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Hobos In Hooverville

Published on Nov 18, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

HOBOS IN HOOVERVILLES

BY KYARISS, DEAN, DONAVAN, DaQUWAN, COREY

WHAT STARTTED HOOVERVILLES?

  • The Depression worsened and millions of families lost their jobs, depleted their savings, and lost their homes
  • Desperate for shelter homeless citizens built shantytowns across the nation.

THE SHANTIES

  • They were constructed of:
  • Tin
  • Cardboard
  • Glass
  • Lumber and other scrap materials

WHY ARE THEY CALLED HOOVERVILLES?

  • Charles Michelson is credited with coining the term
  • Called Hoovervilles because president hoover was blamed for the crisis

WHAT CAUSED THE HOOVERVILLES?

  • The Great Depression resulted in job loss
  • 15 million were unemployed
  • Hoover tried to end the depression by telling people to be less dependent

CAUSES CONT.

  • Hoover passed bills to improve housing for the poor
  • Smoot-Hawley tariff act
  • Public works program with $150 million budget
  • 1932 reconstruction finance corporation

LIFE ON A HOOVERVILLE

  • No two Hoovervilles were quite alike, and the camps varied in population and size
  • Some were as small as a hundred people while others, are bigger than Washington, D.C
  • St. Louis was home to one of the country’s largest and longest-standing Hoovervilles

LIFE ON A HOOVERVILLE CONT.

  • Hoovervilles were built near rivers for the convenience of a water source
  • Some Hoovervilles were dotted with vegetable gardens
  • Some managed to get furniture in the shanties before they were evicted out they're old homes
  • Hoovervilles were typically grim and unsanitary

WHATS A HOBO?

  • A homeless person who usually moves from place to place
  • The word hobo originated in the western US during the 1930s
  • 16 to 25 years old usually
  • Rode trains to find work
  • Carried a bindle, which was a carrying bag on a stick

Hobos lined in huge lines for welfare

Hobos jumped on trains illegally to find jobs

Hobos lined up for work

WHAT THEY WORE

  • Hobos generally wore handy-me-downs
  • If they had a hole in the garment they put a patch in it

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