It’s not unexpected to say that the great depression had immense impact, but through my research of first-hand accounts, I am still astounded by the hardships that people faced. People all over the country went to extreme lengths in order to survive. Many turned to waiting in line in hopes of receiving bread or eating at free soup kitchens. Thurman Hoskins, who was just a young boy in Kansas City during the depression, remembers being so hungry he didn’t want to go to school, and his mother coming home with nothing but bread and butter in hopes of filling him up. He talked about how hard is was for her to cope with the poverty, and explained how she cleaned the halls and bathrooms of their apartment building in exchange for rent. Times were very different back then. A man, LeRoy Hankel, explained how you could live on just a dollar a day. Even so, he and his wife never used credit. People like LeRoy were much more cautious after seeing what happened to the debtors after the crash. Not everyone was that smart though, Walter Schmitt, a Nebraskan man, explained how he knew many people who lost their farms due to debt. Not using credit was all they could do to stay in their homes and keep their farms. After the economic collapse, nearly 15 million Americans were unemployed and the majority of them were dependent on relief money from the government to survive. Franklin Delano Roosevelt created many New Deal programs in order to help, but one program specific to relief stood out. On May 22, 1933 the Federal Emergency Relief Administration was inaugurated. FERA had three primary objectives; adequacy of relief measures, providing work for employable people on the relief roll, and diversification of relief programs. FERA worked with the state government, providing federal grants for these purposes. The program hoped to help all Americans reach living standards of minimum decency. While most of the jobs created were engineering and
It’s not unexpected to say that the great depression had immense impact, but through my research of first-hand accounts, I am still astounded by the hardships that people faced. People all over the country went to extreme lengths in order to survive. Many turned to waiting in line in hopes of receiving bread or eating at free soup kitchens. Thurman Hoskins, who was just a young boy in Kansas City during the depression, remembers being so hungry he didn’t want to go to school, and his mother coming home with nothing but bread and butter in hopes of filling him up. He talked about how hard is was for her to cope with the poverty, and explained how she cleaned the halls and bathrooms of their apartment building in exchange for rent. Times were very different back then. A man, LeRoy Hankel, explained how you could live on just a dollar a day. Even so, he and his wife never used credit. People like LeRoy were much more cautious after seeing what happened to the debtors after the crash. Not everyone was that smart though, Walter Schmitt, a Nebraskan man, explained how he knew many people who lost their farms due to debt. Not using credit was all they could do to stay in their homes and keep their farms. After the economic collapse, nearly 15 million Americans were unemployed and the majority of them were dependent on relief money from the government to survive. Franklin Delano Roosevelt created many New Deal programs in order to help, but one program specific to relief stood out. On May 22, 1933 the Federal Emergency Relief Administration was inaugurated. FERA had three primary objectives; adequacy of relief measures, providing work for employable people on the relief roll, and diversification of relief programs. FERA worked with the state government, providing federal grants for these purposes. The program hoped to help all Americans reach living standards of minimum decency. While most of the jobs created were engineering and