THE GREAT DEPRESSION 1929 1940
THE GREAT DEPRESSION
Question
[CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
|
|
they didn’t visit charities, the stole from markets
|
|
they didn’t visit charities, the grew their own food
|
|
they visited soup kitchens
|
|
they visited the school cafeteria
|
Detailed explanation-1: -Great Depression bread lines, food lines, and soup lines worked hard to feed those who could not afford to feed themselves. These lines, run by charities like the Red Cross, saw hundreds of people lined up for bread, soup, or a hot beverage.
Detailed explanation-2: -Some people chose to hunt for their food. Some people harvested their own bees to make honey. Other people went to soup kitchens, which are places where people can go and get a free meal. Since many people needed a free meal during the Depression, they often had to wait for hours in long ‘soup lines’ to be served.
Detailed explanation-3: -Between 1933 and 1935, the Federal Surplus Relief Corporation, later renamed the Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA), sent millions of tons of government food to every state in the nation.
Detailed explanation-4: -During the Great Depression preceding the passage of the Social Security Act, “soup kitchens” provided the only meals some unemployed Americans had. This particular soup kitchen was sponsored by the Chicago gangster Al Capone.
Detailed explanation-5: -Many homeless people got their food from soup kitchens. When the Great Depression first began, most soup kitchens were run by charities. Later, the government began to open soup kitchens to feed the homeless and unemployed. They served soup because it was cheap and more could be made by adding water.