Saturday, January 7, 2017

Module Four - Impact on People of The Great Depression

*******
Listen to "Great Depression New Deal Module Four - Impact of Great Depression on People" on Spreaker. *******
These links below will help you with translating tools between English and Spanish.
.


Impact of the Great Depression on PEOPLE
These children were living in that shack with their parents.
What was it made out of?
Why were they there?
What questions would you have asked them?

Impact of Great Depression - Introduction
An impact is when something has a strong effect on someone or something else.


Something was said that had an impact on these people. It was different for each one, but it impacted each one.

After the Great Crash people were poor, poor, poor. Many were so poor they would go around begging for some help. Any help. When you ask someone if you can spare something, you are asking them to give it to you. For FREE.

This is a video of a song and images of the time.  The song is 'Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?"

Think.

Why was the guy asking people if they could spare a dime???

Folks were down, way down, as in how much money that had. Also in how they felt in their mood, you know, depressed. People made music about the times to help people get their feelings out. There was an African American man named “Barbecue Bob.”

Image result for barbecue bob

Barbecue Bob
He was a very famous blues (type of music about sad things) guitar player from Georgia. One of his songs that shows what people were experiencing and feeling was called…

“We Sure Got Hard Times Now”


Impact #1 - Banks Failed
When a bank or business fails that means it goes out of business. It is no longer operating. No longer making money.

Image result for banks out of business Great Depression


Related image

These people wanted to get into this bank, but it was closed. Out of business. What do YOU think the sign may have said, besides "Closed?"

Banks lost a lot of the money belonging to their customers when the Stock Market crashed. The money that had been loaned out to people to buy stocks on the Stock Market was just gone.  

When people first heard that this was happening to their bank they would RUSH (hurry) over to it.  They called this a BANK RUN, as people were rushing to the bank to get the money that belonged to them before it was gone.  


Run on the bank.  This bank was closed. what did it sound like when this picture as taken? Can you imagine a conversation between some of the people in this picture?


Bank Run - Movie Version



This shows what a Bank Run might have looked like.
How do the people react to the sound of sirens?


Unfortunately, in too many cases,  there was no money left for them to get.  This made MANY banks close their doors and go out of business.  


See how the $ symbol, which represents the banking system, is breaking apart and falling down.
How does that match what happened during The Great Depression?

In 6 years (1929-1934) 9,815 banks closed in The United States (that is 40% of ALL banks that existed in 1929).  Along with them they took over 9,000,000 savings accounts, and AAAALLLLL of the money in them.  
Related image

Think of it, you were a hard working farmer (like the people below), or factory worker, and had been saving up to get a new washing machine to make the work around the house easier. No longer would you have to wash all the clothes by hand. Now, all that money you were saving in the bank was gone, and it was not even your fault.  You see, you could lose money even if you had not invested money in the Stock Market.  How do you now feel?

Image result for hard working farmer Great depression

How would YOU feel if you were this hard working farm family and all of the money you had saved in the bank was GONE because OTHER people were greedy and messed up???



Impact #2 - Businesses Failed and Closed

Businesses had it bad during the Great Depression. Why??? Because most people had no money to buy anything!!!

If a company cannot sell the products they make, they cannot pay for their raw materials (needed to make their products), their cost of getting those raw materials to the factory and the finished products to the stores, their fuel in the factory costs, and most importantly their workers.

Image result for raw materials for steel
These are all of the raw materials needed to make steel. See how a steel factory must be able to pay for many things in order to make steel?

If you cannot pay for these things, you will go out of business. Between 1929 and 1932 85,000 businesses closed down. That is an average of 21,250 EACH year.  Think of how many people no longer had jobs so they could earn money and go out and buy things.  

Impact #3 - Workers Lost Jobs



Unemployment During The Great Depression

All of the people working for those companies that went out of business lost their jobs. Many other people working for companies that DID NOT go out of business  STILL lost their jobs because there was not as much buying and selling going on.  After they lost their jobs they could no longer afford to pay their bills.
They had no money:
* No money for food

* No money to pay to stay in their house. (When you go to this image think about why all of her stuff is outside on the sidewalk.)

Everyone did not lose their jobs all at once. The problems and pain connected with lost jobs spread over a long period of years. At the start of 1929 unemployment was only at about 4%. That means 4% of the people who wanted to work could not (Example: If 100 people wanted to work, then 4 would NOT be able to find jobs).

After the Great Stock Market Crash in October of 1929  unemployment started climbing (going up)  as more and more companies closed down.


This graph shows unemployment started climbing in 1929, got to the worst in 1933, went down until 1937, went up a bit, and then dropped again in 1939.

Unemployment got to the highest  level in 1933 at 25% ( Example: If 100 people wanted to work, then 25 would NOT be able to find jobs).  This means one-fourth of all people were out of work at this time.

Image result for one fourth

If 1/4 were out of work, which color in the graph represents them?

People would stand in long lines trying to get any work they could. Sometimes they would even push and shove to try to get a job. Why do you think they acted like that?   

People standing in line to try to get a job. There was NO guarantee it would work.

Sometimes these lines would even be segregated, as in only one race.





See how most, if not ALL people in this line were African Americans?



Some men and boys would travel around the country by hopping on trains, illegally, to look for work. They were called Hobos (el vagabundo).  


Hobos hopping on train

Communities would put up signs telling these jobless men (Hobos) to keep going, as their town had enough unemployed of their own to help.  

Image result for Great Depression hobos billboard

Often these people, mostly men and boys, moving around would leave small signs telling other hobos coded messages about what that place was like.



Unemployment started to slowly improve (get better), getting to about 14% in 1937, but then shot back up to about 19% in 1938.  Things were slowly getting better, but the chance to get a job was still not good. All of this unemployment added to the suffering people were experiencing.
***

The story of hobos, some of it is people who actually lived through it talking.

Impact #4 - Large Numbers Of People Were Hungry and Homeless

Hungry


We have all been hungry at times, but the type of hunger many people experienced during this time was much greater. They were hungry because they often could not get food.



These people are hungry and living in a tent.
Do you "see" hunger on their faces?

They could not get food because they had no money. They had no money because they had no job. They had no job because their factory had gone out of business.  You see, there were connections between what happened and what it caused.  

There were people who helped the hungry.  They started places called:

SOUP KITCHENS



and BREAD LINES




Hungry people could come and get food for free.  Sometimes even children would be sent to get the free food


What do you think they will get in their buckets?



Look at the faces of the men in this Soup Kitchen video. What were they thinking?

One unfortunate thing was that even in giving out free food there was segregation by race.  

Why do you think this lines had ONLY African Americans in it?
(Remember Jim Crow segregation?)

What About Hunger Today???

Image result for bread lines modern day

This is a bread line from today.  What do you notice?
How is it similar to The Great Depression time???
What should we all do when we can?


Click on THIS link. It tells a story from today. Listen to it. Then think...How can YOU learn today so you can help kids in the future that will have these same problems?

Homeless

People also ended up homeless, and living on the streets because they had no money to pay for their places to live.


Homeless men sleeping on the street during The Great Depression

When they could no longer pay their rent, they would be evicted (put out of the house they had been living in).

Image result for Great Depression evicted

Why is their furniture on the sidewalk in the rain?
They had money at one time. What happened?

Often the only choice they had was to find what scraps they could and build little shacks in which they could live.


They built these shacks next to a factory.
Why did they build them there?

Sometimes they would join with other homeless folks and build up neighborhoods of little shacks called Hoovervilles.

Related image

See how they even, kind of, have streets?

They did this because they had no place else to go.  No matter the weather, they lived there.


Central Park - New York City
Winter time


The reason they called them “HOOVERVILLES” was Hoover  was the name of the U.S. President at the time, and many felt he was not doing enough to make things get better.


Click on the video below to see more