U.S. History Final. HoovervilleBreadlineCrashWorkDust 10 20 30 40 50.
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Transcript of U.S. History Final. HoovervilleBreadlineCrashWorkDust 10 20 30 40 50.
Hooverville Breadline Crash Work Dust
10 10 10 10 10
20 20 20 20 20
30 30 30 30 30
40 40 40 40 40
50 50 50 50 50
Question 1 - 10
• Before and during the Great Depression, what would happen to a depositor’s money if the bank collapsed?
Question 1 - 20
• President Hoover is often said to have been slow to react to the Great Depression because of his belief in “Rugged Individualism” which meant?
Answer 1 – 20
• He felt that Americans working to improve their own lives had lead to America’s greatness and success, and would solve this new challenge as well.
Question 1 - 40
• During the Great Depression, homeless people put up communities of shacks that were called?
Question 2 - 10• In the box that begins the ripple effect at letter E, what new
consumer practice in the 1920’s (roaring 20’s) led to this downward spiral in the American economy?
EConsumers/Workers
reaction
Effect on Workers
Industries’ Reaction
Effect on Industry
A
B
C
D
Question 2 - 30
• Letter B in this diagram should read?
EConsumers/Workers
reaction
Effect on Workers
Industries’ Reaction
Effect on Industry
A
B
C
D
Question 2 - 40
• Letter C in this diagram should read?
EConsumers/Workers
reaction
Effect on Workers
Industries’ Reaction
Effect on Industry
A
B
C
D
Question 2 - 50
• Letter D in this diagram should read?
EConsumers/Workers
reaction
Effect on Workers
Industries’ Reaction
Effect on Industry
A
B
C
D
Question 3 - 10
• Elected to the Presidency in 1932, he took America through the Depression and also World War II?
Question 3 - 20
• FDR’s plan for ending the Great Depression through massive deficit spending programs was called?
Question 3 - 30
• This Depression era program/agency employed men ages 18-25 to work for the forestry and parks service for $30 a month?
Question 3 - 40
• This Depression era program worked to build dams in the south in order to provide cheap electricity, irrigation and jobs to some of the poorest rural areas in the country?
Question 3 - 50
• This Depression era program employed millions of workers building roads, bridges, schools, hospitals and even provided funding for public art?
Question 4 - 10
• This Depression era program attempted to control farm production in order to raise prices, slaughtering pigs, plowing up crops and dumping milk which could have been fed to the hungry?
Question 4 - 20
• This Depression era agency was created to help restore faith in the banking system, providing a guarantee for the money that we put into a bank (It still exists today)?
Question 4 - 30
• Why did FDR propose his “Court Packing” plan for adding more Supreme Court Justices to the court?
Answer 4 – 30
• The Supreme Court had begun to rule many New Deal programs unconstitutional and FDR feared they would undo it all.
Question 4 - 40
• The decrease in the unemployment numbers during the Great Depression can be deceiving/tricky because…?
Answer 4 – 40
• Many of the jobs being created were only temporary government relief jobs, not meant to be long term.
Question 4 - 50
• FDR’s regular radio addresses to the nation to inform people of what he was trying to accomplish were called…?
Question 5 - 10
• The most likely reason for the unemployment rate more than doubling between 1929-1930 is…?
Answer 5 – 10
• “Black Tuesday” and overproduction mixed with underconsumption in America. The beginning of the Great Depression.
Question 5 - 30
• Explain how each of the following contributed to hard times for American farmers during the 1920’s and led to the Dust Bowl.
• Wheat prices• Poor farming practices (hint: native grasses)• Nature/natural forces
Question 5 - 40
• Though most historians agree that the “New Deal” did not lift America out of the Great Depression, what was FDR able to do for America through his New Deal Programs?
Answer 5 – 40
• The New Deal provided hope to Americans who felt there was no hope. While times were tough, people felt the government was at least doing something to try to end their suffering.
Question 5 - 50
• During World War II, Americans bought over $150 billion worth of liberty and victory bonds in order to?