See also: Hoovervilles Hoover Hoovy Hooved Hooven Hooves Hoovered Hoovering Hooversville Hooverville
1. “Hoovervilles” were hundreds of makeshift homeless encampments built near large cities across the United States during the Great Depression (1929-1933)
Hoovervilles, Hundreds, Homeless
2. Dwellings in the Hoovervilles were little more than shacks built of discarded bricks, wood, tin, and cardboard
Hoovervilles
3. Hoovervilles of the Great Depression Squatter’s shacks in “Hooverville,” Portland, Oregon, Arthur Rothstein, 1936. Hooverville: A crudely built camp put up usually on the edge of a town to house the many poverty-stricken people who had lost their homes during the Depression of the 1930s.
Hoovervilles, Hooverville, House, Had, Homes
4. Hoovervilles were shacktowns spread throughout America which testified to the housing crisis that accompanied the employment crisis during the Great Depression
Hoovervilles, Housing
5. The shanty towns were named "Hoovervilles" after President Herbert Hoover because many people blamed him for the Great Depression
Hoovervilles, Herbert, Hoover, Him
6. Hoovervilles in Seattle: Map and Photos Here are the locations of eight shack towns that housed homeless people in the Seattle area in the 1930s
Hoovervilles, Here, Housed, Homeless
7. During the Clutch Plague small shanty towns, later named Hoovervilles began to spring up
Hoovervilles
8. Hoovervilles were made up of scraps, including old tires, cardboard boxes, newspapers, and flattened metal
Hoovervilles
9. The New Deal, The New Deal, Causes and characteristics of GD, Hoovervilles, The Great Depression, Roaring 20, WW1, migriant farm workers 81 Terms
Hoovervilles
10. After 1940 the economy recovered, unemployment fell, and shanty eradication programs destroyed all the Hoovervilles
Hoovervilles
11. Hoovervilles have often features in the popular culture, and still appear in editorial cartoons.Movies like My Man Godfrey (1936) and Sullivan’s Travels (1941) sometimes sentimentalized Hooverville life
Hoovervilles, Have, Hooverville
12. To begin, Hoovervilles were a nationwide occurrence
Hoovervilles
13. The Hoovervilles was an attempt at a society by the people who were rejected by society
Hoovervilles
14. Whenever possible, Hoovervilles were built near creeks, streams, and rivers to provide a source of water
Hoovervilles
15. These communities of shacks or shanties were called Hoovervilles, after President Hoover, who refused to help the growing number of homeless
Hoovervilles, Hoover, Help, Homeless
16. Thousands of Hoovervilles began to appear all over the country
Hoovervilles
17. Groups of these dwellings for the homeless were called Hoovervilles
Homeless, Hoovervilles
18. Hoovervilles are grungy towns built by the homeless people during the great depression
Hoovervilles, Homeless
19. Its claimed that a hooverville is "a place for anyone that has no where else to go." Why are they called "Hoovervilles"? They are called "Hoovervilles" because they are named …
Hooverville, Has, Hoovervilles
20. Hoovervilles appeared all over the US in the 1930s, some with as many as 15,000 residents.
Hoovervilles
21. Hoovervilles definition at Dictionary.com, a free online dictionary with pronunciation, synonyms and translation
Hoovervilles
22. The rise of Hoovervilles As the Depression got worse, many Americans lost their homes
Hoovervilles, Homes
23. These camps came to be called Hoovervilles, after the president
Hoovervilles
24. Hoovervilles, or shantytowns, became a common sight
Hoovervilles
25. The term was coined by Charles Michelson, publicity chief of the Democratic National Committee.There were hundreds of Hoovervilles across the country
Hundreds, Hoovervilles
26. Sprawling Homeless Camps — Modern 'Hoovervilles' — Vex California The wrangling over what to do about a sprawling homeless camp in Santa …
Homeless, Hoovervilles
27. In 1936, the FDR-created Works Progress Administration sent photographer Arthur Rothstein to document Portland's Hoovervilles
Hoovervilles
28. In the 1930’s Hoovervilles appeared all over the country
Hoovervilles
29. Throughout the country, Hoovervilles, or makeshift shanties, would spring up …
Hoovervilles
30. The conditions in Hoovervilles were not to the best they should have been
Hoovervilles, Have
31. Hoovervilles synonyms, Hoovervilles pronunciation, Hoovervilles translation, English dictionary definition of Hoovervilles
Hoovervilles
32. Photograph of a "Hooverville," 1936 "Hoovervilles" were temporary communities that America’s homeless created to provide shelter for themselves and their families during the Great Depression
Hooverville, Hoovervilles, Homeless
33. It isn’t too early to think about what we should call the 21 st century Hoovervilles, the places where the millions of us made homeless by Mr Trump’s inept response to …
Hoovervilles, Homeless
34. Shop for Hoovervilles art from the world's greatest living artists
Hoovervilles
35. All Hoovervilles artwork ships within 48 hours and includes a 30-day money-back guarantee
Hoovervilles, Hours
36. Choose your favorite Hoovervilles designs and purchase them as wall art, home decor, phone cases, tote bags, and more!
Hoovervilles, Home
37. “Hoovervilles were raided by order of parks departments or other authorities, [but] the men who carried out the raids often expressed regret and guilt for their actions” (History.com 3)
Hoovervilles, History
38. While some Hoovervilles were shut down, most people sympathized with those who lived in Hoovervilles …
Hoovervilles
39. Use Hoovervilles in a sentence Hoovervilles definition 11
Hoovervilles
40. The city’s Hoovervilles were embarrassing to the city on many levels
Hoovervilles
41. Seattle’s long struggle with homelessness was brought to the forefront in the 1930s, when eight settlements called “Hoovervilles” sprang up as far north as Interbay and as far south as
Homelessness, Hoovervilles
42. Most Hoovervilles operated in an informal, unorganized way, but the bigger ones would sometimes put forward spokespersons to serve as a liaison between the camp and the larger community
Hoovervilles
43. Most Hoovervilles were made out of any materials people could find, including crates, cardboard, and scraps of metal.
Hoovervilles
44. Hoovervilles: A Hooverville was the popular name for a shanty town built by homeless men during the Great Depression
Hoovervilles, Hooverville, Homeless
45. A brief history of the burgeoning communities known as "Hoovervilles" during the Great Depression.
History, Hoovervilles
46. In addition, the conditions of the Hoovervilles varied from city to city
Hoovervilles
47. Most of the Hoovervilles were small towns; however, there were many large Hoovervilles, like the St
Hoovervilles, However
48. Louis Hooverville, which lasted until 1936: “No two Hoovervilles were quite alike, and the camps varied in population and size.
Hooverville, Hoovervilles
49. Some Hoovervilles were dotted with vegetable gardens, and some individual shacks contained furniture a family had managed to carry away upon eviction from their former home"
Hoovervilles, Had, Home
50. From the causes of the crisis to its effects in the Hoovervilles and Dust Bowl, a PowerPoint presentation takes viewers through the story of the
Hoovervilles
HOOVERVILLES [ˈho͞ovərˌvil, ˈho͞ovərvəl]
NOUN
Definition of Hooverville. : a shantytown of temporary dwellings during the depression years in the U.S. broadly : any similar area of temporary dwellings.
The people who lived in a Hooverville or Shanty Town were men, women and children, black and white, from all walks of life, who had been evicted from their homes and made homeless due to unemployment in the Great Depression.
Most Hoovervilles were made out of any materials people could find, including crates, cardboard, and scraps of metal. They usually had a small stove, a bed, and some cooking instruments.
No two Hoovervilles were quite alike, and the camps varied in population and size. Some were as small as a few hundred people while others, in bigger metropolitan areas such as Washington, D.C., and New York City, boasted thousands of inhabitants.