How Did The Great Depression Change American Society In The 1930s

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Following the decade of economic prosperity and peace of the Roaring 20’s was the 1930’s which is commonly known as the Great Depression, an era of distress and instability that played an effect on altering the social, political, and economical infrastructure of the United States. Before the Great Depression, the United States was a representation of a consumer-driven society, with people loaning money from banks, in order to pay for luxurious items, they could not afford. However, in 1929, the stock market crashed, resulting in the nationwide closures of multiple banks and marked as the begin of turmoil for Americans. With the burden of the nation on the backs of all Americans, the meaning of life was changed and people waited day by day for the government to act and steer the nation back on the track for economic and political stability and progress, to be a …show more content…

Listening to the words of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, he once said that “In our seeking for economic and political progress, we all go up - or else we all go down,” indicating the need of a unified country in order to solve the crisis. The Great Depression, and the many hardships that accompanied it, greatly altered American society in the 1930s in many ways such as the questioning of the capability of government, the economic effects on the nation, and the perception of society, its morals, and its values.
At the moment of the Great Depression, many Americans lost hope in the government and hope for changes and government reforms. President Hoover, the current president at the time of the Depression, was faced with much criticism, was extremely unpopular, and was blamed for the struggle that Americans had to face during his presidency. Society began to mock the president, and small towns began popping up, which were known as Hooverville’s. Many poor and unemployed Americans stayed in

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