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         Crash Of 1929 & The Depression Economics:     more books (33)
  1. The Great Crash, 1929 by John Kenneth Galbraith, 1988-04-08
  2. The Stock Market Crash of 1929: Dawn of the Great Depression (American Disasters) by Mary Gow, 2003-09
  3. The Great Crash: How the Stock Market Crash of 1929 Plunged the World into Depression by Selwyn Parker, 2010-02-01
  4. The Crash of 1929 (World Disasters Series) by Ronald Migneco, 1989-09
  5. World History Series - Crash of 1929 by Nathan Aaseng, 2001-05-01
  6. The Stock Market Crash of 1929 (Landmark Events in American History) by Scott Ingram, 2004-07
  7. Rainbow's End: The Crash of 1929 (Pivotal Moments in American History) by Maury Klein, 2003-05-01
  8. Great Depression in the United States: Great Depression, Wall Street Crash of 1929, Deflation, Causes of the Great Depression, Debt, Gini coefficient, Smoot? Hawley Tariff Act
  9. STOCK MARKET CRASH (1929): An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Encyclopedia of the Great Depression</i> by PETER FEARON, 2004
  10. 1929 stock market crash (History in the headlines) by Douglas M Rife, 2000
  11. At Issue in History - The Crash of 1929 (paperback edition)
  12. The Year of the Great Crash, 1929 by William K. Klingaman, 1991-05
  13. The Stock Market Crash of 1929: The End of Prosperity (Milestones in American History) by Brenda Lange, 2007-04-30
  14. The Day the Bubble Burst: A Social History of the Wall Street Crash of 1929 by Gordon Thomas, Max Morgan-Witts, 1979

61. Untitled Document
by studying the crash and the depression) and the has written more than 30 books oneconomics and social the world.1 “The Great crash, 1929” was originally
http://www.cmsu.edu/ctl/sins/html/plainbe.html
Book Review:
John Kenneth Galbraith
Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 1988
The most memorable and noteworthy event in economic history was the stock market crash in October, 1929. This event plunged the nation into a ten year depression unlike any seen before or since. There are many theories of how such a devastating sequence of events could have occurred as well as many theories on who, exactly, allowed it happen. Blame has been placed on many factors, none of which alone could have caused the crash and depression, but when you consider all of the events leading up to the crash, it is amazing that next to nothing was done to stop or at least to mitigate the effects of the crash and the resulting depression.
John Kenneth Galbraith in The Great Crash, 1929 carefully describes the state of the economy leading up to 1929 and he then provides in depth analysis of that year by chronicling the events and the inherent weaknesses in the economy that led to the disaster.
In October, 1929, the feeding frenzy on Wall Street came to an end; investors starting selling and prices started falling. Hundreds of thousands of people lost their life savings. As bad as it was, the crash should not have led to such a major depression. According to Galbraith, five weaknesses in the economy in 1929 appear to have had a great impact how deep of a depression the stock market crash caused.1

62. The Great Depression
Opinions and Evidence The stock market crash of 1929 was more The stock market crash. alternativechoices faced policy makers at the start of the depression?
http://www.fte.org/teachers/lessons/efiah/histles9gredep.htm
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The Great Depression and the New Deal Opinions and Evidence - The stock market crash of 1929 was more a symptom than a cause of the Great Depression. The Depression itself resulted from disruptions to international trade and faulty government economic policies before and after the downturn came. Curiously, even though government policies had much to do with both bringing on the Depression and making it more severe, the economic crises of the early 1930s became grounds for greatly expanding the role of the government in American economic life. Outline
  • The U.S. was prosperous during the 1920s, but the world economy faced problems (Background)
  • Legacies of World War I
  • Sources of U.S. prosperity
  • 63. Aier
    The Stock Market crash of 1929, The Great depression, and The Founding of AIER.”“Although our very long time readers know the story, more recent
    http://www.constructiongigs.com/investing/html/aier.html
    Gigs’ Home “The Stock Market Crash of 1929, The Great Depression,
    and The Founding of AIER.”
    “Although our very long time readers know the story, more recent
    subscribers to AIER's publications may be interested to learn that
    this Institute's very existence owes in part to its founder's appreciation of the
    uncertain relationship between the behavior of the stock market and the
    overall economy.
    As a junior military officer in the Army Corps of Engineers stationed in
    Hawaii in the early 1920s, a seriously bored Lieutenant E.C. Harwood began
    an avocational study of economics. This soon led him to challenge prevailing
    views of the "roaring 20s", most especially the widespread confidence in the money-credit system, which he deemed severely distorted. In 1928 and 1929, shortly before he joined the faculty of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as an Associate Professor of military science, he published several articles in leading financial journals warning that the speculative "boom" then underway was attributable primarily to an excessive creation of purchasing media (i.e., inflating the money supply) that could not be sustained

    64. Paperback: The Great Crash 1929
    No need to know economics or stocks just need to have you out there who think thatthis 1997 market wont crash. The time is 1929 but the lessons are universal.
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    The Great Crash 1929
    John Kenneth Galbraith
    Binding: Paperback
    Published: April, 1997

    65. Paperback: The World In Depression, 1929-1939
    The Great crash 1929, John Kenneth Galbraith. Conquer the crash You Can Surviveand Prosper in a Deflationary depression, Robert R. Prechter Jr.
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    Manias, Panics, and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises (Wiley Investment...
    The Great Crash 1929
    The Great Bull Market: Wall Street in the...
    Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary... ...
    Did Monetary Forces Cause the Great...
    Popular Authors
    Robert T. Kiyosaki
    Stephen R. Covey
    Philip Kotler
    Rita Mulcahy ...
    Jim Collins
    Popular Books
    Seven Habits Of Highly Effective...
    Rich Dad, Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids About MoneyThat the Poor and Middle Class Do...
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    Gym Biz: Starting and Running Your Own Gym for... ...
    Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others...
    The World in Depression, 1929-1939
    Charles P. Kindleberger

    66. The Great E-pression?
    the 1980s that will make it impossible to repeat the Great depression, Bordo says. thatprevented us from springing back after the market crash of 1929. .
    http://www.fastcompany.com/change/change_feature/bordo.html

    67. Urban Survival: How To Survive Today's [Economic} Uncertainties
    10/27/01 Skip a depression Waiting to crash the West 12/08/01 Matching '29 's Onceagain, time to line up 1929 numbers with today and see just how the Replay of
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    Replaying 1929! Urban Survival: Warning of the Second Economic Depression Since 1997 Lawyer? Bored? Easy offended? Read this!
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    LONG WAVE ECONOMICS: Occasional Economics Papers Subscribers: Current Issues of Inside
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    Waiting for disaster? -The web bots keep saying a maritime disaster, but when (Scroll down for older Econ papers) Right Again? - Was the Clumbia disaster predicted by the web bots? Or is something else "maritime" looming? (Scroll down for older Econ papers) Annual Forecast for 2003 - War? High gold prices? Or a major rally - read the web bot forecast. (Scroll down for older Econ papers) In terview with a Genius - Cesare Marchetti - father of S curves (see Dec 2001 article below) (Scroll down for older Econ papers) I ndependent Verification: Dr. Steve Rineharts work shows we're on the right track.

    68. Http//www.bergen.org/technology/indust.html THE INDUSTRIAL
    The Great crash 1929. The Great depression America, 19291941. {short descriptionof image}. CAUSE AND EFFECTS OF THE GREAT depression. PRESIDENT HERBERT HOOVER.
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    69. Artzia: The Great Depression
    The Great depression is the period of history that followed BlackThursday , the stock market crash of Thursday, October 24, 1929.
    http://artzia.com/History/Depression/
    History
    The Great Depression
    Arts About Literature Music ... The Greatest Generation Tom Brokaw Walking Backward in the Wind (Chisholm Trail, No 13) Helen Mangum Fields The Great Crash 1929 John Kenneth Galbraith Rethinking the Great Depression (American Ways Series) Gene Smiley Riding the Rails: Teenagers on the Move During the Great Depression Errol Lincoln Uys Voices of Protest: Huey Long, Father Couglin and the Great Depression Alan Brinkley Ava's Man Rick Bragg 12 Million Black Voices Richard Wright, Noel Ignatiev, David Bradley The Great Depression: America, 1929-1941 Robert S. McElvaine The Ghosts of Hopewell: Setting the Record Straight in the Lindbergh Case Jim Fisher
    Migrant Mother, 1936
    Dorothea Lange

    Buy This Art Print At AllPosters.com
    The Great Depression is the period of history that followed "Black Thursday", the stock market crash of Thursday, October 24, 1929. The events in the United States triggered a world-wide depression, which led to deflation and a great increase in unemployment. On the global scale, the market crash in the USA was a final straw in an already shaky world economic situation. Germany was suffering from hyperinflation of currency, and many of the Allied victors of World War I were having serious problems paying off huge war debts. In the late 1920s the American economy at first seemed immune to the mounting troubles, but with the start of the 1930s it crashed with startling rapidity. The nation’s economy had thus been showing some signs of distress for months before October 1929. Business inventories of all kinds were three times as large as they had been a year before (an indication that the public was not buying products as rapidly as in the past); and other signposts of economic health—freight carloads, industrial production, wholesale prices—were slipping downward.

    70. Stock Market Crash Of 1929 Resources At Questia - The Online
    206 pgs. The Causes of the 1929 Stock Market crash A Speculative 6 The Causes ofthe Great depression by John Kenneth Galbraith) by Otis L. Graham.
    http://www.questia.com/Index.jsp?k=stock_market_crash_of_1929

    71. Natural Resources: The Historical Perspective
    was the 1930's depression, which started with the stock market crash in 1929. Thedepression was brought on by a complex assortment of factors, but its root
    http://www.nativehabitat.org/nr-part4b.html
    THE PROGRESSIVE PERIOD (1900-1945) Economics
    Technology.
    The progressive movement led the nation into a new era based on high-minded social goals, scientific innovation, and more regulation by federal and state governments. Human welfare continued to improve during this period and wealth was more equally distributed throughout society as labor organized and as the federal government increasingly regulated big business. With help from the Civil Service Act of 1883, which required appropriate technical expertise for government employees, the federal government became more actively involved in natural resource development and management, especially of forest, range, and water resources. The completion of the Panama Canal in 1909 was an unprecedented engineering accomplishment of immense benefit. It became a model for many other large government water resources projects and public works. Technology advanced at a tremendous rate. Many improvements were made in metallurgy, mechanics, building materials, and farm practices leading to larger, stronger, more efficient, and safer ways to manage, extract, move, refine, and otherwise develop natural resources. Invention of the radio greatly expanded interstate communication. Advances based on the internal combustion engine, motorized flight, and electric generators lead to public pressure on government to assure that appropriate infrastructure was developed to facilitate interstate commerce. Automobile manufacturers, led by Henry Ford, developed mass production. In 1908, the Model T Ford became the first car affordable to the middle class. Automobile ownership became as much a part of American aspiration as owning a home. Highways improved markedly with the paving of the U.S. highway system. The first hard-surface road crossed the continent in 1913. People began to "motor" across the country and fresh farm goods became widely available as a trucking industry burgeoned. Many new products were now ordered cost-effectively through national catalogs and shipped via rail and truck to local retailers or directly to the home.

    72. HallAudiobooks.com :: The Great Crash 1929
    in depression, 19291939The World in depression, 1929-1939 at there who think thatthis 1997 market wont crash. The time is 1929 but the lessons are universal
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    Catalog: Book Manufacturer: Mariner Books Authors: John Kenneth Galbraith Release Date: 30 April, 1997 Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours List Price: Our Price: Used Price: ThirdPartyNewPrice Price: More Details from Amazon.com Amazon international Product Reviews: What Actually Happened in 1929? Having just lived through the crash of the dot-com stocks, I thought it was a particularly appropriate moment to reread John Kenneth Galbraith's famous history of the stock market crash of 1929 in the United States. Professor Galbraith's final words prove to be prophetic as he suggests that as soon as the lessons of 1929 are forgotten, the speculative excesses that led to that debacle will recur. I am sure that when the dot-bomb experience is forgotten, it will be repeated with some new class of speculation in some future generation. With the recent experience of seeing a market mania, I came away more impressed with this book than before. Professor Galbraith does a fine job of capturing the psychology that builds into and sustains a mania. He also writes like a novelist rather than like an economist. That talent makes the message easy to grasp and appreciate.

    73. "DOES 1987 EQUAL 1929
    22.6% yesterday, economists generally don't expect another depression. economy lookslike it did in 1929, says George of factors in the great crash was the
    http://www.deil.uiuc.edu/eslservice/units/stockmarket/3articles.htm
    "DOES 1987 EQUAL 1929?" Eric Gelman The New York Times pp.1,34 October 20, 1987 As stock prices soared this year, a chorus of pessimists warned that 1987 was looking more like 1929, when a stock market crash helped to usher in the Great Depression. Yesterday, after a plunge reminiscent of the worst days of 1929, one pressing question was whether the aftershocks would be as devastating to individuals and the nation. The quick answer, many economists say, is no. The huge losses on Wall Street constitute a substantial blow to the economy at large. But there are many safeguards in place today some instituted directly in response to the Depression that would tend to prevent the cascading financial collapse that characterized the crash, impoverishing millions of Americans. "A stock market crash doesn't ripple out into the economy with the same force" as it did in 1929, said Geoffrey H. Moore, director of the Center for International Business Cycle Research at Columbia University. To be sure, there are some unsettling similarities between the current era and the pre-Depression years.

    74. GALLERY SIX:The Great Depression
    Agriculture, mired in depression for much of the 1920's, was By 1929 production wasoutstripping demand. a heavy debt load even before the crash, the onset of
    http://www.hoover.archives.gov/exhibits/Hooverstory/gallery06/gallery06.html
    Home Page Welcome Research Visiting the Library ... Mailbox GALLERY SIX:The Great Depression Linked pictures are available for purchase.
    The worst disaster in American economic history began in October 1929. This gallery puts the Great Depression in historical context and details Hoover's early response to the crisis.
    Disaster in the Making
    As early as 1925, then-Secretary of Commerce Hoover had warned President Coolidge that stock market speculation was getting out of hand. Yet in his final State of the Union Address, Coolidge saw no reason for alarm. "No Congress...ever assembled has met with a more pleasing prospect than that which appears at the present time"...said Coolidge early in 1929. "In the domestic field there is tranquility and contentment...and the highest record of prosperity in years."
    Al Smith's campaign manager, General Motors executive John J. Raskob, agreed. In an article entitled "Everybody Ought to be Rich" Raskob declared, "Prosperity is in the nature of an endless chain and we can break it only by refusing to see what it is." President-elect Hoover disagreed. Even before his inauguration he urged the Federal Reserve to halt "crazy and dangerous" gambling on Wall Street by increasing the discount rate the Fed charged banks for speculative loans. He asked magazines and newspapers to run stories warning of the dangers of rampant speculation.

    75. A History Of The American People
    The market crash of 1929 ought to have been welcome . But neitherunderstood the depression, or how to cure it (p. 736).
    http://www.mises.org/misesreview_detail.asp?control=102

    76. Education World ® : Lesson Planning: Twelve Great Lessons For Teaching The Grea
    who remember life during the Great depression (19291941). of the Twentieth CenturyThe Great crash and the In his analysis of the depression, University of
    http://www.education-world.com/a_lesson/lesson147.shtml

    Lesson Planning Center
    Archives: All Articles by Date The Arts ... History Lesson Planning Article L E S S O N P L A N N I N G A R T I C L E
    Twelve Great Lessons for Teaching the Great Depression
    The anniversary of Black Tuesday is the perfect opportunity to teach your students about the causes and the effects of the Great Depression. Education World offers a dozen great Internet-based activities. Included: Twelve activities for use across the curriculum and across the grades! October 29, 1999 was the 70th anniversary of Black Tuesday the day the stock market crashed, sending the United States and the world into a bleak era known as the Great Depression.
    The immediate effects of the Great Depression, along with the efforts of the federal government to spur recovery and to prevent a repeat of that disaster, changed forever the U.S. political, economic, and social scene. You can help your students understand the causes and the effects of the Great Depression as well as the impact that event has on their lives today. Introduce them to the people who lived it with the following activities from Education World.
    ESTABLISH A FRAMEWORK
    History It happened in the 1930s.

    77. Quest 2002 Depression Spawned Protections
    helped create safety precautions that should prevent an economic depression likethat of story of its owner following the stock market crash on Black 29, 1929.
    http://www.qconline.com/quest2002/answers/STOKMARK.shtml
    Sullivan Phillips
    1902 3rd Ave.
    East Moline, IL.
    Temple's Sporting Goods
    1524 6th Ave.
    Moline, Il.
    Hwy 61
    Davenport, Ia.
    Website

    Trillium Staffing Solutions
    3401 16th St. Moline, Il. Two Rivers YMCA 2040 53rd St. Moline, Il. Two Rivers YMCA Child Care 2040 53rd St. Moline, Il. Veit's Vettes Website Davenport, Ia. Volt Services 5137 Utica Ridge Rd. Davenport, Ia. Von Hoffman Graphics, Inc. 400 S 14th Ave. Eldridge, Ia. W.J. Albertson 402 SE 8th Ave. Aledo, Il. Email 101 E. Bryant St. Walcott, Ia. Whitey's 2525 41st St. Moline, Il.
    Depression spawned protections
    By Dustin Lemmon, Dispatch/Argus Staff writer The economy is going through hard times now, but the stock market crash of 1929 helped create safety precautions that should prevent an economic depression like that of the 1930s. Photo /File A passerby views the sign on an expensive-looking car that tells the sad story of its owner following the stock market crash on Black Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1929. Arthur Moreau, professor of economics at St. Ambrose University, said it was fraudulent sales to fictional buyers in the Midwest that helped lead to the stock market crash on Black Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1929. He said security steps are in place to prevent that from happening again. Mr. Moreau said from Civil War times, when the New York Stock Exchange was only open periodically, until the 1920s there were no provisions in place to protect the market.

    78. Economic History - Homework And Term Papers - 004-009
    Presidency send me this paper A 5 page paper discussing how the wrenching eventsof 1929 and the The full effect of the crash and depression were not
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    6 pages. This paper evaluates the city of Miami, Florida and its city government. Describes what type of city Miami is, and how it has been affected by demographic changes such as urbanization, suburbanization, deconcentration and regional shifts. Topics also include the type of city government that Miami has, as well as the type of elections. The mayoral style is considered and how this all works together to form a cohesive city government. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
    Filename: JGAmiami.wps

    79. Untitled Document
    The Stock Market crash of 1929 did not cause the depression, but insteadthe crash was caused by the Great depression.
    http://www.newtechhigh.org/gallery/samples/2000/myk_browne/pages/great_depressio
    A family, poverty stricken by the Great Depression, stands outside their NVA Project home in Carson City, Nevada Prior to the Great Depression, this nation's leaders, in general, did not intervene in the running of, or issues associated with, business. In fact, prior to Franklin Delano Roosevelt's administration, the United States' government operated according to laissez-faire economics. Laissez-faire economics, by definition, does not allow for federal intervention in the affairs of business. Laissez-faire economists believe that a national economy is self-regulating - that competition itself will regulate sales, prices, and therefore balance the economy. This 'invisible hand' of the economy is the basis of the laissez-faire theory.
    Herbert Hoover, the President as the Great Depression unfolded, was a laissez-faire economist. It was his belief that it was not the place of the government to interfere in business transactions. President Hoover was hesitant to intervene, despite the American economy's cries for action.
    President Herbert Hoover is sometimes said to have been the cause of the Great Depression. His indecision and lack of action has earned him the role of scapegoat for the Great Depression. However, a close look a history, and the American situation at the time of the Depression would prove that, despite popular belief at the time, President Hoover did not cause the Great Depression.

    80. EasyFunSchool - The Great Depression - Article Archives - Free Unit Studies Reci
    Then hypothesize what role the stock market could have played in the Great depression.4. Compare/contrast the stock market crash of 1929 with the 500 point
    http://www.easyfunschool.com/article1984.html
    The Great Depression The Great Depression was a pivotal event in 20th century economics. It also had a great impact in other areas as well. Here are some activities to use when teaching about this particular period of history. 1. If you are not covering history in chronological order, you may wish to do a short lesson on the precursors for the Great Depression, in particular the years immediately following World War One and the “Roaring Twenties.” 2. Brainstorm an information list of what you know about the stock market. Also list questions that you would like to find the answers to about the stock market. 3. Once you’ve brainstormed what you know about the stock market, cover information on how it works, the parties involved, anything that will increase the understanding of the stock market. Then hypothesize what role the stock market could have played in the Great Depression. 4. Compare/contrast the stock market crash of 1929 with the 500 point drop in the stock market in 1987. How were they different? How were they similar? Why didn’t a depression ensue after the drop in 1987? 5. What changes were made after the 1929 stock market crash that prevented the same results from happening after the 1987 drop?

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