Question:
The great depression- What year did it end?!?
Family Tech Support
2007-01-15 12:10:36 UTC
I need a website that shows information on the date that tyhe great depression ended. A timeline would help too!

Thx a bundle!
-Jazzeh
Sixteen answers:
Libra73117
2007-01-15 12:29:22 UTC
Timeline



America's Great Depression is regarded as having begun in 1929 with the Stock Market crash, and ended in 1941 with America's entry into World War II. However, to fully understand the Great Depression, one must look at it in context of events that happened before and after those dates. For that reason, the timeline below includes events many decades before and after the Great Depression itself.



Several types of events are covered in the timeline below. The first is the passage of legislation that effects either the money supply, international trade, or price and wage controls. The second is important publications about economics. The third is business cycle peaks and troughs. The last is significant political and social events.



Year Events

1873 Lombard Street, by Walter Bagehot, published. The book goes on to become the bible for central bankers.



1882 May 6th, Chinese Exclusion Act passed, suspending the immigration of Chinese Laborers for 10 years



1887 Interstate Commerce Act passed, creating the Interstate Commerce Commission



1890 Sherman Antitrust Act passed



1892 Chinese Exclusion Act extended for an additional ten years



1894 August 18th, Bureau of Immigration established



1897 Countervailing Duty Law passed



1903 Elkins Act passed, prohibiting the railroads from granting secret rebates and from establishing discriminatory rates



1904 April 27th, Chinese Exclusion Act extended indefinitely



1906 June 30, Meat Inspection Act passed

June 30, Pure Food and Drug Act passed

Hepburn Act passed, extending the jurisdiction of the federal government over interstate commerce to include express companies, companies operating pipelines transporting petroleum products, and companies operating sleeping cars on the railroads

The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair, published



1907 May, a business contraction begins, starting one of the most severe depressions on record



1908 January 27th, in Adair v. the United States, U.S. Supreme court rules that yellow dog contracts are legal

June, depression ends

???, Federal Employers' Liability Act passed



1911 Farm Loan Act passed, providing for the establishment of federal land banks under Treasury Department supervision.



1912 The Theory of Money and Credit, by Ludwig von Mises, published

First minimum wage law (for women only) enacted by Massachusetts

Lloyd-LaFollette Act passed, allowing unionization of postal workers

July 31, Milton Friedman born

Woodrow Wilson elected President



1913 February 3rd, 16th Amendment ratified (income tax)

April 8, 17th Amendment ratified (direct election of Senators)

July 15th, Newlands Act passed, creates the U.S. Board of Mediation and Conciliation to adjust disputes between railroads and their operating employees.

December 23rd, Federal Reserve Act passed

Underwood Tariff Act passed, the first reduction in duties since the Civil War, also established a modest income tax



1914 June 28, Archduke Franz Ferdinand and wife are murdered by a Serb terrorist in Sarajevo, Bosnia

August, World War I begins

August 15, Panama Canal opened to traffic

September 26th, Federal Trade Commission established

Clayton Act passed, restricting mergers between companies

December 17, Harrison Narcotics Act passed



1915 May 7, nearly 1,200 people died when a German torpedo sank the British liner Lusitania off the Irish coast.

May 23rd, Italy declares war on Austria-Hungary.



1916 Child Labor Act passed, setting a national minimum age of 14 in industries producing nonagricultural goods for interstate commerce or for export

Keating-Owen Act passed, forbiding the transportation among states of products of factories, shops or canneries employing children under 14 years of age, of mines employing children under 16 years of age, and the products of any of these employing children under 16 who worked at night or more than eight hours a day.

Antidumping Act passed

Federal Farm Loan Act passed, providing low interest credit to farmers

September, Adamson Act passed

Limits railroad workers to an eight-hour day

Mandates time and a half pay for overtime for railroad workers

November, Woodrow Wilson defeats Republican Charles Evans Hughes to win a second term as President



1917 April 6, Congress declares war against Germany

May 18, Selective Service Act passed

December 7, Congress declares war against Austria-Hungary



1918 Pittman Act passed, permitting the government to sell silver to Britain as a wartime measure

November, World War I ends



1919 January 16th, 18th Amendment ratified (prohibition)

June 28th, Treaty of Versailles signed

July, Blockade of German ports ends

The Economic Consequences of the Peace, by John Maynard Keynes, published



1920 January, economic expansion peaks; a severe recession begins

February 28th, Transportation Act passed

ICC empowered to prescribe intrastate rates when necessary to eliminate discrimination against carriers in interstate commerce

Railroad Labor Board created

April 15, Frederick A. Parmenter, paymaster for the Slater and Morrill Shoe Factories, and his guard, Alessandro Beradelli are murdered during a robbery

May, Treasury begins to buy silver at one dollar an ounce, as required by the Pittman Act of 1918

August 18th, 19th Amendment ratified (women's vote)

Jones Act passed, prohibits shipping merchandise between U.S. ports "in any other vessel than a vessel built in and documented under the laws of the United States and owned by persons who are citizens of the United States.''

Warren G. Harding defeats Governor James M. Cox of Ohio to become the 29th President. Voter turnout is 49.2 percent, an all time low up to then.



1921 April, Allied Reparations Commission establishes 132 billion gold marks ($33 billion) as the amount of reparations that Germany must pay

May 19th, Emergency Quota Act passed, establishing national quotas for immigrants

July, economic contraction ends; recovery begins

July 14th, immigrant anarchists, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, convicted of murder



1922 September, Fordney-McCumber Tariff Act passed

Capper-Volstead Act passed

Hyperinflation begins in Germany

Socialism: An Economic and Sociological Analysis, by Ludwig von Mises, published



1923 January, Rosewood massacre

April 9th, Supreme Court decides Adkins v. Children's Hospital , finding that a Congressionally-mandated minimum wage for the District of Columbia is unconstitutional

May, economic expansion peaks, recession begins

mid-year, silver purchase policy effectively ends

August 2, Warren G. Harding dies in San Francisco, apparently from a heart attack

Tract on Monetary Reform, by John Maynard Keynes, published

Hyperinflation ends in Germany



1924 February 3rd, Woodrow Wilson dies

July, economic contraction ends, recovery begins

July, Olympics held in Paris

Congress passes an amendment to the constitution, empowering Congress to limit, regulate, and prohibit the labor of persons under 18 years of age. (The number of state legislatures that ratified the proposed amendment was 28, or 8 less than the 36 then required.)

Keiss Act passed, allowing unionization of the Government Printing Office.

Congress bans heroin completely

Johnson-Reed Act passed, severely limiting immigration

November, Calvin Coolidge elected president

German Hyperinflation ends

The French army evacuates the Ruhr region of Germany, allowing a major increase in coal production

Coal operators in Britain engage in a lock out for seven months, in an effort to force down wages



1925 April 28th, Britain announces return to a gold standard for its currency, setting the value of the pound back to its pre-World War I value of $4.86/pound

July 10-25, Scopes Monkey Trial

The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, published



1926 May 3rd, a nine day nationwide general strike begins in Britain

May 20th, Railway Labor Act passed

October, economic expansion peaks, recession begins

Revenue Act of 1926 passed, cutting taxes of those earning $1M or more by two-thirds



1927 May 20, Charles Lindbergh takes off from Roosevelt Field in Long Island, N.Y., aboard the Spirit of St. Louis on his historic solo flight to France.

August 23rd, immigrant anarchists, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, were executed

November, economic contraction ends, recovery begins

December, the Ford Motor Company introduces the Model A

Federal Reserve reduces the discount rate by half a point and purchases $230 million of government securities



1928 June, France returns to a gold standard, establishing exchange rates of 124 francs per pound and 25.51 francs per dollar

August 27th, Kellogg-Briand Pact signed, "outlawing" war

October, Benjamin Strong, Governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, dies.

November, Herbert Hoover elected president



1929 February 2nd, Federal Reserve announces a ban on bank loans for margin trades

March 4th, Herbert Hoover is inaugurated as President

June 15th, Agricultural Marketing Act passed

August, economic expansion peaks

September 3rd, stock market prices peak, with New York Times index of industrial stocks at 452

October 24th, "Black Thursday," recorded sales of shares hits 12,895,000

October 25th, market rallies, briefly

October 29th, "Black Tuesday," recorded sales of shares hits 16,410,000. New York Times index of industrial stocks drops nearly forty points, the worst drop in Wall Street history to that point.

November 13th, stock market prices reach low for the year, with New York Times index of industrial stocks at 224



1930 June 17th, Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act is signed into law

October, Committee for Unemployment Relief formed

Treatise on Money, by John Maynard Keynes, published

By year's end, 1350 banks have suspended operations during 1930



1931 January 7th, the Committee for Unemployment Relief releases a report on unemployment showing that 4 to 5 million Americans were out of work.

January 19th, Hoover's Wickersham Commission reports that enforcement of Prohibition has become almost impossible.

March 31st, Davis-Bacon Act becomes law, requiring "prevailing" (union) wages to be paid on federal construction contracts

May, KreditAnstalt, Austria's largest bank, collapses

May 1st, New York's 102-story Empire State Building dedicated

June 5th, Chancellor Bruning announces that Germany was no longer going to pay reparations under the Young Plan

July 23rd, Macmillan report on Britain's international finances released, pointing out that Britain's short-term liabilities to foreigners is several times the size of Britain's gold reserves.

September 21st, Britain goes off the gold standard, the first major power to do so.

September, Japan invades Manchuria

October 16th, New York Federal Reserve Bank's discount rate raised from 1.5 percent to 2.5 percent.

October 17th, mobster Al Capone was convicted of income tax evasion and sentenced to 11 years in prison. (He was released in 1939.)

October 23rd, New York Federal Reserve Bank's discount rate raised from 2.5 percent to 3.5 percent.

December, Japan leaves the gold standard

December 11th, New York Bank of the United States collapses

By year's end, 2,293 banks have suspended operations during 1931



1932 January 22nd, Reconstruction Finance Corporation created

March 1st, Charles Lindbergh's 20-month-old son, Charles Augustus, Jr., is kidnapped from the family home in New Jersey.

April, Federal Reserve officials initiate an open market program to buy $500 million worth of securities

May, Federal Reserve officials undertake another open market program, purchasing an additional $500 million worth of securities

May 20th, Amelia Earhart took off from Newfoundland for Ireland to become the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic.

June 6th, Revenue Act of 1932 passed, the largest peacetime tax increase in the nation's history to that date

raised top tax rates from 25% to 63%

reduced personal exemptions from $1,500 to $1,000 for single persons

reduced personal exemptions from $3,500 to $2,500 for married couples

July, Federal law updated to require that the names of banks borrowing from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation be made public.

July 21st, Emergency Relief and Construction Act passed

July 28th, Bonus Army Riot begins in Washington, D.C.

August 24th, Amelia Earhart becomes the first woman to fly nonstop across the United States, traveling from Los Angeles to Newark, N.J., in just over 19 hours

Norris-La Guardia Act passed, outlawing yellow-dog contracts and protecting unions from anti-trust actions, private damage suits and court injunctions

Glass-Steagall Act passed (liberalized the terms under which member banks could borrow from the Federal Reserve)

Tuskegee Syphilis Study begins

November 8th, Franklin D. Roosevelt defeats Herbert Hoover to become the 32nd President (electoral vote count of 472 to 59)

By year's end, 1,493 banks have suspended operatins during 1932



1933 January 5th, Construction begins on San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge

January 23rd, 20th Amendment ratified

January 31st, Adolf Hitler named Chancellor of Germany

February 15th, Chicago mayor Anton Cermak is killed during an assassination attempt in Miami, Florida on President-elect Roosevelt.

March, economic contraction ends; economy starts to recover

March 4th, FDR is inaugurated as president

March 6th, FDR declares a bank holiday

March 9th, bank holiday ends

March 9th, Emergency Banking Relief Act passed, providing for federal bank inspections

March 12th, FDR's first Fireside Chat is broadcast over the radio.

March 20th, FDR signs Economy Act.

March 20th, Credit Act passed, indentifying those veterans and dependents of veterans who were entitled to a pension

March 31st, Reforestation Relief Act passed, creating the Civilian Conservation Corps

April, New York becomes the first to pass a state law regulating minimum producer, wholesale, and retail milk prices (25 other states will take similar action by the end of the 1930s)

April 19th, America goes off the gold standard

May 12th, Agricultural Adjustment Act passed, authorizing paying farmers not to grow crops

May 12th, Federal Emergency Relief Adminstration created

May 12th, Farm Relief Act passed, creating the Farm Credit Administration and the Agricultural Adjustment Adminstiration

May 18th, Tennessee Valley Authority created

May 27th, Federal Securities Act passed

June 6th, National Cooperative Employment Service Act passed

June 13th, Home Owners' Loan Act passed

June 16th, Farm Credit Act passed

June 16th, Glass-Steagall Act passed

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation established

Federal Reserve empowered to set maximum allowable interest rates on savings and time deposits accounts

Payment of interest on demand deposits (checking accounts) outlawed

Commercial banks were no longer allowed to engage in investment banking (underwriting securities)

Federal Open Market Committee established

June 16th, National Industrial Recovery Act passed

June 16th, Emergency Railroad Transportation Act passed

October 17th, Albert Einstein arrived in the United States as a refugee from Nazi Germany.

November 8th, Civil Works Administration (CWA ) created by executive order

December 5th, 21st Amendment ratified (repeals 18th amendment, ending alcohol prohibition)

By year's end, approximately 4,000 banks have suspended operations in 1933



1934 January 30th, Gold Reserve Act passed

Establishes Exchange Stabilization Fund

Allows the U. S. Treasury to seize all gold held by Federal Reserve banks

Private possession of gold made illegal except for "legitimate" purposes (jewelry, artwork, and industrial and scientific uses)

January 31st, FDR issues an executive decree, changing the price of gold from $20.67 an ounce to $35 an ounce

January 31st, Congress creates Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation.

February 2nd, Export-Import Bank of Washington created, established under DC charter by Executive Order 6581, to assist in financing U.S. trade with the Soviet Union.

February 23rd, Crop Loan Act passed

February 15th, Civil Works Emergency Relief Act passed.

April 7th, Jones-Connally Farm Relief Act passed, bill effectively placing an expanded roster of farm products under the control of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA).

May 23rd, bank robbers Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow were shot to death in a police ambush in Bienville Parish, Louisiana

June 6th, Securities Exchange Commission established

June 19th, Federal Communications Commission created

June 19th, Silver Purchase Act passed, empowering FDR to increase the Treasury's silver holdings to 1/3 the value of gold, nationalizing silver stocks and purchases (victory for Free Silverites)

June, Taylor Grazing Act passed

July 22nd, John Dillinger, Public Enemy Number One, shot by the FBI near a Chicago Theatre

August 2nd, German President Paul von Hindenburg dies, paving the way for Adolf Hitler's complete takeover.

August 13th, the satirical comic strip "Li'l Abner," created by Al Capp, makes its debut

November 6th, Democrats gain 9 seats in the House of Representatives

Anti-Rackateering Act passed

Commodity Credit Corporation created

Federal Farm Bankruptcy Act passed

Federal Surplus Relief Corporation created

National Firearms Act passed

Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act passed

Bankhead Cotton Control Act passed



1935 January 11th, Amelia Earhart becomes the first person to fly solo from Hawaii to California.

January 16th, Fred and "Ma" Barker killed outside Ocklawaha, Florida.

April 8th, Emergency Appropriations Relief Act passed, creating the Works Progress Administration

May 27th, Supreme Court unanimously declares Section 3 of the National Recovery Act to be unconstitutional, in Schecter Poultry Corporation v. United States. Section 3 empowered the President to implement industrial codes to regulate weekly employment hours, wages, and minimum ages of employees.

June, National Youth Adminstration created by executive order

June 3, Farm Credit Act passed

July 5th, National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act) passed

August 14th, Social Security Act passed

August 23rd, Banking Act passed

August 28th, Public Utility Holding Company Act passed

August 30th, Bituminous Coal Conservation Act passed

August 30th, Revenue Act (Wealth Tax Act ) passed.

Increased the surtax rate on individual incomes over $50,000, the estate tax on individual estates over $40,000 and graduated steeply taxes on individual incomes over $1 million until the rate was 75% in excess of $5 million.

Decreased the small corporation tax rate to 12% while increasing the corporate tax, on incomes above $15,000 to 15%.

Some excess profits over 10% were taxed at a 6% rate and in excess of 15% at a 12% rate.

August, Neutrality Act passed

September 2nd, a Category 5 hurricane, the most intense ever recorded in U.S. History, hits the Florida Keys, killing over 400 people.

September 8th, Huey Long assassinated

November 5th, Parker Brothers releases board game, "Monopoly".

Davis-Bacon Act amended, lowering contract threshold to $2,000

Federal Power Act passed

Motor Carrier Act passed, extending federal regulatory authority to motor carriers engaged in interstate commerce

Rural Electrification Administration established

Soil Conservation Act passed



1936 January 23rd, Adjusted Compensation Act passes, over Roosevelt's veto. The Act provides for the immediate payment of veterans' bonuses.

February 17th Supreme Court upholds constitutionality of TVA in Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Authority

February 29th, Soil Conservation and Allotment Act is passed

May 18th, Supreme Court declares (6 to 3) the Bituminous Coal Conservation Act (1935) to be unconstitutional in Carter vs. Carter Coal Co.

August 1st, Olympics open in Berlin

General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money, by John Maynard Keynes, published

Robinson-Patman Act passed, effectively outlawing price cutting by permitting price discrimination (charging different prices in different markets) only if it can be justified by differential costs of serving different markets, or if a price reduction is made "in good faith'' to meet the price reduction of a competitor.

Rural Electrification Act passed, authorizing loans to qualified borrowers, with preference given to nonprofit and cooperative associations and public bodies, to construct and operate electric systems and generating plants

Domestic Allotment Act passed

November 3rd, FDR defeats Alfred M. Landon, Governor of Kansas, to win second term as President (electoral count 523 to 8)



1937 January 20th, FDR delivers his second inaugural address: "I see one-third of a nation ill-housed, ill-clad, ill-nourished."

February 5th, FDR introduces the Judiciary Reorganization Bill (FDR's infamous court packing scheme):

It proposed to add judges at all levels of the federal courts, assign judges to the more congested courts and adopt procedures to expedite the appeals process by sending lower court cases on constitutional matters directly to the Supreme Court

Justices of the Supreme Court who reached age 70 could retire

When a Supreme Court justice, age 70, did not retire, FDR could add an additional judge up to 6, potentially increasing the court to 15 members.

March 1st, Supreme Court Retirement Act passed, permitting Supreme Court Justices to retire at age 70 with full pay, after 10 years of service

March 29th, in West Coast Hotel v. Parrish, Supreme Court upholds (5 to 4) a state minimum wage law for women.

April 12th, Supreme Court declares (5 to 4) provisions of NLRA (1935) that guaranteed worker rights to unionize to be constitutional in National Labor Relations Board v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation

May, economic recovery stops; economy enters a second depression

May 6th, Hindenburg disaster

May 24th, Supreme Court declares (5 to 4) that the unemployment compensation provision of the SSA is constitutional in Steward Machine Co vs Davis

May 24th, Supreme Court declares (7 to 2) that the old age benefits provisions of the SSA are constitutional in Helvering vs Davis

July 22nd, Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act passed, creating the Farm Security Agency (FSA). The FSA established camps for migrant farm workers, provided medical care for those workers and their families, and helped in finding jobs.

September 1st, United States Housing (Wagner-Steagall) Act passed, creating the US Housing Authority (USHA) to administer low-interest 60-year loans to small communities for slum clearance and construction projects and to grant subsidies for setting rent geared to low-income levels in areas where local agencies provided 25% of the federal grant.



1938 January 2nd, President Roosevelt establishes the March of Dimes.

February 16th, 2nd Agricultural Adjustment Act passed

June, economic contraction ends, economy begins to recover

June 23rd, Civil Aeronautics Authority established

June 25th, Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act signed into law

June 25th, Fair Labor Standards Act passed, enacting first national minimum wage law

September 30th, British and French prime ministers Neville Chamberlain and Édouard Daladier sign the Munich Pact with Nazi leader Adolf Hitler

October 30th, Orson Welles' broadcast of "War of the Worlds" persuades thousands of Americans that the United States is being invaded by Martians

November 1st, with 40 million radio listeners tuned in across the country, a long-anticipated match race between two champion race horses, Seabiscuit and War Admiral is run. Seabiscuit beats War Admiral by four lengths in just over a minute fifty-six for the mile and three-sixteenths, a new track record.

Supreme Court decides NLRB v. Mackay Radio & Telegraph, finding that employers have an undisputed right to hire permanent replacement workers for striking workers in an economic strike.

Democrats lose 71 Congressional seats during November elections



1939 January 7th, Labor leader Tom Mooney freed by California Governor Olson after 22 years imprisonment.

February 27th, in NLRB v. Fansteel Metallurgical Corp, Supreme Court rules sit-down strikes illegal.

April 30th, New York Worlds Fair opens in Flushing Meadows

August 2nd, Albert Einstein signed a letter to President Franklin Roosevelt urging creation of an atomic weapons research program.

September 1st, Germany invades Poland

The Grapes of Wrath, by John Steinbeck, published

(??? Act), an all-risk crop insurance program was initiated for interested farmers to prevent economic distress in case of crop failure for hail, floods, and other natural disasters.



1940 September 16th, Selective Training and Service Act passed, requiring men between the ages of 21 and 35 to register for military training

November 7th, FDR defeats Wendell Willkie (449 to 82 Electoral College vote totals) to win third term as President

How to Pay for the War, by John Maynard Keynes, published

Investment Advisers Act passed, allowing SEC to supervise the activities of investment advisors

Investment Company Act passed, allowing SEC to supervises the activities of mutual funds and other investment companies

Transportation Act passed, giving ICC authority to regulate common carriers operating in interstate commerce in the coastal, intercoastal, and inland waters of the U.S.



1941 January 6th, President Roosevelt delivers his State of the Union address, saying "we look forward to a world founded upon four essential human freedoms."

January 7th, Office of Price Administration is created.

Davis-Bacon Act amended to include military construction

March, Lend-Lease Act passed, giving the president the authority to aid any nation whose defense he believed vital to the United States and to accept repayment "in kind or property, or any other direct or indirect benefit which the President deems satisfactory."

May 1st, the Orson Welles motion picture "Citizen Kane" premiered in New York

December 7th, Japanese attack Pearl Harbor

December 8th, U.S. declares war on Japan

December 11th, Germany and Italy declare war on U.S.



1942 February 19th, FDR signs executive Order 9066, calling for the internment of over 100,000 Japanese-Americans.

November 9th, Supreme Court decides Wickard v. Filburn, finding that the interstate commerce clause allows Congress to regulate wheat production, even if the wheat is never sold and used only by the grower

Emergency Rubber Production Act passed



1943 January 15th, construction of the Pentagon completed.

April 19th, Warsaw Ghetto uprising begins.

December 17th, Chinese Exclusion Repeal Act passed



1944 January 22nd, Allied troops begin assault on Rome.

June 6th, D-Day

July 1st-22nd, Bretton Woods Conference held, establishing the basis of the postwar international monetary system and creating the International Monetary Fund

November 7th, FDR defeats Thomas E. Dewey (432 to 99 Electoral College Votes) to win fourth term as President

Individual Income Tax Act passed, raises the individual maximum rate to 94 percent.

The Road to Serfdom, by F. A. Hayek, published



1945 January 9th, U.S. forces under Gen. MacArthur invade Philippines.

January 26th, Auschwitz is liberated by Soviet troops.

February, economic expansion ends, economy enters recession

February 13th, British bombers attack Dresden, killing over 100,000.

March 9th, U.S. bombers attack Tokyo, killing over 100,000.

April 12th, FDR dies while at Warm Springs, Georgia

April 28th, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini and his mistress, Clara Petacci, are executed by Italian partisans as they attempt to flee the country.

April 30th, Adolph Hitler and Eva Braun commit suicide

May 7th, Germany signed an unconditional surrender at Allied headquarters in Rheims, France.

June 26th, United Nations charter signed by 50 countries in San Francisco.

July 16th, the United States exploded its first experimental atomic bomb, in the desert of Alamogordo, New Mexico

July 31st, Export-Import Bank Act passed, making the Export-Import Bank an independent agency

August 2nd, President Truman, Soviet leader Josef Stalin and British Prime Minister Clement Attlee concluded the Potsdam conference.

August 6th, atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima

August 9th, atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki

September 2nd, Japan surrenders

October, economic contraction ends



1946 July 3rd, Hobbs Act passed, eliminating loop holes in 1934 Anti-Rackateering Act

Employment Act passed

October 16th, President Truman lifts price controls on meat



1947 Labor-Management Relations Act (Taft-Hartley Act) passed



1948 November 2nd, Harry S. Truman defeats Thomas E. Dewey (303 to 189 electoral votes) in the presidential election

November, economic expansion ends, economy enters recession



1949 October, recession ends, economy begins to expand



1951 February 21st, 22nd amendment to the constitution ratified (prohibits Presidents from serving more than two terms)



1953 July 30th, RFC Liquidation Act passed, terminating the lending powers of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation

July, economic expansion peaks, recession begins



1956 Agricultural Act passed, otherwise known as the soil-bank program, authorized federal payments to farmers if they reduced production of certain crops



1957 June, Reconstruction Finance Corporation abolished



1959 Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act (Landrum-Griffin Act) passed
anonymous
2016-12-23 04:55:22 UTC
1
anonymous
2016-12-24 02:45:39 UTC
2
?
2016-12-16 10:59:54 UTC
Great Depression Dates
fragileindustries
2007-01-15 12:27:29 UTC
Ignore all of above (with due respect).



Most economists say the Depression ended in 1938, but some Keynsian economists say the economy did not really recover until 1946, after WWII. Here is detail from the wikipedia article:



The administration's other response to the 1937 deepening of the Great Depression had more tangible results. Ignoring the pleas of the Treasury Department, Roosevelt embarked on an antidote to the depression, reluctantly abandoning his efforts to balance the budget and launching a $5 billion spending program in the spring of 1938, an effort to increase mass purchasing power. Business-oriented observers explained the recession and recovery in very different terms from the Keynesians. They argued that the New Deal had been very hostile to business expansion in 1935–37, had encouraged massive strikes which had a negative impact on major industries such as automobiles, and had threatened massive antitrust legal attacks on big corporations. All those threats diminished sharply after 1938. For example, the antitrust efforts fizzled out without major cases. The CIO and AFL unions started battling each other more than battling corporations, and tax policy became more favorable to long-term growth.



On the other hand, according to economist Robert Higgs, when looking only at the supply of consumer goods, significant GDP growth resumed only in 1946 (Higgs does not estimate the value to consumers of collective, intangible goods like victory in war; Higgs 1992). To Keynesians, the war economy showed just how large the fiscal stimulus required to end the downturn of the Depression was, and it led, at the time, to fears that as soon as America demobilized, it would return to Depression conditions and industrial output would fall to its pre-war levels. That is, the Keynesians predicted a new depression would start after the war—a false prediction.
anonymous
2016-05-16 12:18:35 UTC
I have been suffering from post partum depression for the past one year when I gave birth to a baby boy. I couldn't stop thinking about how my husband loves him more than me and how things might be better if he wasn't born at all. Thus, I stayed away from him because I knew that I might do something I will regret for the rest of my life.



Almost instantly I went to a therapist and convince them that I need help. Among other things, I've tried herbal supplements and other book to treat depression but nothing works like the Depression Free Method. So now I'm proud to say I'm one of the happiest mother in the world. My husband loves us both very much and I thank the Lord for the blessing he gave us.



Depression Free Method?
?
2015-07-16 01:39:01 UTC
The Great Depression started in 1929 and ended in 1939. I know this because I have studied it very much and worked very hard. Plus the second world was started right after the Depression times finished, because the people were very happy until they heard the war was coming.
Anne2
2007-01-15 13:21:48 UTC
Timeline

1929 (October) Stock market Crashes

1930 3.2 million people are unemployed

1931 3 thousand unemployed workers marched on the Ford Motor company in Michigan

1932 Congress establishes the Reconstruction finance Corp RFC

November of 1932 Franklin d. Roosevelt elected President in landslide over herbert Hoover

1933 Rosevelt is inaugurated

April of 1933 Roosevelt orders Nation off gold Standard

civilian conservation corps is established known as CCC give jobs to many, they build schools, buildings, homes

Tennessee Valley Authority is created, built damns, planted trees

1934 Large 3 day dust storm blows 350 million tons of soil from West as far as New York and Boston, street lamps are lit in day time.

1935 FDR signs legislation creating Works Progress Admin later know as WPA, this puts artists, writers, painters to work.

1936 Harvest workers plight in California becomes known

1940 ww2 jump starts US industry.
anonymous
2014-08-29 22:00:15 UTC
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Christiansoccerchica
2007-01-15 12:16:16 UTC
Well hope this helps. the Depression was a time of economic down fall therefore there was no official end date. It lasted throughout much of the 1930's and was a terrible time. Please when you are researching this think of it in terms of the fact that real people went through this.
dutchfam7
2007-01-15 12:15:20 UTC
I don't have a website for you but it ended with the onset of wwII. Countries needed supplies and that brought Americans back to work. And that would be around 1940's.
CanProf
2007-01-15 12:14:47 UTC
Usually the outbreak of WW2 in Europe (1939) marks the end of the Great Depression.



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_depression
?
2017-03-09 01:09:22 UTC
3
anonymous
2007-01-15 12:19:28 UTC
it began in 1919, but the is no a end date for that, the global economy just was growing and recovering with the time
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2016-06-05 05:04:36 UTC
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john s
2007-01-15 12:21:30 UTC
"timeline? time isnt made out of lines, its made out of circles. And that is why clocks are round."-caboose, red vs blue (c) roosterteeth 2005 all rights reserved


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