[Crowd of people gather outside the New York Stock Exchange following the Crash of 1929]

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  • 23. The Great Depression | The American Yawp

    http://www.americanyawp.com/text/23-the-great-depression

    Magnifique site collaboratif (et article) sur la grande dépression de 1929.

    The wonder of the stock market permeated popular culture in the 1920s. Although it was released during the first year of the Great Depression, the 1930 film High Society Blues captured the speculative hope and prosperity of the previous decade. “I’m in the Market for You,” a popular musical number from the film, even used the stock market as a metaphor for love: You’re going up, up, up in my estimation, / I want a thousand shares of your caresses, too. / We’ll count the hugs and kisses, / When dividends are due, / Cause I’m in the market for you. But, just as the song was being recorded in 1929, the stock market reached the apex of its swift climb, crashed, and brought an abrupt end to the seeming prosperity of the “Roaring ‘20s.” The Great Depression had arrived.

    II. The Origins of the Great Depression
    “Crowd of people gather outside the New York Stock Exchange following the Crash of 1929,” 1929. Library of Congress, http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/99471695.

    “Crowd of people gather outside the New York Stock Exchange following the Crash of 1929,” 1929. Library of Congress, http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/99471695.

    On Thursday, October 24, 1929, stock market prices suddenly plummeted. Ten billion dollars in investments (roughly equivalent to about $100 billion today) disappeared in a matter of hours. Panicked selling set in, stock sunk to record lows, and stunned investors crowded the New York Stock Exchange demanding answers. Leading bankers met privately at the offices of J.P. Morgan and raised millions in personal and institutional contributions to halt the slide. They marched across the street and ceremoniously bought stocks at inflated prices. The market temporarily stabilized but fears spread over the weekend and the following week frightened investors dumped their portfolios to avoid further losses. On October 29, “Black Tuesday,” the stock market began its long precipitous fall. Stock values evaporated. Shares of U.S. Steel dropped from $262 to $22. General Motors’ stock fell from $73 a share to $8. Four-fifths of the J.D. Rockefeller’s fortune—the greatest in American history—vanished.

    #états-unis #finance #crise_financière #grande_dépression #otto_neurath #visualisation #isotype #neurath