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Unemployed World War I veterans marched on DC in the summer of 1932, seeking early payment for service compensation.
They led a month-long march to Washington to lobby Congress
The Bonus army was a group of WWI veterans which wanted their army paychecks early. You see, when they served they were offered money which was suppose to be accessible sometime in the year 1940. They were okay with that at the time but then the Great Depression happened and they marched to Washington D.C demanding access to their paychecks early.
Their demand that bonuses be paid early was ignored
Their demand that bonuses be paid early was ignored
Unemployed World War I veterans marched on DC in the summer of 1932, seeking early payment for service compensation.
President Herbert Hoover battled the Bonus Army. In 1932, a group of World War I veterans known as the Bonus Army marched to Washington, D.C. to demand early payment of their military bonuses. Hoover ordered the eviction of the protesters from their makeshift camps, leading to a violent clash with the federal troops.
They led a month-long march to Washington to lobby Congress
They led a month-long march to Washington to lobby Congress
When President Hoover ordered that the Bonus Army be dispersed in 1932, his public image was damaged. Hoover ordered that WW1 veterans, who were protesting outside federal buildings in Washington, DC be removed by soldiers of the Army. These protesting veterans were called the Bonus Army because they wanted immediate cash redemption for their service certificates. In 1924, Congress voted to give a bonus to WW1 veterans, but they needed to wait until 1945 to collect these bonuses. However, due to the Depression, many veterans were unemployed and so wanted their bonuses early.
The Bonus army was a group of WWI veterans which wanted their army paychecks early. You see, when they served they were offered money which was suppose to be accessible sometime in the year 1940. They were okay with that at the time but then the Great Depression happened and they marched to Washington D.C demanding access to their paychecks early.
WWI veterans participated in the Bonus March because they wre to reciave bonus payments in 1945. However, they wanted their bonus money in 1932 to help with finances. Hoover would not pay them so he sent the military in to destroy a Hooverville built in Washington D.C. My social studies class didn't talk about why uunemployed workers protested.
They were called the "Bonus Army" when they marched to Washington in 1932 to press for immediate payment of the bonuses granted them under a 1924 act (the World War Adjusted Compensation Act). Although the bonuses were not to be payable until 1945, many veterans were put out of work by the Great Depression, which began in 1929, and wanted their payments early. They were evicted from their camps by the army, but in 1936 many were granted payments by Congress.
The Bonus Army wanted their military bonus early.
Their demand that bonuses be paid early was ignored
Their demand that bonuses be paid early was ignored
Their demand that bonuses be paid early was ignored