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Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%
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Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

Dec 28, 2015

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Page 1: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

Comparative Unemployment Rates:

Panic 1893: 18%Great Depression: 25%Great Recession: 10%

Page 2: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

Herbert Hoover was unlucky enough to be president at the time of the crash.

Page 3: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

Due to the perception that Hoover did nothing to combat the depression or aid sufferers,

homeless camps were called ‘Hoovervilles’.

Page 4: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

Andrew Mellon (Sec of Treasury and Republican) cuts taxes for the wealthy: that didn’t help the perception of the Hoover administration’s being pro-rich and uncaring.

Page 5: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

Then desperate WWI veterans head to Washington DC to demand early payment of their promised veterans ‘bonus’.

Page 6: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

They were known as the Bonus Expeditionary Force after of course the American Expeditionary Force for which they served.

Page 7: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

Thousands of vets camped out in DC; when Congress denied early payment for the desperate men, they sang ‘God Bless America’, went back to their squatter

camp, and stayed. And stayed…

Page 8: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

The vets stayed until the army and tanks showed up. They thought it was a show of support…

Page 9: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

…until they army began to burn their camp and tear gas the vets so that they would disperse.

Page 10: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

The sight of vets being tear gassed on movie newsreels and on the radio made Pres. Hoover look even worse.

Page 11: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

The perception was that Hoover was a laissez-faire Republican who figured the economy would fix itself.

Page 12: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

In fact, Hoover did start many projects such as Boulder Dam (later named Hoover Dam) as a means of trying to stimulate

the economy and create jobs; it was too little, too late.

Page 13: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

So in the election of 1932, Democrat Franklin Roosevelt easily won election to the Presidency.

Page 14: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

FDR’s charisma and effervescent attitude helped raise Americans’ spirits.

Page 15: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%

Eleanor Roosevelt, the First Lady, was a person who could relate to the common man and had no tolerance for intolerance.

Page 16: Comparative Unemployment Rates: Panic 1893: 18% Great Depression: 25% Great Recession: 10%