YES!
Hoovervilles were shantytowns during President Hoovers term also during The Great DepressionYes, they were places where homless, jobless people lived. They consisted of small shacks. This was during the 1930's (The Great Depression)
The towns of shacks and tents built by homeless people during the Great Depression were commonly referred to as "Hoovervilles," named derisively after President Herbert Hoover, who was blamed for the economic crisis. These makeshift communities sprang up in cities across the United States as people lost their homes and sought shelter. Hoovervilles were often constructed from scrap materials and reflected the severe poverty and desperation faced by many during that time. They became symbols of the hardships of the Great Depression and the struggles of the American populace.
Hoovervilles-apex
How many people were homeless during the Great Depression? Between one and two million people.
Farmers were not doing good during the Great Depression.
homeless people during the great depression Over 1,200 people were homelss.
Not very people at all jumped off of skyscrapers during the Great Depression. Building new skyscrapers were put on hold after the Great Depression but no because people were jumping off of them.
Education was horrible in the great depression. Unlsess you call learning to survive on your own education. Many schools actually closed during the great depression. Most children couldn't even afford to go to school, or didn't even get a chance to go. So many children and youths were uneducated and unemployed, this was the main reason the NYA (national youth adminsitration) was created.
HooverVilles
They did not have dessert
no
During the great depression people smelled tar paper from what they built when they became homeless and they smelled many cars that passed by.