Men selling apples on street corners or ... selling all of their property and possessions to survive during the Great ...
Men are more likely to deal with depression by taking part in escapist, unhealthy behaviors as a way of coping. More than women, they tend to overindulge in alcohol, tobacco and drugs, or to turn ...
In cities, men and women waited in bread lines stretching ... actually apologized for the Federal Reserve’s actions during the Great Depression, placing much of the blame on the Fed itself.
Still, it was the 1930s—the middle of the Great Depression—and people were desperate for work. Hopeful men lined up, waiting for construction jobs that would open when laborers inevitably died ...
America’s response to the unprecedented economic crisis that threatened the nation during ... young men to work in the nation's forests and parks at the height of the Great Depression.
Men eating bread and soup at a breadline during The Great Depression in the USA in 1929. Breadlines were places for people in extreme poverty, who did not have the money to buy food for themselves ...
During the Great Depression of the 1930s, President Roosevelt’s CCC put 3 million young men to work across America. Living in camps across all 48 states (and the territories of Alaska ...
At the height of the Great Depression, thousands of jobless ... Like Liversedge, thousands of young, single men had few options during the economic crisis of the 1930s. Many of them criss-crossed ...