Sec 1
Sec 1 + Sec 2
Sec 2
Sec 2 + Sec 3
Sec 3
100

paying only small percentage of a price and borrowing the rest from a dealer

buying on margin

100

won election of 1928: pro-business policies, high tariffs, global depression, loss of exports sales

Herbert Hoover

100

lines of people waiting to receive food distributed by charitable organizations or agencies.

breadlines

100

men who would wander the country to look for jobs by riding on railroad boxcars and sleeping under the bridges.

hoboes

100

he wanted Americans to have a positive view and was dedicated to improving human welfare 

Herbert Hoover

200

arrangement where customers buys and pays later

credit

200

government would buy most needed crops and sell them on the world market

price-supports

200

little towns that included shacks or tiny huts

shantytowns

200

cash payments or food distributed by the government to the poor 

direct relief

200

world's largest dam constructed and authorized by Hoover. It provided a regular water supply, electricity, and flood control. It also helps provide water to cities today.

Boulder Dam

300

Began Great Depression when stock prices peaked and suddenly fell. Investors and Shareholders sold their stocks in panic. Number of shares dumped was a record of 16.4 million. Many bought stocks on credit and were stuck with big debts as prices rose.

Stock Market Crash 1929 or Black Tuesday

300

sons of poor farmers and unemployed miners whose family lost everything were eager to tour America for free. (SECTION 2)

Hoover tourists

300

The region where Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado were hit the most hardest by a windstorm in 1934.

Dust Bowl

300

authorized the government to pay a bonus to World War I veterans who weren't honored well for their service (SECTION 3)

Patman Bill 

300

When 10k-20k World War I veterans and their families came to Washington D.C demanding for payment that wasn't due til 1945

Bonus Army

400

people bought stocks and bonds to make easy money 

speculation

400

established highest protective tariff in U.S history and protected American farmers and manufacturers from foreign competition. However it made world trade fall more than 40%.

Hawley-Smoot Tariff

400

offered free or low-costing food for the poor or unemployed due to the Great Depression

soup kitchens

400

name that was used for Oklahomans but later were negatively used for all migrants. They found work as farmhands.

Okies

400

lowered mortgage rates for homeowners and allowed farmers to refinance their farm loans and avoid foreclosure

Federal Home Loam Bank Act

500

most widely used barometer of stock market’s health. It tracks performance of 30 large companies in the U.S

Dow Jones Industrial Average

500

a period of rising stock prices

Bull Market

500

process by which a mortgage holder gets back property if the owner has not payed yet

forclosure

500

Americans made fun of Hoover while calling newspapers "Hoover blankets and empty pockets as "Hoover flags". Many viewed him as a cold and heartless leader. (SECTION 3)

Hoovervilles

500

Authorized up to 2 billion dollars for emergency financing for banks, life insurance companies, railroads, and other big businesses

Reconstruction Finance Corporation

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