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Great Depression and the Dust Bowl: 1929-1942
Looking at how the depression affected people’s lives
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Great Depression and the Dust Bowl
By 1932, 12 million people were unemployed That is 25% of the entire American population at this time. (The unemployment rate now is 7%)
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Great Depression and the Dust Bowl
How do you eat when you have no money? People had to wait in bread lines and at soup kitchens for food
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Great Depression and the Dust Bowl
Many people lost their entire life savings when the banks failed, and therefore they also lost their homes They had to make new homes out of cardboard, tin, or crates These makeshift homes are known as Hoovervilles
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Great Depression and the Dust Bowl
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Great Depression and the Dust Bowl
What about the farmers out west? Life was just as bad as they faced falling income, foreclosure, and drought
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Great Depression and the Dust Bowl
Their income dropped by half Why? People could not buy food!
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Great Depression and the Dust Bowl
A drought in the plain states and southwest worsened their situation
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Great Depression and the Dust Bowl
The drought combined with poor farming methods resulted in a loss of topsoil, which would get whipped into giant dust storms The “Dust Bowl”
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Great Depression and the Dust Bowl
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Great Depression and the Dust Bowl
People couldn’t live and farm here with these economic and environmental problems A group of migrant farmers moved to California looking for work They are known as Okies
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Great Depression and the Dust Bowl
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Great Depression and the Dust Bowl
How do we beat the Depression? Starts in 1932 with a new President Franklin Delano Roosevelt defeats Hoover (FDR) He promises a New Deal for Americans
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