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| Term 1929-1933 |
Party Republican |
Born August 10, 1874, in West Branch, Iowa |
Died October 20, 1964, in New York, New York |
| Vice President Charles Curtis |
First Lady Lou Henry Hoover (Wife) |
Previous Occupation Engineer |
States in Union 48 |
| Family
Hoover’s parents were Jesse Clark and Huldah R. Minthorn Hoover. Hoover married Lou Henry in 1899. They had two sons: Herbert Clark and Allan Henry. |
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Legacy Hoover was president for less than a year when the stock market was seized by the most devastating crash in American history, plunging the U.S. into the period known as the Great Depression and initiating an international economic crisis. The consequences of the crash were devastating as businesses went bankrupt, banks failed, and millions became unemployed. People lost their homes, farmers lost their land, and many lost their life savings. By the end of 1930 more than 1,300 banks had closed across the country. Ultimately the Great Depression witnessed the failure of 10,000 banks and the loss of $2 billion in deposits. Nearly five million Americans were out of work by January 1931. Unfortunately, the economic situation continued to deteriorate and by 1933 nearly 13 million people were unemployed. Many blamed Hoover for the Depression, and he was easily beaten by Franklin Roosevelt in the following election. Today many historians believe that Hoover could not possibly have solved the economic crisis, though he might have eliminated human suffering by authorizing direct relief. |
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Quotes When he accepted the Republican nomination for president in 1928, Hoover predicted that “We in America today are nearer to the final triumph over poverty than ever before in the history of any land.” |
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| At This Time 1929: The stock market crashes October 24, which triggers the Great Depression • William Faulkner writes The Sound and the Fury • The Museum of Modern Art opens in New York and exhibits works by Cezanne, Gauguin, Seurat, and Van Gogh • U.S. aviator Richard E. Byrd and three companions fly over the South Pole • The Bell Laboratories in the U.S. experiment with color television • The St. Valentine’s Day Massacre occurs, in which six notorious Chicago gangsters are machine-gunned to death by rivals • Construction begins on the Empire State Building in New York • 1930: The movie All Quiet on the Western Front, the first major anti-war film of the sound era, wins the Academy Award for Best Picture • Grant Wood’s painting American Gothic is exhibited for the first time at The Art Institute of Chicago and causes a sensation; it is awarded a $300 prize • The planet Pluto is discovered by C.W. Tombaugh • Comic strips become very popular in the U.S. • The U.S. population is now 122 million • In 1900 the population numbered only 76 million • 1931: Pearl S. Buck’s novel The Good Earth is a best seller • Robert Frost’s Collected Poems wins the Pulitzer Prize • Salvador Dali paints the fantastic The Persistence of Memory • “The Star-Spangled Banner” becomes the national anthem • Mrs. Hattie T. Caraway, a Democrat from Arkansas, becomes the first woman to be elected to the Senate • 36 million cars are produced world wide each year • The Empire State Building is completed • 1932: The Reconstruction Finance Corporation is established • Aldous Huxley publishes his dystopian novel Brave New World • The Folger Library opens in Washington • Cole Porter’s musical The Gay Divorcee is produced on Broadway and stars Fred Astaire • Amelia Earhart is the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic from Newfoundland to Londonderry, Ireland • Japan begins to conquer world markets by undercutting prices • The Olympic Games are held in Los Angeles, and 37 nations participate • The winter games are held in the U.S. for the first time in Lake Placid, New York • Unemployment is rampant: over 13.7 million are unemployed in the U.S. , and 30 million are unemployed worldwide • Construction begins on the Golden Gate Bridge |
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| Did You Know? Hoover was the first president who was born west of the Mississippi River. When he was only two years old, he became severely ill with the croup, which is an infection of the upper airway that is characterized by a loud, barking cough. During the worst of his illness, the young Hoover’s breathing had slowed to such a degree that his parents were unable to find his pulse and thought he had died. They subsequently put pennies over his eyelids and covered his body with a sheet. Fortunately, his uncle was a doctor, and he arrived just in time to revive him. Just four years later when Hoover was six, his father died. His mother died when he was nine. He eventually went to live with the uncle who had saved him, Dr. John Minthorn. |
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| Learn More At: http://hoover.archives.gov/ (Information about the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum in West Branch, Iowa.) |
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| Field Trips for Herbert Clark Hoover
Herbert Hoover National Historic Site |
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