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The 20s and The Great Depression

Context

  • The war ended in the late 1910s

  • Germany suffered due to having to adhere to the terms set by the Treaty of Versailles

  • For other countries, it brought economic prosperity

The 1920s around the world

  • Hope, optimism, and economic prosperity after the war brought about new technology and social changes

  • Production of cars and household appliances rose

  • Mass production increased

    • Assembly lines

    • Machinery

  • Easier production meant that these were no longer luxury products

    • People had regular work

    • Money to spend

  • Advertisement campaigns emerged

    • Toasters

    • Vacuums

    • Fridges

    • Irons

The 1920s in Australia

  • Electrical lighting installed in houses

  • Many people didn’t have power points

  • Appliances didn’t get widely spread until the 40s

  • Cars were imported from overseas until Ford and General Motors established factories in 1925 in Australia

  • 100,000 → 560,000 cars (1921 → 1939)

Media

  • Radios became an influential innovation

  • Advertising proliferated, airing to radios to families every night

  • Radios helped bring the Jazz Age of the 1920s

  • The Hollywood motion picture industry rose

    • The first talking movie was released in 1927

Fashion/Social

  • Youth and freedom celebrated

  • Boyish flapper style with short skirts, low waists, and short hair with bell hats popularised

  • Women danced, smoked, and drank alcohol in public

  • They went out without chaperones

  • Flappers flaunted disregard for traditional codes of behaviour

  • Conservatives provided resistance

  • Flappers were rebelling against roles placed on women during the war

Jobs for women

  • During the war, jobs were made available for women

  • Many girls leaving high school were now expected to work

  • Pay rates for women were still half of what men got

  • Male work unions argued they put the working class men at risk

  • The government was opposed to women working

Indigenous people

  • Indigenous people still suffered despite social and economic changes

  • The Stolen Generation began around this time

  • Assimilation was present

The Great Depression

A period of severe economic downturn and hardship around the world

  • The economy started to slow in the late 20s

  • Work became harder to find and mass-production companies had less demand

  • Prices for goods dropped around the world

  • Unemployment in industrialised nations

  • The New York Stock Exchange plummeted

  • Many people were involved in investing money in shares bought on credit

  • By late 1920 the number of investors grew and prices became inflated

  • Some shareholders lost confidence and sold their shares

  • Prices dropped and the market crashed

  • Many investors lost everything

  • Confidence in the economy sank, and businesses closed, causing unemployment

  • People bought less stuff, causing a never-ending cycle

Australia in The Great Depression

  • Australia was highly dependent on other countries during the 30s

  • When the American economy collapsed, two-thirds of trading ceased

  • People lost jobs overnight, and 32% were unemployed by 1932

  • Without an income, many people lost their homes and lived in shabby housing

  • Shanty towns sprang up around major cities

  • People desperate to find work

  • Charities attempted to feed the poor

  • Ex-soldiers hit the hardest

    • Unable to find work

    • Families broke down

    • Homeless

    • Suicide rates among soldiers grew

The susso

  • The government provided relief payments through sustenance payments

  • By 1932 more than 60,000 people relied on susso

  • The susso was granted to the truly destitute who had been unemployed for a long time and had no assets

  • It consisted of food rations and coupons

  • Fathers often deserted homes to become itinerant workers

  • Men took to drink

  • People engaged in petty crimes and all sorts of desperate measures to survive and pass the time

A

The 20s and The Great Depression

Context

  • The war ended in the late 1910s

  • Germany suffered due to having to adhere to the terms set by the Treaty of Versailles

  • For other countries, it brought economic prosperity

The 1920s around the world

  • Hope, optimism, and economic prosperity after the war brought about new technology and social changes

  • Production of cars and household appliances rose

  • Mass production increased

    • Assembly lines

    • Machinery

  • Easier production meant that these were no longer luxury products

    • People had regular work

    • Money to spend

  • Advertisement campaigns emerged

    • Toasters

    • Vacuums

    • Fridges

    • Irons

The 1920s in Australia

  • Electrical lighting installed in houses

  • Many people didn’t have power points

  • Appliances didn’t get widely spread until the 40s

  • Cars were imported from overseas until Ford and General Motors established factories in 1925 in Australia

  • 100,000 → 560,000 cars (1921 → 1939)

Media

  • Radios became an influential innovation

  • Advertising proliferated, airing to radios to families every night

  • Radios helped bring the Jazz Age of the 1920s

  • The Hollywood motion picture industry rose

    • The first talking movie was released in 1927

Fashion/Social

  • Youth and freedom celebrated

  • Boyish flapper style with short skirts, low waists, and short hair with bell hats popularised

  • Women danced, smoked, and drank alcohol in public

  • They went out without chaperones

  • Flappers flaunted disregard for traditional codes of behaviour

  • Conservatives provided resistance

  • Flappers were rebelling against roles placed on women during the war

Jobs for women

  • During the war, jobs were made available for women

  • Many girls leaving high school were now expected to work

  • Pay rates for women were still half of what men got

  • Male work unions argued they put the working class men at risk

  • The government was opposed to women working

Indigenous people

  • Indigenous people still suffered despite social and economic changes

  • The Stolen Generation began around this time

  • Assimilation was present

The Great Depression

A period of severe economic downturn and hardship around the world

  • The economy started to slow in the late 20s

  • Work became harder to find and mass-production companies had less demand

  • Prices for goods dropped around the world

  • Unemployment in industrialised nations

  • The New York Stock Exchange plummeted

  • Many people were involved in investing money in shares bought on credit

  • By late 1920 the number of investors grew and prices became inflated

  • Some shareholders lost confidence and sold their shares

  • Prices dropped and the market crashed

  • Many investors lost everything

  • Confidence in the economy sank, and businesses closed, causing unemployment

  • People bought less stuff, causing a never-ending cycle

Australia in The Great Depression

  • Australia was highly dependent on other countries during the 30s

  • When the American economy collapsed, two-thirds of trading ceased

  • People lost jobs overnight, and 32% were unemployed by 1932

  • Without an income, many people lost their homes and lived in shabby housing

  • Shanty towns sprang up around major cities

  • People desperate to find work

  • Charities attempted to feed the poor

  • Ex-soldiers hit the hardest

    • Unable to find work

    • Families broke down

    • Homeless

    • Suicide rates among soldiers grew

The susso

  • The government provided relief payments through sustenance payments

  • By 1932 more than 60,000 people relied on susso

  • The susso was granted to the truly destitute who had been unemployed for a long time and had no assets

  • It consisted of food rations and coupons

  • Fathers often deserted homes to become itinerant workers

  • Men took to drink

  • People engaged in petty crimes and all sorts of desperate measures to survive and pass the time

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