Tuesday, November 26, 2019
The Great Depression Hoover and Roosevelt essays
The Great Depression Hoover and Roosevelt essays    When the Great Depression hit the nation was turned inside out.           Presidents Hoover and Roosevelt each took a turn at working toward           its demise. While their attempts were different their goal was the           same. They each wanted it to end.           Herbert Hoover reacted to the Great Depression with determination. He           believed providing public work positions would be able to assist in           the regrouping of Americans. He urged state senators to increase           public construction and use the unemployed for the labor. He believed           this would provide jobs as well as continue to improve the           He spent a significant amount of time lobbying not only politicians to           support his public works ideas, but also civic organizations including           the Elks Lodges nation wide. He opposed the Wagner employment bill and           worked to reduce immigration while the nation was in the throes of           unemployment by those already living here(The Depression Papers of           geocities.com/mb_williams/hooverpapers/employment.html).           Even though he supported various efforts and attempts to deal with           unemployment he focused for the most part on the public works programs           that he believed were the answer to turning the nation's woes around.           When Roosevelt was elected he took an entirely different approach.           While Hoover focused on one program, Public Works, Roosevelt took the           attitude that a wide variety of changes were the answer to the Great           When he "took office in 1933, he feverishly created program after           program to give relief, create jobs, and stimulate economic recovery           for the U.S. These programs were called "alphabet soup" as well as the           bergen.org/AAST/Projects/depression/successes.html)."    ...     
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