What was America like in the early days of the Great Depression? What steps could the federal government take to help the American public? American life would be transformed forever as the country slipped further into an economic decline.
As the 1920s neared an end, many were convinced that prosperous times would go on forever. On September 3, 1929, stock prices reached their highest level yet, but a slow decline began. On October 24th, an abrupt dip led bankers to attempt stemming the tide. On October 29th, Black Tuesday, a record 16,410,030 shares were traded as huge blocks of stock were dumped for whatever they would bring.
By December 1st, stocks on the New York Stock Exchange had dropped in value by $26,000,000,000 ($391,770,000,000 today). The day after the crash President Herbert Hoover assured the public that the business of the country was on a sound and prosperous basis. All that was needed was time. In November 1929, he had summoned business leaders to the White House and secured promises to maintain wages. He also received commitments to spend $1.8 billion ($15 billion) for new construction and repairs to stimulate employment.
At first, Hoover was praised by the press for his actions, which allowed Long Beach and other parts of the nation to grow throughout most of 1930. In Long Beach, the Ford Motor factory opened, ground was broken for the Procter & Gamble soap plant, a new wharf to allow bigger cargo ships access to the harbor was completed, and a $100,000 water plant was put into service. Residential districts such as Bixby Knolls started selling new homes, and two new schools, Lindbergh and Naples, opened to meet the educational needs of the many families moving to Long Beach. Economic conditions improved somewhat in early 1931 until a series of bank collapses in Europe and the drought and dust hitting the Plains states sent another wave of terror through the American economy. Farmers were unable to sustain their crops and, as a result, some 2.5 million people would leave the Plains states, most headed to California.
Long Beach did have oil, new
industries, and a seemingly bright future, but it could not deal with all of
the displaced workers from Dust Bowl states seeking employment in Long
Beach. In an attempt to remedy the
downturn in the job market, the American Legion asked that only American
citizens be employed by business firms, resulting in the repatriation of
120,000 Mexican laborers from California.
Going a bit further, the Long Beach City Council passed an ordinance
mandating that only residents of the city could be hired to build the new
municipal auditorium.
By late November
1930, the veneer that everything was O.K. began to crumble. Long Beach churches were asked to open their
doors and give homeless men a night’s lodging.
Nearby Fort MacArthur furnished 100 cots and bedding for the itinerant
men who had come to seemingly prosperous Long Beach looking for work. Business sales were sagging.
In
January 1931, those municipal employees not dependent on their salaries for a
living, were asked to take a leave of absence so their jobs could be filed by
men who had to support their families.
Married women were chiefly affected by this proposal. At a county conference in Los Angeles, it was
agreed that every possible dollar of county money should be spent in employing manpower. Contractors doing public work were asked to
abandon machines and use hand labor so far as possible. One rule was that persons who refused to
work, although able to do so, would not be carried on the charity list, and
would have to "shift for themselves."
In March 1931, $174,000 ($3 million) was appropriated by the Los
Angeles County Board of Supervisors for Long Beach street projects. Men paid $4
($68) a day were employed two days a week. Under this system as many as 1500
were put to work.
The five-month period, which ended in May 1931, marked the heaviest drain ever on the social service organizations of the city. The Social Welfare League, American Red Cross and Catholic Welfare Bureau went into 4,000 Long Beach homes, providing relief in the form of food, fuel and clothing. Five thousand grocery orders were distributed by the agencies; 2000 pairs of shoes and 11,000 pieces of clothing were given out. From December 1, 1930 to May 1, 1931, the Salvation Army served 10,473 meals and provided beds for 7100 men. By mid-May 1931 the resources of these agencies were beginning to wear thin, agencies were forced to evaluate requests for aid based on need.
The City Council looked at ways to
cut expenditures. Oil revenues were down
and Long Beach was feeling severe financial pressures. A cost-savings study recommended a ten percent
reduction in all salaries. Police and
Fire wages could not be touched, however, since they were mandated under a city
ordinance. On June 11, 1931, the City
Manager decided to set an example and announced plans to cut his own salary,
even though the city charter said he should not be paid less than $7500 ($128,000)
a year. Establishment of a five-day work
week (employees used to work 9-1 on Saturdays), with appropriate salary cuts to
reflect the shortened work period, was also recommended. City employee sick leave cost the city
$28,000 ($475,000) per year; it was proposed employees receive no pay for the
first three days of illness and that a nurse from the Health Department visit
them to verify they were really sick.
City Manager Claude C. Lewis worked
on consolidating departments; when city managers retired they were not
replaced, their duties assigned to another department head. Lewis, however, did
create a new position, that of Assistant City Manager whose job duties included
being director of personnel and looking into the efficiency of each city
department.
New taxes were considered. The city began to charge for the collection
of garbage from business places, hotels, clubs and restaurants. Individual
houses were still exempt. A business and
professional tax was also instituted--any member of any profession who
maintained or occupied an office or place of business within the city was
required to pay a license tax.
Ford Motor Co. Long Beach |
The City Council told the public
that a recall measure would bring disaster.
There was no provision in the City Charter to hold a special election to
fill the vacancies should the recall prove successful. The running of Long Beach would be turned
over to the State. The 1932 recall
election was defeated, but in 1934 a recall was approved and eleven city
officials were without a job.
Public relief was something city,
county, state and federal governments had never dealt with before. It had always been handled by charitable
institutions. Now new rules and new
players were getting into the game. Long
Beach had done what it legally could to raise money for public relief, and the
measure had been defeated. While they
were looking into the legality of tapping into Gas Department revenues, the
American Legion proposed holding a drive to raise $100,000 ($1.7 million) for
employing out-of-work men in planting trees along Long Beach streets.
By October 21,
1932, the County was giving aid to 151,628 people, or one-tenth of the county
population. On the charity rolls were an
ex-brigadier general, working for $3.20 ($60) a day; an ex-State's attorney of a
Midwestern State, an Austrian countess who formerly mingled with the crowned
heads of Europe, a graduate of West Point and a former head of a newspaper
publishers association who turned down the chance to become Governor of his
home State eight years earlier in order to go into business in California. Southern California was becoming the Mecca of
transient families from all parts of the country. Lured by the fine climate and promise of a
better future, thousands left their homes for the sunshine of the
Southland. Such wanderings created
untold problems for the areas they wanted to call home.
Though a Republican town by
tradition, Long Beach gave Franklin D. Roosevelt a majority of 7181 votes in
the November election. It was time for a
change and new solutions to the economic woes of the nation.
More about the Roosevelt’s “New
Deal” in the 4th and final part of this series.
Since I didn't live in CA in the early thirties but was a small child I do remember a few things.
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