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  1. Home
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  3. Great Depression

Great Depression

The Great Depression was the worst economic downturn in the history of the industrialized world, lasting from 1929 to 1939. Explore topics on the era, from the stock market crash of 1929, to the Dust Bowl, to FDR’s response to the economic calamity—the New Deal.

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5 Causes of the Great Depression

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5 Causes of the Great Depression

By 1929, a perfect storm of unlucky factors led to the start of the worst economic downturn in U.S. history.

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How Bank Failures Contributed to the Great Depression

How Bank Failures Contributed to the Great Depression

Were financial institutions victims—or culprits?

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6 People Who Made Big Money During the Great Depression

6 People Who Made Big Money During the Great Depression

Even amid America’s worst economic downturn, a select few accumulated vast fortunes.

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Gangsters in a patrol wagon, New York, USA, mid 1930s. Hiding their faces from the camera as they are on their way to the office of Special Prosecutor Thomas E Dewey. Dewey (1902-1971) was appointed Special Prosecutor to lead the fight against crime and corruption in New York. He later went on to serve as Governor of the state of New York (1943-1954) and was the unsuccessful Republican candidate for the US Presidency in 1944 and 1948. (Photo by Historica Graphica Collection/Heritage Images/Getty Images)

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Crime in the Great Depression

Organized Crime in the Prohibition Era The passage of the 18th Amendment and the introduction of Prohibition in 1920 fueled the rise of organized crime, with gangsters growing rich on profits from bootleg liquor—often aided by corrupt local policemen and politicians. According to the FBI, Chicago alone had an estimated 1,300 gangs by the mid-1920s, […]

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Franklin D. Roosevelt. United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt signing the Social Security Bill (Act) in 1935. (Photo by: Photo12/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

Social Security Act

Early Social Assistance in America Economic security has always been a major issue in an unstable, unequal world with an aging population. Societies throughout history have tackled the issue in various ways, but the disadvantaged relied mostly on charity from the wealthy or from family and friends. In the early 17th century, England established “poor […]

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September 1932: Steel workers atop the 70 story RCA building in NYC's Rockefeller Center get all the air and freedom they want by lunching on a steel beam with a sheer drop of over 800 feet to the street level.

The 1930s

The Great Depression The stock market crash of October 29, 1929 (also known as Black Tuesday) provided a dramatic end to an era of unprecedented, and unprecedentedly lopsided, prosperity. The disaster had been brewing for years, though different historians and economists offer different explanations for the crisis: Some blame the increasingly uneven distribution of wealth […]

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Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)

FDIC

Bank Failures Deepen Depression Many analysts expected the United States economy to make a quick and robust recovery after the stock market crash of 1929. Three previous market contractions—in 1920, 1923 and 1926—had lasted an average of 15 months each. A series of bank panics in 1930 and 1931, however, turned a typical economic downturn […]

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History Shorts: How Artists Helped End the Great Depression

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Here’s How the Great Depression Brought on Social Security

Explore how the Great Depression of the 1930s forced America to consider having a social safety net, leading President FDR to sign the Social Security Act into law via his New Deal programs. Learn how Social Security has changed over time.

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2:25 minTV-14

The Stock Market Crash of 1929

Black Thursday brings the roaring twenties to a screaming halt, ushering in a world-wide an economic depression.

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2:05 minTV-PG

Artists of the New Deal

President Franklin Roosevelt creates a series of programs designed to help America cope with, and recover from the Great Depression.

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3:20 minTV-14

Deconstructing History: Hoover Dam

Did you know that the Hoover Dam supplies electricity to more than 20 million people? Get all the facts on this marvel of engineering.

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Franklin D. Roosevelt seated behind a microphone

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7 of FDR’s Most Inspiring Speeches

Roosevelt, known as ‘the great communicator,’ used his speeches and fireside chats to calm Americans’ fears during depression and war—and to rally them around his policies.

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Government official in suit sitting at a desk signing a document, as a group of men in Indian clothing and headdresses stand behind him.

What Was FDR’s ‘Indian New Deal’?

An economic relief program aimed specifically at helping Native American communities during the Great Depression, the legislation marked a sharp U-turn in federal policy toward Indigenous peoples.

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President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the Social Security Act on 14th August 1935. From left to right, Robert Lee Doughton, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, Edwin E. Witte, Director of the President's Social Security Committee, with Senator Robert F. Wagner, co-author of the bill behind him, Senator Robert La Follette, Senator Augustine Lonergan, Labor Secretary Frances Perkins, Senator William H. King, Rep. David John Lewis, co-author of the bill and Senator Joseph F. Guffey.

Why Social Security Was the Cornerstone of FDR’s New Deal

Social Security differed from other New Deal programs in that it wasn’t a short-term solution to the Great Depression. It was a long-term investment.

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Eleanor Roosevelt and Dr. Mary Bethune Visit George Washington Carver HallEleanor Roosevelt and Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune are visiting George Washington Carver Hall, a men's dormitory for blacks. Washington, D.C., May 1943. | Location: George Washington Carver Hall, Washington, D.C., USA. (Photo by © CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)

What Was the Role of FDR’s ‘Black Cabinet’?

Led by Mary McLeod Bethune, this informal network of advisors was the first group to press for civil rights from within the federal government.

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This Day in History

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This Day in History Video: What Happened on January 24

Great Depression
1929

Stock market crashes on Black Tuesday

Great Depression
1931

Nevada legalizes gambling

Great Depression
1935

Works Progress Administration established by Congress as part of FDR’s “New Deal”

Great Depression
1937

FDR announces “court-packing” plan

Great Depression
1939

New York World’s Fair opens

Great Depression
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