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The word 'Hooverville' in the Great Depression was named after the President of the United States, Herbert Hoover because he allegedly let the nation fall into a depression. 'Hoovervilles' were nothing more than shanty towns built for the homeless.
The word 'Hooverville' in the Great Depression was named after the President of the United States, Herbert Hoover because he allegedly let the nation fall into a depression. 'Hoovervilles' were nothing more than shanty towns built for the homeless.
Iraq war
John Adams, who left office in March 1801 and passed away on the 4th of July in 1826, held the record for 154 years and 7 months, from December 1803 to July 1954! Herbert Hoover broke John Adams' record on the 4th of July of 1958, then lived more than six additional years! President Hoover left office in March 1933 and passed away in October 1964 (he was President when the Great Depression started, and he was still alive when Kennedy was assassinated). Herbert Hoover held the record for over 54 years until it was broken on September 9, 2012 by Jimmy Carter. Coincidentally, September 9, 2012 was Grandparents' Day, the holiday started by Jimmy Carter. President Carter left office in January, 1981, and he's still alive in the fall of 2012. And he isn't even the oldest living former President; he's 3½ months younger than George H. W. Bush.
John Adams, who left office in March 1801 and passed away on the 4th of July in 1826, held the record for 154 years and 7 months, from December 1803 to July 1954! Herbert Hoover broke John Adams' record on the 4th of July of 1958, then lived more than six additional years! President Hoover left office in March 1933 and passed away in October 1964 (he was President when the Great Depression started, and he was still alive when Kennedy was assassinated). Herbert Hoover held the record for over 54 years until it was broken on September 9, 2012 by Jimmy Carter. Coincidentally, September 9, 2012 was Grandparents' Day, the holiday started by Jimmy Carter. President Carter left office in January, 1981, and he's still alive in the fall of 2012. And he isn't even the oldest living former President; he's 3
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John Adams, who left office in March 1801 and passed away on the 4th of July in 1826, held the record for 154 years and 7 months, from December 1803 to July 1954! Herbert Hoover broke John Adams' record on the 4th of July of 1958, then lived more than six additional years! President Hoover left office in March 1933 and passed away in October 1964 (he was President when the Great Depression started, and he was still alive when Kennedy was assassinated). Herbert Hoover held the record for over 54 years until it was broken on September 9, 2012 by Jimmy Carter. Coincidentally, September 9, 2012 was Grandparents' Day, the holiday started by Jimmy Carter. President Carter left office in January, 1981, and he's still alive in the fall of 2012. And he isn't even the oldest living former President; he's 3½ months younger than George H. W. Bush.
Technically, it would be Herbert Hoover, who was elected President in 1928 and was inaugurated in 1929. The stock market had its wild swings through the fall of 1929, culminating in a drastic crash in September, a recovery in early October, then a crash with no end at the end of October 1929. Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected President in 1932, arguably one of the worst years of the Depression, but still a Depression that already happened.
It is correct to say ''He will fall down''
there is a big possibility that our beloved country will be in chaos and might be our greatest down fall. Ps: base on my opinion. thank you!
It didn't fall down it was knocked down.
I Fall Down was created in 1982.