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1930's Leigh Hollar 3/20/12 Coach Reid 3. 1930's ● The 1930's was a test to see if people could handle living in a tragic time of need.

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Presentation on theme: "1930's Leigh Hollar 3/20/12 Coach Reid 3. 1930's ● The 1930's was a test to see if people could handle living in a tragic time of need."— Presentation transcript:

1 1930's Leigh Hollar 3/20/12 Coach Reid 3

2 1930's ● The 1930's was a test to see if people could handle living in a tragic time of need.

3 1930 ● Banks foreclosed and people lost their homes. ● In November and December more than 600 banks closed. ● This was the first bank panic. ● There were bank panics in Tennessee, Mississippi, and Alabama.

4 1931 ● The second bank panic began in March. ● There was a mini bank panic in Chicago in June. ● There was a full scale panic in Toledo in August. ● In September-October there was 827 bank failures.

5 1932 ● Stock prices had dropped 20% of the value since 1929. ● Germany unemployment had reached 6 million. ● In the United States unemployment had risen to between 12 and 15 million. ● Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected president in late 1932. ● He increased government and public work projects to promote a recovery.

6 1933 ● In January, banks were closing for good. ● 30% of American banks closed between 1930 and 1933. ● $140 billion disappeared through bank failures. ● Detroit lost two big banks. ● Roosevelt signed the banking act of 1933 that year it was also called the Glass Steagall Act.

7 1934 ● GNP rises to 7.7% and unemployment falls to 21.7%. ● No banks were open from Monday, March 6 th to Monday, March 13 th. ● There was 16,096 banks in 1934 and only 57 were suspended. ● Nine FDIC banks that were insured failed. ● The FDIC had a fund balance of $292 million.

8 1935 ● GNP grows another 8.1% and unemployment falls to 20.1%. ● The social security act passes this year. ● The social security act was suppose to limit the dangers in American life. ● Congress passed five acts in 1935 ● The Banking act of 1935, Emergency Relief Appropriation act, National Labor Relations, and the Social Security.

9 1936 ● GNP grew to a record of 14.1% and unemployment fell to 16.9% ● Top tax was raised to 79%. ● President Roosevelt is elected to a second term. ● He wins every single state except Maine and Vermont. ● Germany becomes the second nation to fully recover from the Great Depression.

10 1937 ● Roosevelt attempted to enlarge and liberalize the Supreme Court, and that attempt now only failed but made everybody mad. ● He tried to add new liberal judges, which also failed. ● He also tried to get rid of the Democratic Party of conservative congressman. ● These fails lead to the Conservative Coalitiion.

11 1938 ● No major New Deal legislation is passed in 1938 because of Roosevelt. ● The reason it is not passed is because of his weakened political power. ● Congress passes Agricultural Adjustment Act and the Fair Labor Standards Act. ● GNP falls 4.5% and unemployment rises to 19.0%. ● Hitler announces his support of Japan.

12 1939 ● The Untied States borrows and spends $1 billion to build armed forces in 1939. ● From 1939 to 1941, when Japanese attack Pearl Harbor, U.S. Manufacturing will have gone up 50%. ● The Great Depression is ending worldwide as nations prepare for the upcoming war. ● World War 11 starts with Hitler's invasion of Poland.

13 Works Cited ● www.stockpicksstem.com/the- great-depression www.stockpicksstem.com/the ● http://history1900s.about.com/od/photographs/tp/gre atdepression http://history1900s.about.com/od/photographs/tp/gre atdepression http://www.shmoop.com/great-depression/photo-fdr.html http://www.flags-flags-flags.org.uk/japanese- flag.htm http://history1900s.about.com/od/hitleradolf/tp/hitlerpictures.htm http://history1900s.about.com/od/photographs/tp/Pictures-Of-Roosevelt.htm http://www.english.illinois.edu/maps/depression/pho toessay.htm


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