION
• The Stock Market crash
signaled the beginning of
the Great Depression
• The Great Depression is
generally defined as the
period from 1929 – 1940
in which the economy
plummeted and
unemployment
skyrocketed
• The crash alone did not
cause the Great
Depression, but it
hastened its arrival
FINANCIAL COLLAPSE
• After the crash, many
Americans panicked and
withdrew their money
from banks
• Banks had invested in
the Stock Market and lost
money
• In 1929- 600 banks fail
• By 1933 – 11,000 of the
25,000 banks nationwide Bank run 1929, Los Angeles
had collapsed
CAUSES OF THE GREAT
DEPRESSION
• Tariffs & war debt
policies
• U.S. demand low,
despite factories
producing more
• Farm sector crisis
• Easy credit
• Unequal
distribution of
income
EFFECTS OF DEPRESSION
• Suicide rate rose more
than 30% between 1928-
1932
• Alcoholism rose sharply in
urban areas
• Three times as many
people were admitted to
state mental hospitals as
in normal times
• Many people showed great
kindness to strangers
• Additionally, many people
developed habits of
savings & thriftiness
End to Depression
• Outbreak of World War II
causes
– US factories flooded with
orders form armaments and
munitions
– Unemployment decreases
and production increase
– Depression ends completely
by the time the US enters
the war in 1941

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