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The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair

The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

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Page 1: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

The Dirty ThirtiesThe Dirty ThirtiesA Decade of DespairA Decade of Despair

Page 2: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

The Stock Market CrashTuesday October 29, 1929

The Stock Market CrashTuesday October 29, 1929

Page 3: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Causes of the CrashCauses of the Crash

1. Buying on margin: buying stocks on borrowed money with the hope that the stock will rise significantly in a short time,

2. Speculation: The belief that a stock will rise; stockholder can re-pay the loan after selling his/her shares.

Page 4: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Causes of the DepressionCauses of the Depression

1. Protectionism

Protective Tariffs: Tariffs are duties collected on goods coming into a country.

•A country can protect home industries from the competition of foreign goods by discouraging imports through protective tariffs.

•When the United States began protectionist policies this caused other countries to lose their export markets (e.g. wheat from Canada).

.

Page 5: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

2. Slowdown in World Trade

2. Slowdown in World Trade

Decrease in production led to layoffs in factories

Less spending on consumer goods

Decrease in production led to layoffs in factories

Less spending on consumer goods

•Further decrease in production

•led to additional layoffs in factories

Page 6: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Canada and the Depression

Canada and the Depression

illustrated a major weakness in the Canadian Economy; a dependence on the export of primary resources

Mainly wheat (40% of world demand)and newsprint (65% of world demand)

A slowdown in the world markets led to lost jobs and a depressed market

Many Canadians were forced onto government assistance (Pogey)

illustrated a major weakness in the Canadian Economy; a dependence on the export of primary resources

Mainly wheat (40% of world demand)and newsprint (65% of world demand)

A slowdown in the world markets led to lost jobs and a depressed market

Many Canadians were forced onto government assistance (Pogey)

Page 7: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Canada and the DepressionCanada and the Depression

• 1 in 5 Canadians became dependent on government relief (Pogey).

• 30% of the Labour Force was unemployed.

• The effects of unemployment were very severe because employment insurance and welfare payments did not yet exist.

Page 8: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Why didn’t more people collect public relief?

•Pogey was lower than the lowest paying jobs in order to discourage people from wanting to be on it.

•Government made it difficult for the unemployed to collect “pogey”:

•Men had to wait in line for hours and declare their financial failure publicly

Page 9: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929
Page 10: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929
Page 11: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929
Page 12: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Despair

Unemployment

Poverty

Loss of jobs and incomes

Poor are evicted from homes

Loss of hope, dignity, respect…suicide rate jumps

Page 13: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

ImmigrationImmigration

In 1931, the government put a complete stop to immigration.

First 1/2 of the depression saw the deportation of 10,000immigrants

In 1931, the government put a complete stop to immigration.

First 1/2 of the depression saw the deportation of 10,000immigrants

Page 14: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Responses to the Depression

Responses to the Depression

PM King was not ready for the depression and believed the economy would improve in time.

When desperate Canadians began to ask him for help he said it was the responsibility of the provinces and municipalities to offer aid.

Unfortunately, many municipalities were bankrupted by the depression.

PM King is a Liberal (Grit), when the Conservatives asked why some provinces were not being helped, King replied that he would not give a “a five-cent piece to a Tory (Conservative) provincial government.

In 1930, King lost the election to the Conservative R.B. Bennett.

PM King was not ready for the depression and believed the economy would improve in time.

When desperate Canadians began to ask him for help he said it was the responsibility of the provinces and municipalities to offer aid.

Unfortunately, many municipalities were bankrupted by the depression.

PM King is a Liberal (Grit), when the Conservatives asked why some provinces were not being helped, King replied that he would not give a “a five-cent piece to a Tory (Conservative) provincial government.

In 1930, King lost the election to the Conservative R.B. Bennett.

Page 15: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

King v. BennettKing v. BennettR.B. Bennett was brought into power when his opposition, Mackenzie King, reported that he would not give "a five-cent piece" to "any Tory Provincial Government".

In the election, of 1930, the conservatives got 137 seats in parliament and the Liberal representation was 88 seats.

William Lyon Mackenzie King

Liberal, Prime Minister

R.B Bennett

Conservative, Prime Minister

Page 16: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Many Canadians needed help…

• Government relief (Pogey)•Not easy to get…had to prove your hardship and swear they did not own anything of value

• Private and Religious Charities set up soup kitchens and distributed clothing• Despite the help, many chose suicide over destitution

Page 17: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Bennett’s Response to the Depression

Bennett’s Response to the Depression

Increase Tariffs - no help (p.82) Banned Communist Party Relief Camps

Increase Tariffs - no help (p.82) Banned Communist Party Relief Camps

The Conservative government of Bennett set up work camps to prevent the growing unrest among this wandering mass of young unemployed workers.

The camps were located in remote areas such as northern Ontario and B.C.'s interior. Inmates called these camps "slave camps".

They lived on war surplus clothing, bunked in tar-paper shacks, ate army rations and were forced to work six and a half days a week for twenty cents a day

Page 18: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Relief CampRelief Camp

Page 19: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Relief CampRelief Camp

Page 20: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Letters to BennetLetters to BennetDear Sir: I wish to give my opinion of relief. First it is

a shame for a strong man to ask for relief in this country... The best thing that can happen to a young man is to toss him overboard and compel him to sink or swim, in all my acquaintance I have never known one to drown who was worth saving...It takes hardship to make real men and women so cut out of relief...There are some people in this country who are in hard circumstances, but I can safely say there is no one having hardship that we pioneers had 28 or 30 years ago.

Blaine Lake, Saskatchewan

Dear Sir: I wish to give my opinion of relief. First it is a shame for a strong man to ask for relief in this country... The best thing that can happen to a young man is to toss him overboard and compel him to sink or swim, in all my acquaintance I have never known one to drown who was worth saving...It takes hardship to make real men and women so cut out of relief...There are some people in this country who are in hard circumstances, but I can safely say there is no one having hardship that we pioneers had 28 or 30 years ago.

Blaine Lake, Saskatchewan

Page 21: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

LETTERS TO BENNETTLETTERS TO BENNETTDear Sir: I am writing you as a last resource to see if I cannot, through your

aid, obtain a position and at last, after a period of more than two years, support myself. The fact is this day I am faced with starvation and I see no possibility for counteracting it or even averting it temporarily.

I have applied for every position that I heard about but there were always so many girls who applied that it was impossible to get work... First I ate three very light meals a day; then two and then one. During the past two weeks I have eaten only toast and a drunk a cup of tea every other day.

Day after day I pass a delicatessen and the food in the window look oh, so good! So tempting and I'm so hungry!...The stamp which carries this letter to you will represent the last three cents I have in the world, yet before I will stoop to dishonour my family, my character or my God, I will drown myself.

Hamilton, Ontario

Dear Sir: I am writing you as a last resource to see if I cannot, through your aid, obtain a position and at last, after a period of more than two years, support myself. The fact is this day I am faced with starvation and I see no possibility for counteracting it or even averting it temporarily.

I have applied for every position that I heard about but there were always so many girls who applied that it was impossible to get work... First I ate three very light meals a day; then two and then one. During the past two weeks I have eaten only toast and a drunk a cup of tea every other day.

Day after day I pass a delicatessen and the food in the window look oh, so good! So tempting and I'm so hungry!...The stamp which carries this letter to you will represent the last three cents I have in the world, yet before I will stoop to dishonour my family, my character or my God, I will drown myself.

Hamilton, Ontario

Page 22: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Government Responses To The Depression

Government Responses To The Depression

• Government would have to take a more active role in caring for the poor.

• Unemployment insurance, sick benefits, child benefits, and welfare were proposed during the Depression and implemented some time later.

• Laissez faire* treatment of the economy was dead. (*Leave it alone)

• Governments began to manage the economy through tax policy, monetary policy, and fiscal policy.

• Government would have to take a more active role in caring for the poor.

• Unemployment insurance, sick benefits, child benefits, and welfare were proposed during the Depression and implemented some time later.

• Laissez faire* treatment of the economy was dead. (*Leave it alone)

• Governments began to manage the economy through tax policy, monetary policy, and fiscal policy.

Page 23: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

On to Ottawa TrekOn to Ottawa Trek 1935 - 1000 camp workers from BC plan to go

to Ottawa to protest the conditions in the camps.

They grew in numbers along the way, riding railcars toward Ottawa.

When they arrived in Regina only the leaders were allowed to go on to Ottawa.

Bennett declared the leaders “radicals and troublemakers” and did not hear them.

Meanwhile in Regina, the RCMP cleared the rest of the trekkers; one man was killed and 130 arrested.

1935 - 1000 camp workers from BC plan to go to Ottawa to protest the conditions in the camps.

They grew in numbers along the way, riding railcars toward Ottawa.

When they arrived in Regina only the leaders were allowed to go on to Ottawa.

Bennett declared the leaders “radicals and troublemakers” and did not hear them.

Meanwhile in Regina, the RCMP cleared the rest of the trekkers; one man was killed and 130 arrested.

Page 24: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Protesters ride trains on their way to Ottawa

Protesters ride trains on their way to Ottawa

Page 25: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

But they didn’t all make it to Ottawa

But they didn’t all make it to Ottawa

Page 26: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

Communists?Communists?

Page 27: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

The Dust BowlThe Dust Bowl

Drought on the prairies between 1928-1936

Combined with the collapse of the world wheat market the result was disaster

Wind caused constant dust storms

Drought on the prairies between 1928-1936

Combined with the collapse of the world wheat market the result was disaster

Wind caused constant dust storms

Page 28: The Dirty Thirties A Decade of Despair. The Stock Market Crash Tuesday October 29, 1929

No chance…

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