the homeless rate during the great depression was nearly 25 percent of Americans.
During the great depression people smelled tar paper from what they built when they became homeless and they smelled many cars that passed by.
Gaycats
was the popular name for shanty towns built by homeless people during the Great Depression.
Hoovervilles
homeless people during the great depression Over 1,200 people were homelss.
How many people were homeless during the Great Depression? Between one and two million people.
the homeless rate during the great depression was nearly 25 percent of Americans.
During the great depression people smelled tar paper from what they built when they became homeless and they smelled many cars that passed by.
Too many to count
Gaycats
was the popular name for shanty towns built by homeless people during the Great Depression.
Hoovervilles
Hoovervilles
Hoovervilles
Hoovervilles
It is estimated that there were over two million homeless people in the United States during the Great Depression. Many of these people lived in shanty towns called 'Hoovervilles' after President Herbert Hoover.