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Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do NOT just copy the information…..EXPLAIN IT!!! 0 As your partner is teaching you, fill in the rest of the graphic organizer. 0 Once you’ve both finished, discuss and answer the three follow-up questions!

Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

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Page 1: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

Instead of Bellwork……0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your

Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do NOT just copy the information…..EXPLAIN IT!!!

0 As your partner is teaching you, fill in the rest of the graphic organizer.

0 Once you’ve both finished, discuss and answer the three follow-up questions!

Page 2: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

The Great Depression The Great Depression in Canadain Canada

Political, Social, and Economic Effects

Page 3: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

Statistics of the GD in Canada 0 Every trade saw wages drop between

1930 and 1936 0 Saskatchewan (farm): 90%

0 Unemployment reached 27% at the height of the Depression in 1933.0 Newfoundland (fish): 50%

0 Corporate profits went from $396 million in 1929 to $98 million in 1933.

0 Between 1929 and 1933 the GNP dropped 43%.

0 Relied on trade, but imports 25% and exports 55%

0 Farmers hit hardest: Wheat 75%0 20% of Canadians were on relief

27% unemployment

Page 4: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

DISCUSSION0 Read the beginning of the “Effects of the GD in CA” packet and

respond to the following:0 List two ways the US depression impacted Canada.0 Why did Canada impose high tariffs? Were they effective?0 Why were prairie provinces hit the hardest by the GD?0 Explain the changes in Canadian immigration during the GD.0 List three effects of the Canadian Dust Bowl.0 THINKER: During economic crises, many people turn towards

radical forms of government, as seen in Canada, Germany and the U.S. Why do you think this is? Explain!

Page 5: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

0 Pre-Depression Immigration0 1920: 138,8240 1921: 91,7280 1922: 64,2240 1923: 133,729 0 1924: 124,1640 1925: 84,9070 1926: 135,8920 1927: 158,8860 1928: 166,78310 929: 164,9930 Totals 1920-1929: 1,264,130

0 Depression Immigration0 1930: 104,8060 1931 27,5300 1932: 20,5910 1933: 14,3820 1934: 12,4760 1935: 11,2770 1936: 11,6430 1937: 15,1010 1938: 17,2440 1939: 16,9940 Totals 1930-1939: 252,044

Page 6: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

King’s Response to the Depression0 MacKenzie King thought that it was

the responsibility of the provinces to aid their own citizens.

0 He wasn’t prepared for the depression (not many political leaders were) and so he didn’t take an interventionist approach to the economy.

0 King was eventually openly criticized for his controversial comment that he wouldn’t give “a five cent piece” of relief money to any province that had a Conservative Government

He won’t give “a five cent piece”

Page 7: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

Enter “Bonfire” Bennett0 R.B. Bennett was Leader of the Conservative

Party of Canada0 He had the nickname “bonfire” because of his

bombastic (loud) speaking style.0 On July 28th, 1930 R.B. Bennett became Prime

Minister of Canada.0 Originally from New Brunswick, grew up to

be a self-made millionaire as a corporate lawyer and businessman in Calgary.

0 Given his “rags to riches” humble beginnings, he believed in capitalism and the free-enterprise system (i.e. leave economy alone and everything will work out in the end)

Prime Minister R.B. Bennett

Page 8: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

Bennett’s Response to the Great Depression

0 Bennett tried to combat the depression by increasing trade within the British Empire and imposing tariffs for imports from outside the Empire. Known as the Imperial Preference Policy

0 Conservative pro-business policies provided little relief for the unemployed

Page 9: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

Bennett’s Response to the Depression

0He put $ 20 Million dollars towards emergency relief

0He raised the tariffs on imports to 50% in order to protect Canada’s industries from foreign competition and end the trade deficit. (Do you think this would work?)

“Bonfire” Bennett

Page 10: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

Blaming it on BennettBlaming it on Bennett

Page 11: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

Bennett’s Failures0 No Unemployment Insurance0 Prime Minister Bennett blamed for

inability to end Depression0 Bennett Buggies – Cars pulled by horses0 Bennettboroughs – homeless

communities0 Bennett blankets - newspapers

Page 12: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

0 January 1935, Bennett announces in a radio address “I am for reform” and launches his own New Deal.

0 The plan called for federal government intervention:> minimum wage, maximum work week laws, > unemployment insurance > retirement pensions, health insurance> mortgage assistance for farmers

0 Most of the New Deal was seen by the Supreme Court of Canada as an encroachment on the authority of provincial governments and struck down as violation of Section 92 of the British North America Act (Canada's Constitution)

0 Bennett’s reform effort was seen as too little, too late by voters who elected McKenzie King in October 1935

Bennett’s New Deal

Page 13: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

The Return of King0In 1935, the Canadian people

had enough of Bennett who they blamed for prolonging the Depression.

0Running under the slogan “King or Chaos”, King won the election.

0Bennett ended his final days in Great Britain and remains the only Canadian Prime Minister to be buried outside of Canada.

He’s Back Again……

Page 14: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

0 Introduces relief programs:> National Housing Act> National Employment Commission

0 Nationalizes:> Canadian Broadcast Corporation 1936> Trans-Canada Airlines (Air-Canada) 1937> Bank of Canada 1938

0 From 1939, an increased demand in Europe for materials, and increased spending by the Canadian government on public works created a boost to the economy.

0 Unemployment declined as men enlisted in the military. 0 By 1939, Canada was experiencing economic prosperity for the first time

in a decade.

MacKenzie King Returns

Page 15: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

Discussion0 Similarities/differences between King and Bennett

Page 16: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

Political Parties Responses to the GDNew Political Party Why they opposed the

government & ideas for reform

Cooperative Commonwealth Federation (CCF)

Social Credit

Union Nationale

Communist Party of Canada

Liberals

Unionists

*Read pgs. 216-219 and complete page 2 of your worksheet “Effects of GD in CA”

Page 17: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

Other Political Parties offer their solutions

0 Bill Aberhart was a preacher and school teacher from Alberta

0 School principal/evangelist. Begins broadcasting his “Back to the Bible” program to a large audience in 1925.

0 He thought that the Depression was caused by people not having enough money to buy goods and services; especially farmers.

0 His idea? Give every citizen $25 per month “prosperity certificate” so people could buy more products and help the economy.

Social Credit Party leader“Bible Bill” Aberhart

Page 18: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

• Social Credit Theory advocates • government income subsidies to stimulate economic

growth• tight regulatory control of banks to manage money

supply0His party was called the “Social Credit” Party.0His party was elected in 1935 in Alberta, but they never

paid out the certificates. The party was a major force in the west and stayed in power until the 1970s in Alberta. It was also a major force in BC politics

William “Bible Bill” Aberhart

Page 19: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

0 Co-Operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) Socialist political party established in Calgary, Alberta in 1932.

0 Platform:> Concentration of wealth in the hands of a few threatened democracy.> New social order calling for production and distribution for the public good not private gain.

0 CCF joined the League for Social Reconstruction (LSR) 0 Regina Manifesto 1933:

0 All industry related to social planning would be nationalized0 Universal health care, unemployment compensation, and pensions

would be provided by amendments to the BNAA0 The CCF enjoyed modest success in the Western Provinces

C.C.F.

Page 20: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

J.S. Woodsworth0 He was a “conscientious objector” during WW1

and worked as a minister in Winnipeg helping the homeless.

0 He believed that the free enterprise system had failed the people during the depression and that the government needed to take a greater role during the depression.

0 He proposed: Unemployment insurance, free medical care, family allowances and old age pensions.

0 Many of his ideas have been adopted in Canada.

0 His Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) Party later was renamed the NDP in 1961.

Page 21: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

0Became a legal party in Canada in 1924.0Criticized as Un-Canadian because of its allegiance to

Communist International (Comintern) operating out of Moscow

01919, Red Scare, Section 98 of the Criminal Code outlaws the Communist Party. Party leaders were imprisoned in 1931.

0Helped organize the trek to Ottawa. Arthur “Slim” Evans

Communist Party of Canada

Page 22: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

The Union Nationale0 Maurice Duplessis blamed the

existence of the Depression on the fact that many of Quebec’s industries were owned by Americans and English speaking Canadians.

0 He formed the Union Nationale so that Quebeckers would have more control over their economy.

0 The Union Nationale won the Quebec election in 1936 and remained a force in Quebec politics for the next 22 years

Page 23: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

0 To spur employment, Bennett created relief camps in rural areas for men to live/work

0 Conditions in the camps were repulsive, not only because of the low pay, but the lack of recreational facilities, isolation from family and friends, poor quality food, and the use of military discipline.

0 Communist Party leaders saw a chance to organize strikes in the camps. Forming the Relief Camp Worker’s Union

Establishment of Relief Camps

Page 24: Instead of Bellwork…… 0 Meet with your partner and teach them about your Prime Minister and their successes/failures during the Great Depression……. Do

HOMEWORK0 Finish reading the packet and complete the review

portion on the back of the worksheet.0 You should probably start term cards too……..