America and the Great Depression, 1929–1941
The complete narrative history of the Great Depression, 1929–1941 — Black Tuesday, the New Deal, FDR, the Dust Bowl Okies, and the human cost of America's darkest decade.
On October 29, 1929, 16.4 million shares changed hands on the New York Stock Exchange. General Electric lost $1.7 billion in a single day. Radio Corporation of America fell from $505 per share to $26 before the year was out. American stocks shed $14 billion in one week — more than four times the entire federal budget. The ticker tape ran until midnight, still printing transactions from a world that had ceased to exist.
This is the story of what followed. Frances Millicent Shaw traces the full arc of America's Great Depression history across twenty-four chapters — from the structural causes of collapse, through Hoover's principled but catastrophic response, through FDR's Hundred Days and the New Deal's experiments, to the human stories statistics cannot tell. Named throughout: FDR, Eleanor Roosevelt, Frances Perkins, Dorothea Lange, and the 400,000 depositors of the Bank of the United States who lost everything on December 11, 1930.
The New Deal left behind the FDIC, Social Security, the SEC, and the TVA. It left behind, too, an unfinished question: how much can democratic government do when markets fail? The Depression decade's answer was provisional. The debate has never ended.
For readers of David Kennedy's FREEDOM FROM FEAR and Jonathan Alter's THE DEFINING MOMENT.
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