2) After people have realized that their stocks have completely hit rock bottom, people stormed to the banks to try and get what remained of their money to store at home, usually in their mattress, because they felt that it would be safer there. Because so many people tried to get to their money so quickly, many were upset due to the fact that they weren’t there fast enough and banks literally ran out of money to give to the people. (O.I.) Last, many Americans were struck by poverty so bad, they were not even able to feed their whole family. (O.I.)
The event that started the Great Depression was “Black Tuesday.” On this day, the stock market crashed. The so called “bubble” had burst. The roaring twenties were over. Banks were forced to close, as they had no more money for the massive amount of people that were making withdrawals. Many lost their jobs, and were forced to look for work elsewhere.
Unemployed parents could not pay for food or water, nor could they pay for clothing and shelter, and as a result, innocent children suffered. Incapable of providing for their families, many fathers became frustrated, and simply abandoned them, leaving them to fend for themselves. Other times, young children were left homeless, having no one to care for them. During the height of the Great Depression, at least 200000 young people and 25000 families roamed the country, in search of food. These alarming statistics show just how greatly the Depression did actually impact
Many American people lost their money and their jobs. They were jobless and they were unable to make rents or house payments. Some of them were kicked out of their houses because they couldn’t afford the house. And were homeless living on the street. The causes of the Great depression were when people started loaning money from the bank, and then they would purchase stocks on margin and get profit from it, but people did not make money off of their stock and they owed for the original stock.
It is companies such as the peach farm that force people’s insanity and revoke their sense of ownership and livelihood. At the end of the story there is a tragic scene where Rose of Sharon, one of the women of the group, gives birth to a stillborn child in the rain and Uncle John, a depressed drunk due to the death of his wife and mal living conditions, sends the dead baby downstream in hopes that the landowners of California receive the message that there are people dying due to their greed and self interests. Unfortunately the Joads and many others try to stay united but the horrors of poverty settle in as many people die due to the living conditions and there are many setbacks in their journey expressed as “livelihood,” was never met. The novel portrays an image of a world in which generosity and self-sacrifice are the greatest of virtues. It also portrays an image of the 1930’s and one of the causes of the Great
The great depression and the dust bowl brought a new myth to the 1930’s which was the misconception of self-blame and personal responsibility which evolved from the earlier self-made man myth. “Most Americans were taught to believe that every individual was responsible for his or her own fate, that unemployment and poverty were signs of personal failure” (CD; B, 662). Many men were ashamed and blamed themselves for their loss, some even pretended to still go to work during the day because they were too ashamed to let down their family. (CD; B, 663) Some Americans also blamed the president himself and named their poor crumbling neighborhoods. “Many Americans held the president personally to blame for the crisis and began calling the shantytowns that unemployed people established on the outskirts of cities “Hoovervilles” (B, 676; CD) The 1930’s also show examples of our continuing inequality in America.
Many soldiers returning from the great war (expecting to get their old jobs back) caused a great surplus of workers. The farmers that didn't go to the city (to find work) go together to form the national progressives (third party for farmers) and they created the Maritimers rights movement to promote their interests. Not only were the returning soldiers faced with job loss but they were also faced with the rising prices, strikes, the new role of woman, and the prohibition (ban of liquor) making their settling in a lot harder. The strikes were pointless because it resulted in people getting charged, workers losing their jobs and nobody even payed attention to them. The ban of liquor didn't last long either.
The 1930’s was the time when the culture in America really began to take shape. The Great Depression affected the lives of every American. The lack of government regulation left many people unemployed as well as, working in horrible conditions. Many Americans had become fearful of banks because of the growing economic panic. President Franklin Roosevelt tried to help the banking crises as we all the American people to regain economic strength and civilization.
The Great Depression didn't just end all at once. Many countries continued to suffer extreme poverty long after the governments declared the depression was over. When banks and businesses were forced to close down, it left millions of hardworking individuals without jobs and that then caused them to suffer financial hardship. With no way to earn money, many people could not pay their bills or buy food and needed help from the government to survive. The public were begging for some sort of program that would help them recover and hopefully gain back what they had lost.
Everywhere you go, poverty can be found. There are families living on the streets because they can’t afford a house. A few families are starving and cold because they lost everything they own in this economic depression. The reason is because rich people won’t spend a few of their dollars to help our economic situation while the poor put forth everything they had. I believe that it would be in the world’s best interest if state governments would hire thieves to steal from the rich and give to the poor.