The Great Depression was hard on all who lived in that time. This paper is based on 3 different events that happened during or after the depression. This article will talk about the life of a child in the city, a child of a farmer, and a political view of the Great Depression. The Depression started in the late 1920’s and early 1930’s. The stock market crashed and families were plunged into debt. Families that couldn’t pay off debt were put in a crisis as they had to pay off the debt or lose their home and property. The first character I will tell you about is about a young boy in a city, with the Great Depression raging all around him.
The boy tells the tale of his family in the time of struggle that is the Great Depression. I am guessing that they are in the American.Now, I will answer given to me that is how people changed during and after the Depression. Life was hard because certain things had to be limited. One of the reasons life was hard for them was because they had no steady job.
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The Dad was a miner, but probably because of budget costs, he had to quit. As it says in the article: The closing of the Old West Side Mine meant the end of anything resembling a steady job for the next eight years. That meant that the family was in trouble and the boy would feel unstable in an environment where no steady work was available. The biggest problem and emotion for the boy was probably hunger.
He had tiny meals as little as possible without starvation. It says in the article that they were good off, but they had to save money and thus cut the amount of food that they ate.The money the family had had to be saved, thus less food had to be consumed. And, though the food was never too scarce, meals were little with not a lot of food. You had to pay to buy seed to plant plants, which probably was hard to do with so little money. That meant that some food was store bought and that means that it may be more expensive to eat. It would have been rough for a growing boy like him to live off as little food as possible. The whole family would be looking for opportunities to get food as much as possible. The boy would probably have murky days, emotions powered by hunger. The fact that he was hungry would mean he would be distracted, angry, and a lot of other emotions that were overpowered by the sense of
hunger. It would also be hard and emotional would be hard because they didn’t have any sort of financial support. The people that lived through the Great Depression would probably feel a variety of emotions. The boy would feel that he was out in the open with no support. He would think that his life was now all up to others making enough money. It says in the article that they had no dependable income. They had to disconnect city water, gas ranges, and sell the Model T they owned, which was really nice looking. Before the Depression the boy would have probably thought that he had a future. Now, as he looked at everything going on around him, he wouldn’t think so. He may have had a chance of college that he didn’t have now because of money shortage. The boy probably thought that he was unsupported and had to rough it out and do whatever he could to get money, and a life! There is also sorrow in him. He would feel sorrow because of the turn of events. In the article the boy is almost openly praising the looks of the Model T. He loses almost all of the good property the family owns, including the Model T. He almost loses his home to a bank, but the bank asks for less money and is relieved to find out that they keep the house! He is probably very sorrowful because of loneliness as well. His mom was at home and his dad alway away trying to find work. Just to make things worse, he didn’t really have a future at the time. As I said above, he had a grim future if one at any. He couldn’t get a good education with no money to pay the school. He also couldn’t gain the advantage of having money like he had before. He would probably think every day that his future was destroyed. He would look at how the family was before the Great Depression to how it is in the middle of the Depression. That thought, and any type of thinking like that will bring a person down emotion wise. The boy would consider his options and see how murky they were for a good life and would think how unfortunate he was because of this loss of money and how it ruined his hope of a good future. Another emotion he might have felt was lonely. Everybody would be pitted against each other for the best amount and quality food. The neighbors would be there, but not a lot of people at the boy’s house.His dad was always working to get more money. This maybe led to a sense of roughness in the boy’s heart. As it says in the article, his dad sold iron cords, bought horses to till and break gardens, raised sweet potatoes, sold coal to people that ordered, hung wallpaper and painted neighbors houses, guarded the county fair fence, worked for a few days at a strip mine, picked peaches and sold them, and cut hair like a barber. That willingness to have a good house and position in society made him have a roughing-it-out spirit that may have been passed down, by experience, to his son. Another emotion might be anger. Anger at the banks for closing down and putting his family in such a poor condition. Anger at employers of his dad for not giving his dad more money. The bank company could have taken his house, which he probably grew to like after a few changes to the design. He would probably later wonder how he had gotten away with so little money in so long a time It says that even while they saved money, one day they were penniless. It says in the article that the cupboards were empty and the family were penniless. This may have made the boy feel like a complete failure. After all those conflicting emotions of hunger, anger, and sorrow at the remembrance of losing property, and still they were penniless. Some days he may have been more emotional than others because of turn of events, but after all of this, his emotion was relief. He had lived through the Great Depression and had made a life for himself. He had lived without all the property and he had changed. He now wouldn’t take as many things for granted and would see what a pleasure and blessing property was. Then we come upon the farmer’s boy. His first emotion may have been defeat. His father’s crops are dead. Money wasn’t coming in and he was in a conflicted household. It seems that he would be in an unstable environment. He would hear his mom and dad fight and would doubt himself. He probably had a father that had great soil before the hard times. He would be crushed to see his family fall into despair and poverty. He would think that his life was ruined. His once stable home was broken. He would probably hear his parents fight and think that he would never get through the times. If he loved both parents then he would feel crushed when they fought over issues that made they both miserable and angry. Another emotion might be thirst. It says in the article that there wasn’t much rain. With no rain to feed the crops, there would also be hardly any for the family to have.He would obviously be thirsty if he was deprived of so much water. He would thus feel angry at his parents and probably at the world. This is because of thirst and hunger. With no crops, there would be hardly enough money for seeds and more crops. This meant that hunger would strike in without enough money to buy seed or crops. He would feel angry as I said before. Angry at his parents for not having enough food. Angry at the world for going into such a hard stage of time to go through. He would be crouched up in a home in a dead farm with almost no hope of getting lots of money and food and water. All the stuff he needed, including water and food, would be limited. This would especially be the case if he lived in the American West in the Dust Bowl. In the end, after the Great Depression, he would feel strongly against being a farmer. He would see that it was hard to be a farmer and that all was at stake based on the crops. This would mean that he would have a natural thing against being a farmer. He wouldn’t want to risk what he had accomplished in life based on crops! Finally, there is the New Deal. This would probably be the cause of much happiness. The people of the United States would feel that the government cared. Everybody would cheer the change and call President Franklin amazing. After surviving such hard times the public would feel relieved. They would feel that they were sponsored. All the public would feel supported by a stronger force. That force was the American government, that would support them. They would teach their children that they could trust banks. This would be joyous in the government. The American people would feel that they could trust the government. That meant more power by the government, giving them the power to do powerful things. One of these things was pulling the nation out of a Great Depression and into a more positive future.
No Promises In the Wind, authored by Irene Hunt, gives an excellent description of growing up in the center of the Great Depression. Chapter One begins with the alerting sound of an alarm clock going off at 4am. Josh, a fifteen year old boy, leaves his bed, and departs from his family’s home to deliver newspapers. Notwithstanding, the paper route brought very little money, but the money earned was needed. Directly after finishing his route, Josh returns home to prepare for school, where he anticipated the day’s end, knowing that Miss Crowne’s music room belonged to them after school hours.
The Great Depression is one of the worst time for America. Books, cartoons, and articles have been written about the people during the Depression and how they survived in that miserable period. For example, the book Bud not Buddy takes place in the time of the Great Depression. Bud is a ten year old orphan, who was on the run trying to find his dad. There are many feelings throughout the book like sadness and scarceness. There are many diverse tones in the book about what people were feeling at the time.
The story’s main character, Jurgis Rudkus, goes through a great deal of hardship in this story. His family moves from Lithuania in hopes of chasing “the American Dream”. Instead they find that the higher wages they earn are offset by the much higher cost of living. Everyone in the family has
In conclusion, The Baker family went through a lot through the great depression, and it affected there lives in many ways that they thought it wouldn’t. This autobiography on the troubles him and his family faced during the Great Depression. During the Depression, the major problems that Baker faced through the novel were about the financial difficulties that his family endured, ending in result of his father passing away, the struggles of moving from rural life to urban life, and the lack of Medical attention around the area. During the depression, in Morrisonville there was a common occurrence as many towns people died from common illnesses like phenomena, or whooping cough. This book has much to offer to teenage readers who are interested in the story of one individual’s growth, development, and struggles of his life in the Great Depression.
During the 1920’s, America was a prosperous nation going through the “Big Boom” and loving every second of it. However, this fortune didn’t last long, because with the 1930’s came a period of serious economic recession, a period called the Great Depression. By 1933, a quarter of the nation’s workers (about 40 million) were without jobs. The weekly income rate dropped from $24.76 per week in 1929 to $16.65 per week in 1933 (McElvaine, 8). After President Hoover failed to rectify the recession situation, Franklin D. Roosevelt began his term with the hopeful New Deal. In two installments, Roosevelt hoped to relieve short term suffering with the first, and redistribution of money amongst the poor with the second. Throughout these years of the depression, many Americans spoke their minds through pen and paper. Many criticized Hoover’s policies of the early Depression and praised the Roosevelts’ efforts. Each opinion about the causes and solutions of the Great Depression are based upon economic, racial and social standing in America.
Compare and Contrast Essay Rough Draft January 26, 2016 Justin Park The Great Depression was the worst period in the history of America’s economy. There is no way to overstate how tough this time was for the average worker, and there was a feeling of desperation that hung over the entire country. Current political wisdom leading up to the Great Depression had been that the federal government does not get involved in business or the economy under any circumstances. Three Presidents in a row: Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover, all were cut from the same cloth of enacting pro-business policies to generate a powerful economy.
Junior sometimes had to go to bed hungry, but that wasn’t the worst thing about being in poverty. He made a diary entry stating, “Poverty= empty refrigerator+empty stomach. And sure sometimes my family misses a meal…and hey, in a weird way, being hungry makes food taste better (8).” This really puts the diary reader in his shoes about how many times he had to go without food and starve while trying to go to sleep, simply because his family couldn’t afford it. But to Junior, being hungry wasn’t necessarily that bad. What he felt was the worst thing about his poverty was that there was no money to save his beloved animal Oscar. Oscar became really ill and Junior wanted to take the animal to the doctor, but the family couldn’t afford it. When it came down to it, his father had to put the dog out of misery, and decided to shoot him. Visualizing someone having to shoot your best animal friend is heart wrenching. Most people have been in Juniors shoes where they have a sick animal, however they never imagine having to shoot it. This comparison of being hungry and losing an animal, shows Junior’s great strength at a young age about going through poverty, and sometimes even hope...
Diary Of Man During Great Depression Dear Diary I am 29 years old and I come from a lower middle class family. My ancestors came from England, but I was born in Australia. I haven't got married because I am having a hard time supporting myself let alone have a family of a few. I lost my job when the Great Depression began and I got one. about three years later.
During the depression it was not uncommon for family’s to go hungry and for parents to do unusual jobs for work. In Cinderella Man Jimmy Braddock was a father trying to feed his kids. When he saw that his daughter was still famished after eating her little breakfast, he gave her his breakfast so she wouldn’t go hungry. Hungry, he got up from the table
The article is titled "3 TVs and No Food: Growing Up Poor in America," written by Nicholas Kristof, a journalist, author, liberal / progressive op-ed columnist, and a winner of two Pulitzer Prizes, focuses on child poverty in the US and how the government fails to inform people about it. He uses real-life examples of people who were living poorly as a kid due to certain conditions. Child Poverty is a severe disaster in the United States.
After the victory of World War 1, the U.S. had a positive spike in its economy and during the early 1920s it’s economic boost was called the Roaring 20s. Everyone’s yearly wages were high and unemployment rates were low, but this period of prosperity was followed by a dramatic downfall in the late 1920s and 1930s called, The Great Depression. Jim Braddock, the main character of Cinderella Man and boxer, had experienced the full hardship of this time during the movie, and portrays the living situation of the U.S. population during the devastation. Through his experiences comes an insight of The Great Depressions impact. The Great Depression caused the U.S. economy to plummet and with this came the rise of unemployment and lowered yearly workers’ wages, causing a drastic change in home and work life for the people.
“Secretary Lamont and officials of the Commerce Department today denied rumors that a severe depression in business and industrial activity was impending, which had been based on a mistaken interpretation of a review of industrial and credit conditions issued earlier in the day by the Federal Reserve Board - New York Times (October 14, 1929).” Life before the Great Depression was the era known as the Roaring twenties. The reason for the roar was the United States was at an all time high in employment and consumer spending. Buying on credit became a new concept, which allowed for people to purchase items and allow them to make payments to a bank which in return once the debt was paid the item was officially theirs. However due to this concept being new to much credit was lent out and the return for purchase was slim causing the stock market to plummet drastically. Following the plummet
The Great Depression was a period from the late 1920s until the late 1930s. Some the terms that come to mind when one says “depression” are economics, money, work, and recession. The effects of economics were an intense dispute within the American society at the time. Money was the central machine that made America function, which is still a key concept of today’s society. Moreover, the progression here means the transition within the severe effects during the Great Depression. This period served a mass of negative effects on the people, but it also caused people to shift their views on others, which in the end proves advantageous for History. Life for Americans during the Great Depression was difficult, because most people lost their sources
unpredictability is loved by some and despised by others? I often wonder too, and in
The Great Depression was the deepest and longest-lasting economic downfall in the history of the United Sates. No event has yet to rival The Great Depression to the present day today although we have had recessions in the past, and some economic panics, fears. Thankfully the United States of America has had its shares of experiences from the foundation of this country and throughout its growth many economic crises have occurred. In the United States, the Great Depression began soon after the stock market crash of October 1929, which sent Wall Street into a panic and wiped out millions of investors ("The Great Depression."). In turn from this single tragic event, numerous amounts of chain reactions occurred.