The Great Depression
By Jackie White U.S. History II
Chapter 22 Section 1 “The Nation’ Sick Economy” Key Question: What caused the Great Depression?
Chapter Objective: Students will be able to identify and describe the causes of the Great Depression.
Chapter 22 Section 1 “The Nations Sick Economy”
Learning Objective: Be able to summarize several causes of the Great Depression
Main Idea: As the prosperity of the 1920s ended, severe economic problems gripped the nation.
Why It Matters Now: The Great Depression had lasting effects on how Americans view themselves and their government.
Terms, People, & Events: price support, credit, DOW Jones Industrial Average, speculation, buying on margin, Black Tuesday, Great Depression, Hawley-Smoot Tariff
Warm Up:
What would you do if you lost your entire life’s savings and couldn’t find a job?
How might you feel if you couldn’t provide food, clothing, or shelter for your family?
What would happen if you spent more money then you actually had?
What happens when many people and businesses are in that situation?
Beginning of Economic Problems
What did American companies do during World War I?
As European countries rebuilt in the 1920s they decreased their dependency on American products.
How will the decline in demand for American goods impact businesses?
If a company is loosing profits, what might the company do?
Industry
Some industries suffered from declining demand for goods after WWI
Some industries lost business to foreign competition and new American technologies
Coal industry declines b/c of development of new energy sources
Key industries barely made a profit (railroads, textiles, & steel) & had to lay off workers
New housing starts declined affecting other business that depended on construction
What types of industries would be affected by a decline in building new houses?Loggers (cut down trees)
Construction workers
PlumbersLandscapersElectricians
ArchitectsReal Estate Agents
Major Industries
What areas of the US will be most affected by the decrease in coal production?
Agriculture
http://www.iptv.org/IowaPathways/artifact_detail.cfm?aid=a_000757&oid=ob_000064&format=wmv
http://www.iptv.org/IowaPathways/artifact_detail.cfm?aid=a_000749&oid=ob_000064
As you watch the video clips list/identify 3 problems in agriculture.
Agriculture After WWI, demand for farm products fell drastically
Farm overproduction lead to a surplus of crops, which lead to a decrease in farm prices.
Many farmers were unable to make a profit to pay off their debts and some lost their farms to foreclosure
Congress passed federal price supports for farm products, but President Coolidge vetoed them
Consumer Spending What are some examples of things that people spend money on?
Complete consumer spending worksheet
What was problematic about consumer spending?
By making credit easily available, businesses encouraged Americans to pile up a large consumer debt
Faced with rising prices, stagnant wages, and high levels of debt, consumers decreased their buying, and could not afford to pay off their debt
Distribution of Wealth
What percentage of Americans made more than $10,000 annually?
What percentage made less than $1,500 annually?
What was problematic about how wealth was distributed in 1929-1930?http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPKKQnijnsM
Distribution of Wealth
Nearly half of American families earned the minimum amount needed for a decent standard of living
Unequal distribution meant most consumers had too little money to buy the goods produced by American factories
What is the NYSE?NYSE- New York Stock Exchange place to buy and sell stock since 1792
Stock Market
What is stock?Stock- a share of a company that entitles you to profits made by the company.
Stock Market
What does a stockbroker do?Stockbrokers-take orders from customers to buy and sell shares of stocks in more than 3,000 companies
Dow Jones Industrial Average- barometer of stock market health based on the stock prices of the 30 largest firms trading on the NYSE
Stock MarketWhy do people invest money into the stock market?
Speculation- buying stock in hopes of making a quick profit
Bull Market- period of rising stock prices
In 1929 only 3% of population owned stock (4 million)
Most were already wealthy, some hoped to strike it rich
Black Tuesday
On October 29, 1929 the bottom fell out of the market and the nation lost confidence
Shareholders frantically tried to sell before prices plunged even lower
Millions of shares of stock could not find buyers
People who bought stock on credit were stuck with huge debts
Stock prices plummeted and most lost their savings.
Stock Market
Many investors engaged in buying on margin, paying a small percentage of the stocks price as a down payment and borrowing the rest.
Buying on margin fueled the market upward and generated wealth but only on paper
When the market crashed most investors lost their life savings
What was the DOW average in 1927?
What was the DOW average in July of 1929?
What happened to the DOW average between 1927-1929?
What do we call that pattern?
When did the market crash?
When did the market reach its lowest point?
What does the cartoonist suggest will happen to individuals because of the crash?How does the cartoonist convey a sense of fear and shock?What do the looks on people’s faces indicate about the impact of the crash?
Causes of the Great Depression
Key industries barely made a profit cut hours or laid off workers
Agricultural decline post WWI, farmers couldn’t pay off loans, many lost their farms when the banks foreclosed and seized their property as payment for their debt
Americans were buying less b/c of rising prices and low wages
Wealth was not evenly distributed among rich and poor
Availability of easy credit during 1920’s caused many to go into debt
Chapter 22 Section 2 “Hardship & Suffering during the Depression”
Learning Objective: Be able to describe how people suffered during the Great Depression & the effect on men, women, & children.
Main Idea: During the Great Depression Americans struggled to survive & overcame adversity.
Why It Matters Now: Since the Great Depression, many Americans have been more cautious about saving, investing, & borrowing.
Terms, People, & Events: shantytown, soup kitchen, breadline, Dust Bowl, direct relief
Great DepressionWhat was it like to grow up during the Great Depression of the 1930’s?
How did the Depression alter family roles?
Did Depression hardship strengthen or weaken family bonds?
Great Depression
Period of time between 1929-1940 in which the economy plummeted and unemployment skyrocketed
How does the American Banking system work?People invest their money in the banks and banks then invest that money in the stock market or to give some of it out in the form of loans for mortgages, cars, & businesses
Can all Americans take out all their money at the same time?
No, because the money isn’t sitting in the vault some of it is invested so if everyone tried to take their money out at the same time the banks wouldn’t have enough money to pay everyone.
Rush on the Banks
During the Great Depression, people panicked and withdrew their money from banks, but some couldn’t get their money b/c the banks invested it in the stock market
Rush on the banks
In 1929, 600 banks closedIn 1933, 11,000 banks failed b/c the government did not insure bank accounts millions lost their savings
Protects your savings today up to $250,000
Gross National Product GNP- total output of the nation’s goods and services
GNP was cut in half from $104 billion to $59 billion
90,000 business went bankrupt
What was the higest percentage of unemployment during the GD?
Economic Collapse
Unemployment jumped from:
1.6 million in 1929
4 million in 1930 8 million in 1931 12 1/2 million in 1932
25 million in 1934 25% of nation’s families did not have a single employed wage earner
1 out of 4 people were unemployed
Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act
What is GDP? What was the GDP in 1928?
What was the GDP in 1933?
What impact did the Hawley-Smoot Tariff have on US GDP?
How would that impact jobs and business?
Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act
Passed by Congress in the 1930’s Established the highest protective tariff in U.S. History
Designed to protect American farmers and manufacturers from foreign competition
Had the opposite effect Tariff made unemployment worse in industries that could no longer export goods to Europe
Countries retaliated by raising tariffs
Global Effects of the Depression
As the U.S. economy collapsed so did As the U.S. economy collapsed so did EuropeEurope’’ss
WorldWorld’’s nations had become s nations had become interdependentinterdependent
World trade droppedWorld trade dropped World Wide unemployment soaredWorld Wide unemployment soared Germany and Austria were particularly Germany and Austria were particularly hard hithard hit
How might the global depression have How might the global depression have contributed to to Hitlercontributed to to Hitler’’s rise to s rise to power in Germany?power in Germany?
Bellwork:What would your life be like if you had no home to live in and no money to buy food or clothes?
What should the role of government be in helping people who are experiencing tough times?
Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act
What is GDP? What was the GDP in 1928?
What was the GDP in 1933?
What impact did the Hawley-Smoot Tariff have on US GDP?
How would that impact jobs and business?
Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act
Passed by Congress in the 1930’s Established the highest protective tariff in U.S. History
Designed to protect American farmers and manufacturers from foreign competition
Had the opposite effect Tariff made unemployment worse in industries that could no longer export goods to Europe
Countries retaliated by raising tariffs
Effects of the Great Depression
People lost jobs, were evicted from their homes, & ended up on the streets
Homelessness
Effects of the Great Depression
Shantytowns/Hoovervilles-little towns consisting of shacks that sprang up in cities across the U.S.
Effects of the Great Depression
Inhabitants blamed Hoover for their plight
Effects of the Great Depression
Hoover’s name became an object of ridicule
Soup Kitchens- free or low cost soup
Effects of the Great Depression
Effects of the Great Depression
Breadlines- Men waiting in line for free bread.
http://www.iptv.org/IowaPathways/artifact_detail.cfm?aid=a_000756&oid=ob_000064
Dust Bowl
Drought that began in the early 1930’s
Wreaked havoc on the Great Plains
No trees or grass to hold the topsoil in place caused sand and gravel to blow
Plowing removed the thick layer of prairie grasses Farmers exhausted the land from overproduction of crops
Dust Bowl
Dust storms hit Kansas, Texas, New Mexico, & Colorado
Dust Bowl
Migrant “Oakies” on their way to California
Thousands of families fled to California
Dust Bowl
Alendanre Hogue Grew up in West Texas
Part of the regionalist movement of artist who attempted to create unique American art
He believed plowing the land broke a sacred bond
Believed farmers deserved some of the blame for causing the Dust Bowl because of their farming methods
Painting Analysis What does the house, cow, the windmill, the dunes, the vulture represent?
What is the feeling of the painting?
Dreary, desolate, destruction, death, no signs of life or relief
• Lonely house vast distance between it and the one in the background emphasizes loneliness of life on the Great Plains
Skeletal cow it looks forlornly at the water tank that is empty
• Broken windmill the power of nature the wind has broken the blades
• The well has not produced any water and the water tank is filled with dust
The vulture waiting for the cow to die and the fate of life on the plains
What sense of the Dust Bowl does this photo give you?
Examine the photograph closely. What details from the photo suggest the impact of dust storms?
What agricultural problems contributed to the problems in the Dust Bowl?
Dust Bowl
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YDxvc-BuS5A
Why are the people in the photograph standing in line?
Irony involves the indirect presentation of a contradiction between an expression and the context in which it occurs. What was the original intent of the billboard?
What contradictions occur as a result of the line in front of the billboard?
A Relief Center in Louisville Kentucky by Margaret Bourke-White (1937)
Effects on Families
Americans believed in traditional values and emphasized the importance
of family Families entertained themselves by staying home and playing board games & listening to the radio
Some families broke apart under the strain to make ends meet
Depression Effects on Men
Difficulty coping with unemployment Men walked the streets in search of jobs Some men abandoned their families
Depression Effects on Men
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Hoboes- wandered the country, hitched rides on railroad boxcars and slept under bridgesNo federal system of direct relief- cash payments or food provided by the government to the poor
Effects on Women
Canned food or sewed clothes to make money
Managed household budgets Many people believed that single women had no right to work when there were men who were unemployed
Cities refused to hire married women as schoolteachers
Were not seen begging or standing in breadlines
Many women starved to death
Effects on Children
Poor diets, malnutrition, diet related diseases, not enough milk
Rickets- a disease caused by lack of vitamin D which makes bones become soft and prone to bending and structural change
Lack of money for health care led to serious problems, kids didn’t see a doctor or dentist
Effects on Children
School year shortened due to insufficient funding
Children went to work in sweatshops
Road the rails in search of adventure, work, escape
Social and Psychological Effects
Some people were demoralized & lost their will to survive
Suicide rate rose over 30%
3x more people were admitted into mental hospitals
Social and Psychological Effects
People stopped going to doctors & dentists
Many did not go on to college
Some put off getting married & having children
Frugality, never wanted to be poor again
Chapter 22 Section 3“Hoover Struggles with the
Depression” Learning Objective: Understand how Hoover’s reluctance to help Americans caused the Depression to worsen.
Main Idea: President Hoover’s conservative response to the Great Depression drew criticism from many Americans.
Why It Matters Now: Worsening conditions caused the government to become more involved in the health and wealth of the people
Terms & Names: Herbert Hoover, Boulder Dam, Federal Home Loan Bank Act, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Bonus Army
Who Won the Election of 1928?
Why might the democratic candidate not have won many states?
Herbert Hoover 1928 Campaign pledge, “A chicken in every pot and a car in every garage.”
Hoover’s Philosophy of Government
“rugged individualism”- the idea that people succeed through their own efforts. People should take care of themselves and their families and not depend on the government to bail them out. Self reliance, free competition,
individual liberty
Hoover’s Philosophy of Government
Opposed any form of federal welfare or direct relief to the needy
Believed handouts weaken people’s self respect Local charities should care for the less fortunate
Hoovers Philosophy of Government
The chief function of government was to encourage voluntary cooperation among competing interest groups
Federal government should guide relief measures but NOT directly participate in them
Hoover’s Response to Crash
Tried to reassure Americans that the nation’s economy was on sound footing
Remain optimistic Go about business as usual Believed depressions were normal parts of the business cycle
Do nothing and let the economy fix itself
Limited role of government in helping to solve problems
Hoover’s Response to Crash
Reacted with caution to stock market crash
Urged key leaders to work together to provide solutions and act in ways that would not make the economic situation worse
Urged businesses not to cut wages or lay off workers
Urged workers not to demand higher wages or go on strike
Economic Situation in 1930?
Continued to worsen Unemployment continued to rise More companies went out of business Soup kitchens, shantytowns, & hoboes became common
Misery of ordinary people continued to grow
Republicans lost control of the House of Representatives & Senate
Herbert Hoover’s Response
Directed federal funds to public works projects, such as the Boulder Dam, to jump start the economy & create jobs
What measures did Hoover take and what results did he achieve to help the economy?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oj7rdDoJKng
Hoover’s Response
Backed a series of federal programs: Federal Farm Board
National Credit Corp Federal Home Loan Bank Act Reconstruction Finance Corp The economy continued to deteriorate
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Z44gRBwLm8&feature=related
Patman Bill
Passed by Congress in 1924 authorized the government to pay a bonus to WWI veterans who had not been compensated adequately for their wartime service not to be paid until 1945 in the form of cash and life insurance policy
Wright Patman believed that money should be paid out immediately $500 per soldier
Bonus Army March on Washington
10,000-20,000 WWI veterans and their families went to Washington D.C. to demand bonus pay they were promised
Hoover Disbands the Bonus Army
Hoover thought they were communists and persons with criminal records so he opposed the legislation
The marchers refused to leave
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xu9FxiHp8ss
Hoover sent 1,000 soldiers under the command of Dwight D. Eisenhower and Douglas MacArthur to disband the veterans.
They gassed 1,000 people including an 11 month old baby who died & an 8 year old who went blind
The New Deal23 The New Deal
HOME
CHAPTER OBJECTIVE
To understand the impetus for FDR’s New Deal legislations and the impact these policies had on the American nation
1A New Deal Fights the Depression
OVERVIEW
After becoming president, Franklin Delano Roosevelt used government programs to combat the Depression.
Americans still benefit from programs begun in the New Deal, such as bank and stock market regulations and the Tennessee Valley Authority.
MAIN IDEAMAIN IDEA WHY IT MATTERS NOWWHY IT MATTERS NOW
TERMS & NAMESTERMS & NAMES
HOME
• Franklin Delano Roosevelt
• Glass-Steagall Act
• Federal Securities Act
• National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA)
• Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
• Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)
• Huey Long
• deficit spending
• New DealASSESSMENTASSESSMENT
MAP
23W I T H H I S T O R YI N T E R A C T
How would you begin to revive the economy?Examine the Issues
It is 1933, the height of the Great Depression. Thousands of banks and businesses have failed, and a quarter of the adult population is out of work. Now a new president takes office, promising to bring relief to the ailing economy.
• What can be done to ease unemployment?• How can the government help failing industries?
HOME
• What would you do to restore public confidence and economic security?• How would you get money to pay for your proposed recovery programs?
The New Deal
What Should Be Done to Cure the Depression?
Read each of the following suggested ways to fix the economy.
Pick the top three ideas that you think are best and label them 1, 2, &3
Pick the three ideas you think are the worst and label them 8, 9, & 10.
Election of 1932
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Democratic Candidate
reformer
Herbert Hoover
Republican Candidate
Incumbent (residing) President
Who won the Election of 1932?
Who were the two presidential
candidates in the 1932 election?
Who won the election of 1932?
Which political party was the winning candidate apart of?
Why might this candidate have won by such a large majority?
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Thirty-Second President
1933-1945
Suffered from polio & was partially paralyzed from the waist down.
He was able to stand with the help of leg braces.
Campaigned vigorously to prove he could undertake the job of President despite his disability
Brain Trust
A group of carefully picked advisers including professors, lawyers, & journalists that helped FDR set policies to alleviate the problems of the Depression.
New Deal
Goals of the New Deal:
1. relief for the needy
2. economic recovery 3. financial reform
FDR’s programs designed to alleviate the problems of the Great Depression.
First Hundred Days
What month is the president elected in?
When is the president inaugurated (sworn in) into office today?
First 3 months of Roosevelt’s administration (March-June 1933)
A burst of congressional legislation (laws) to address problems of the Depression.
Significantly expanded the federal government’s role in the nation’s economy.
A Wise Economist Asks A Question 1. What do
squirrels do with acorns in the summer & fall?
2. Did the man “squirrel” away his money?
3. What happened to his savings?
4. What does this cartoon tell us about Americans faith in the banking system?
5. What can be done to restore Americans confidence?
FDR Fireside Chat
How does FDR use the fireside chat?
What type of language does he use?
What was the focus of his first talk?
http://www.iptv.org/IowaPathways/artifact_detail.cfm?aid=a_000760&oid=ob_000064
http://www1.teachertube.com/viewVideo.php?title=FDR_Fireside_Chat&video_id=89365&vpkey=
Banking Reform
Widespread bank failures had caused Americans to loose faith in the banking system.
March 5, 1933 Roosevelt declared a “Bank Holiday”
Closed the banks to prevent further withdrawals & reorganization
Exit Ticket
Complete the, “Let’s Make A Deal” Worksheet.
Identify the specific problems Roosevelt will need to address as president.
Brainstorm possible solutions to each problem.
1A New Deal Fights the Depression
OVERVIEW
After becoming president, Franklin Delano Roosevelt used government programs to combat the Depression.
Americans still benefit from programs begun in the New Deal, such as bank and stock market regulations and the Tennessee Valley Authority.
MAIN IDEAMAIN IDEA WHY IT MATTERS NOWWHY IT MATTERS NOW
TERMS & NAMESTERMS & NAMES
HOME
• Franklin Delano Roosevelt
• Glass-Steagall Act
• Federal Securities Act
• National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA)
• Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
• Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)
• Huey Long
• deficit spending
• New DealASSESSMENTASSESSMENT
MAP
Insert make your own fireside chat or new deal program poster.
Emergency Banking Relief Act:
Authorized the Treasury Department to inspect the country’s banks. Sound could reopen, insolvent-remain closed
How does this help to cure the economy?
Restored confidence in banks
Glass-Steagall Act
Established the FDIC Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to provide federal insurance for individual bank accounts.
Regulating Banking & Finance
Federal Securities Act- required corporations to provide complete information on all stock offerings and made them liable
Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC)-regulate the stock market and prevent insider trading.
21st Amendment
Repealed prohibition so that government could raise revenue by taxing alcohol.
Rural Assistance
Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)- sought to raise crop prices by lowering production which the government achieved by paying farmers to leave a certain amount of land unseeded.
Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)
Government provided subsidies for limits on production of corn, wheat, cotton, pork, & tobacco
If farmers reduced their supply then prices would increase
Slaughtered 6 million hogs In return for withdrawing land, farmers received “rental” payments from the AAA
Paid $200 million to plow under 10 million acres of cotton
Agricultural Adjustment Act
http://www.iptv.org/IowaPathways/artifact_detail.cfm?aid=a_000759&oid=ob_000064
declared unconstitutional in 1936 Revived in 1938 with modifications to meet Court challenge
Tennessee Valley AuthorityTVA Designed to
develop & improve the Tennessee River Valley region
Created thousands of jobs & other benefits to an impoverished region
Which seven states benefit most directly from TVA projects?
Built damns to prevent floods
Constructed hydroelectric power plants to attract more industry and provide electricity to homes
Power companies didn’t like the government production and sale of power they claimed it was unfair
Civilian Conservation Corps
Put almost 3 million young men aged 18-25 to work building roads, developing parks, planting trees, & helping prevent soil erosion and flood control projects. http://www.iptv.org/IowaPathways/artifact_detail.cfm?
aid=a_000755&oid=ob_000064
Planted 200 million tress in the Great Plains to prevent another Dust Bowl
Public Works Administration
Created in 1933 when Depression was at its most severe and economic system of U.S. was near “complete collapse”
Provided money to states to create jobs chiefly in the construction of schools & community buildings
Funded $3.3 billion to put people to work building roads, public buildings, improving waterways, and other projects
34,000 public projects
The poster claims that P.W.A. efforts were aimed at turning relief into what?
What examples of P.W.A. activities are found in Texas?
What primary activity was taking place off the west and east coast of the U.S.?
What public-works activity involved the Mississippi River?
National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA)
Established codes of fair business practices
Set prices of products to ensure fair competition
Established standards for working hours & a ban on child labor
Guaranteed workers rights to unionize and bargain collectively.
Home Owners Loan Corp (HOLC)
Provided government loans to homeowners who faced foreclosure because they couldn’t make their loan payments.
Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
Furnishes loans for home mortgages and repairs
Federal Agency Emergency Relief (FERA)
$500 million to provide direct relief for the needy
Food & clothing for the unemployed, aged, & ill
Keynesian Economics
Deficit Spending- spending more money then the government takes in to stimulate the economic recovery by putting money in the hands of consumers to make it possible for them to buy goods & services and thus fuel economic growth
British economist
John Maynard Keynes
Opposition to the New Deal
New Deal isn’t doing enough!- liberals
New Deal is doing too much!-conservatives
Opposition from the Supreme Court
New Deal Isn’t Doing Enough!
Many Americans were still desperately poor
Worst off were blacks & farmers
Key figures were: Huey Long Father Coughlin Dr. Francis Townsend
New Deal Critic: Dr. Francis Townsend
Retired California Physician
Suggested a $200 per month pension for people over 60
Open jobs for younger unemployment
Funded by a national transaction sales tax
New Deal Critic: Father Charles Coughlin
Catholic radio priest in Detroit Michigan in 1930’s
10 million listeners Criticized FDR in weekly radio program
Critical of New Deal International conspiracy of bankers
Fascist; Anti-Semitic overtones
National Union for Social Justice
Every person capable of work should receive a fair, living, annual wage
Nationalizing some public resources
Private ownership of property but controlling it for public good
Right for workers to form unions & govt support & protection
Human rights over property rights
Father Charles Coughlin
New Deal Critic: Huey Long
Governor of Louisiana & U.S. Senator
Populist who championed the working class & the poor
“The Kingfish” Critic of FDR’s New Deal for not doing enough to redistribute wealth
Promoted “Share the Wealth” program
Shot & killed by Dr. Carl Weiss in 1936
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hphgHi6FD8k&feature=related
“Share Our Wealth” 1. Federal govt give every family an allowance of not less than 1/3 the average family wealth of the country
No family have a fortune more than 100-300 times the average family fortune
Capital levy tax on income over $1 million 2. No person have an income less than $2,000-$2,500 annually
3. Limit/regulate working hours to prevent overproduction and allow workers time for recreation, education, etc.
4. Old Age Pension for people over 60 years old Guarantee all citizens a car, a house, a pension, & an education
Popular with the poor
The New Deal is Doing Too Much!
Business Community & Republicans ND too complicated, too many codes & regulations
Govt shouldn’t support unions & wages, that is the job of the market
ND like Stalin’s 5 year Plan Wealthy worked hard, high taxes discourage people from working hard, & gave money to people who did little for it.
The New Deal is Doing Too Much!
Govt schemes like TVA unfair competition since private companies aren’t funded by govt
What is FDR wearing?
What does his clothing represent?
What is FDR pointing at?
What compass did FDR want to change? Why?
How might the cartoonist feel about FDR’s power as president?
•FDR is behaving like a dictator
1A New Deal Fights the
Depression
1. List problems that President Roosevelt confronted and how he tried to solve them.
continued . . .
Massive unemployment
Bank holiday; treasury inspection; deposit insurance
Federal work programs
Paying farmers to slow crop production
Lack of confidence in banks
Low crop prices
HOME
Problems Solutions
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ASSESSMENT
1A New Deal Fights the Depression
2. Of the New Deal programs discussed in this section, which do you consider the most important?Think About:
ANSWERANSWER
POSSIBLE RESPONSES:
•The FDIC boosted confidence in banks
•The CCC provided aid for unemployment and helped the environment.
• the type of assistance offered by each program• the scope of each program
• the impact of each program
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ASSESSMENT
continued . . .
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1A New Deal Fights the
Depression
3. Do you think Roosevelt was wrong to try to “pack” the Supreme Court with those in favor of the New Deal? ANSWERANSWER
POSSIBLE RESPONSES:
•No: Given the crisis of the Depression, it was necessary for FDR to restructure the Court.
•Yes: FDR’s proposed “Court-packing bill” would violate principles of judicial independence and the separation of powers.
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ASSESSMENT
continued . . .
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1A New Deal Fights the
Depression
4. The New Deal has often been referred to as a turning point in American history. Cite examples to explain why.
ANSWERANSWER
The New Deal helped the failing banking system, restored people’s hope in the future, provided assistance to farmers and those in need of housing, and provided people with jobs.
HOME
ASSESSMENT
End of Section 1
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