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1929 The Great Depression Part 1
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The Great Depression Share Flipboard Email PRINT Migrant Family Dorothea Lange / Getty Images History and Culture History & Culture The 20th Century The 30s People & Events Fads & Fashions Early 20th Century The 20s The 40s The 50s The 60s American History African American History African History Ancient History and Culture Asian History European History Genealogy VIEW MORE by Jennifer Rosenberg Updated May 13, 2019 The Great Depression, which lasted from 1929 to 1941, was a severe economic downturn caused by an overly-confident, over-extended stock market and a drought that struck the South. In an attempt to end the Great Depression, the U.S. government took unprecedented direct action to help stimulate the economy. Despite this help, it was the increased production needed for World War II that finally ended the Great Depression. The Stock Market Crash After nearly a decade of optimism and prosperity, the United States was thrown into despair on Black Tuesda...
1929 The Great Depression Part 2
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Great Depression The Great Depression began with the stock market crash of 1929 and was made worse by the 1930s Dust Bowl. President Franklin D. Roosevelt responded to the economic calamity with programs known as the New Deal. UNITED STATES – CIRCA 1900: Young Man’s Opportunity for Work, Play, Study, and Health (Photo by Buyenlarge/Getty Images) New Deal poor-figures-from-depression-breadline Great Depression History young-black-men-accused-in-the-scottsboro-rape-case Scottsboro Boys smelting-furnace-2 TVA money-2 Bank Run wpa-workers-in-new-york Works Progress Administration (WPA) franklin-roosevelt-delivers-radio-address The Fireside Chats 44franklindelanoroosevelt The 1930s UNSPECIFIED – 1929: Front page of the Continental edition of the London ‘Daily Mail’ 25 October 1929 reporting the Wall Street Crash. (Photo by Universal History Archive/Getty Images) Stock Market Crash of 1929 franklin-d-roosevelt-4 Social Security Act migrant mother Artists of the New Deal Erosion is a...
The Great Depression 7 - Arsenal of democracy
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There are a lot of parallels between the present moment and the late 1800s, including a backlash against globalization: economist Author photo By ANDREA RIQUIER Courtesy Everett Collection Nope, not the Great Depression - there was one that by many accounts was even worse A financial crisis that left in its wake deflationary price pressures, low productivity, stagnant incomes, a spike in populism, a backlash against globalization: if that all sounds familiar, you may not like the following insight. It comes from Dario Perkins, global macro economist for TS Lombard, who, in a Wednesday note, described the historical period he thinks most resembles the current moment. That era is called, a bit bleakly, the Long Depression, and stretched from 1873 to about 1896, depending on the country. TS Lombard The U.S., for example, was in recession from October 1873 to March 1879, a stretch that remains the longest downturn on record, and which was followed by four more recessionary period...
The Great Depression 6 - To be somebody
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Kathy Gill Updated May 23, 2019 The 2008 financial market meltdown was not a solo event, although its magnitude marks it for the history books. At the time, it was the latest in a series of financial crises where businesses (or government entities) turned to Uncle Sam to save the day. Other pivotal events include: 1907: Run on trusts: The last days of deregulation 1929: Stock Market Crash and Great Depression: Although the stock market crash did not, by itself, cause the Great Depression, it contributed. 1971: Lockheed Aircraft is pinched by Rolls Royce bankruptcy. 1975: President Ford says 'no' to NYC 1979: Chrysler: US government backs loans made by private banks, in order to save jobs 1986: Savings and Loans failed by the 100s after deregulation 2008: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac enter a downward spiral 2008: AIG turns to Uncle Sam in the wake of the secondary mortgage crisis 2008: President Bush calls on Congress to pass a $700 billion financial services bailout Read on f...
The Great Depression 1 - A job at Ford's
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The Great Depression Share Flipboard Email PRINT Migrant Family Dorothea Lange / Getty Images History and Culture History & Culture The 20th Century The 30s People & Events Fads & Fashions Early 20th Century The 20s The 40s The 50s The 60s American History African American History African History Ancient History and Culture Asian History European History Genealogy VIEW MORE by Jennifer Rosenberg Updated May 13, 2019 The Great Depression, which lasted from 1929 to 1941, was a severe economic downturn caused by an overly-confident, over-extended stock market and a drought that struck the South. In an attempt to end the Great Depression, the U.S. government took unprecedented direct action to help stimulate the economy. Despite this help, it was the increased production needed for World War II that finally ended the Great Depression. The Stock Market Crash After nearly a decade of optimism and prosperity, the United States was thrown into despair on Black Tuesday, Octob...
Full Episode | The Industrial Revolution | BBC Documentary
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Full Episode | The Industrial Revolution | BBC Documentary
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Wessyngton Plantation: A Family's Road to Freedom | NPT
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����The decline of labour unions in the US | Fault Lines
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