Georgia and WW1
Roaring 1920s Economy
Agricultural Crisis
Stock Market & Depression
New Deal and Recovery
100

The year the United States entered WW1

1917

100

This president promised a "return to normalcy" after World War I.

Warren G. Harding.

100

Name the insect pest that devastated Georgia's cotton crops beginning in the 1910s.

The boll weevil.

100

 What major event in October 1929 signaled the start of the Great Depression?

The Stock Market Crash of October 1929

100

Name one of the three main goals of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal.

Relief, Recovery, Reform (any one).

200

Name one of the important military bases or training camps located in Georgia during WW1

Fort McPherson, Camp Benning, Camp Stewart

200

What manufacturing change and new method made consumer goods more widely available and affordable in the 1920s?

Mass production / assembly-line methods (e.g., Henry Ford's methods)

200

During the 1920s and 1930s droughts, about how many farm workers left Georgia?

Over 375,000(farm workers).

200

Name two social consequences Georgians faced during the Great Depression.

Foreclosures and evictions; homelessness; hunger; massive unemployment / job loss.

200

 Give one program of the New Deal that helped young men find jobs and describe one type of work they did.

Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC): employed young men to build parks, plant trees, create flood control and conservation projects.

300

Approximately how many Georgians served in the armed forces during World War I?

About 100,000

300

Define "buying on margin" in one sentence

Buying on margin: purchasing stock using borrowed money, paying only a portion up front.

300

Give two ways Georgians tried to save cotton crops from the boll weevil.

 Removing boll weevils by hand; setting traps; using pesticides.

300

Define a "margin call" in the context of stock market buying on margin.

 A margin call is a demand by a broker that an investor deposit more money or sell stock to cover losses when the stock price falls.

300

 What federal program provided loans to bring electricity to rural areas of Georgia?

Rural Electrification Administration (or Rural Electric Administration).

400

Give two civilian contributions Georgians made on the home front to support the war effort.

 Buying war bonds; rationing; growing victory gardens; volunteering for war drives.

400

List two problems that arose in the 1920s because of widespread consumer credit and overproduction.

Overuse of credit leading to personal bankruptcies; overproduction causing falling prices and reduced farmer income; risky speculation in stocks.

400

Describe two economic effects droughts and boll weevils had on Georgia's rural communities (banks, farms, businesses, or population).

 Farms were abandoned or foreclosed; banks failed as loans were not repaid; farm-related businesses closed; many rural families migrated to cities or other states.

400

 Describe how bank failures were linked to the agricultural problems of the 1920s and early 1930s.

 Falling crop prices left farmers unable to repay loans, causing rural banks to collapse; those bank failures reduced credit for businesses and consumers, deepening the economic slump.

400

 Describe Governor Eugene Talmadge’s general stance toward New Deal programs and one action he took while governor.

Talmadge opposed most New Deal programs; he refused many federal programs, cut state spending, reduced property taxes and utility rates, and removed college officials who supported integration

500

Explain one major worldwide consequence that followed World War I and is mentioned as creating future challenges in Europe.

Treaty of Versailles that punished Germany, which later created political and economic problems leading to future conflict.

500

By approximately what percent did the stock market lose its value after the October 1929 crash, according to the documents?

About 89% loss

500

Explain how overproduction in agriculture contributed to falling prices and bank failures in Georgia.

Overproduction increased supply while demand fell, causing prices to drop; farmers couldn't repay loans; rural banks failed, spreading financial instability.

500

Explain why consumer confidence is important for a healthy economy and how its collapse worsened the Depression.

Consumer confidence influences spending and investment; when confidence collapses people spend less, businesses produce less, layoffs rise, and the economy contracts further.

500

Explain how Governor E.D. Rivers' approach to New Deal funding differed from Talmadge’s and named two areas Rivers used federal funds to improve in Georgia.

Rivers accepted New Deal funding; he secured millions in federal funds for public housing, rural electrification, and doubled state spending on education (or increased education funding).