Dakota Gibbons Mrs. Skrobul Great Depression DBQ 11 February, 2015 The Great Depression Throughout United States history society has been separated into factions based on people's’ religion, race, and sex, but no matter which faction someone belonged to they were again separated based on wealth. In the late 1920s and throughout the 1930s, the U.S. went through a period of recession known as The Great Depression. During this period more and more citizens dropped from their economic classes until they were confsidered to be a part of the lower class while living in poverty. During this ten year span people apart of the working class continuously begged and wished for the same two things, improved wages and improved working conditions. They did so not because of the people they worked …show more content…
On average a worker would make a few dollars a week, which lead a factory worker from Texas to write President Roosevelt, “ I can’t see for my life President why a man must toil & work his life out in Such factories 10 long hours ever day except Sunday for a small sum of 15 cents to 35 cents per hour & pay the high cost of honest & deason living expences,” (pg 171). This reality of people working for nothing needed to come to a conclusion. In order for the people to receive a higher hourly wage the government needs to implement a law that dictates the minimum amount of money a worker gets paid hourly. This amount needs to be determined based on the cost of living, and in order to prevent people from working for little to nothing in the future it needs to fluctuate with the cost of living. Owners of factories and other business will be upset and not follow the law, and that is why the government will need to be strict and enforce this minimum wage law. Once the people received the more money they deserved their focus turned to how they were