Free Term Papers on Book Review - The Great Depression

OPPapers.com Essay Index >> American History >> Book Review - The Great Depression

We have many free term papers and essays on Book Review - The Great Depression. We also have a wide variety of research papers and book reports available to you for free. You can browse our collection of term papers or use our search engine.

Essays from FratFiles.com
  1. Book Review - The Great Depression

    Book Review - The Great Depression. Amanda Carrion Review of The Great
    Depression America 1929-1941 by Robert S. McElvaine September ...

  2. Of Mice And Men Book Review

    Of Mice and Men book review. ... One reason this book will retain a considerable berth
    in my ... America?s treatment of the undesirables during the Great Depression. ...

  3. The Great Depression

    ... changed. The misery of the Great Depression was finally brought to an
    end. There was a book review that I read about this book. ...

  4. The Great Depression

    ... changed. The misery of the Great Depression was finally brought to an
    end. There was a book review that I read about this book. ...

  5. Ww Ii Book Review

    WW II book review. ... II taught in high schools across America tends to read something
    like this: capitalizing on inflation in the Great Depression, animosity from ...

View More Papers...

Book Review - The Great Depression

Submitted by carrions on September 23, 2005

Category: American History
Words: 1002 | Pages: 5
Views: 206
Popularity Rank: 36,235
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

Amanda Carrion
Review of The Great Depression America 1929-1941 by Robert S. McElvaine
September 2, 2004
The Great Depression America 1929-1941 by Robert S. McElvaine covers many topics of American history during the “Great Depression” through 1941. The topic that I have selected to compare to the text of American, Past and Present, written by Robert A. Divine, T.H. Breen, George M. Frederickson and R. Hal Williams, is Herbert Hoover, the thirty-first president of the United States and America’s president during the horrible “Great Depression”.
Divine et al., state that Hoover was a “sober, intelligent, and immensely hardworking” man. McElvaine concurs and explains that “at the age of 29, Hoover was a financier-promoter-geologist-engineer-metallurgist”. Divine et al., characterize Herbert Hoover by saying “Hoover epitomized the American myth of a self-made man” and he “embodied the nation’s faith in individualism and free enterprise”. McElvaine agrees and explains that Hoover “Orphaned and very poor at the age of nine, was a self-made millionaire thirty years later”. McElvaine, in agreement, goes on to say that Hoover himself held the opinion that if a man “has not made a million dollars by the time he is forty he is not worth much.”
After making his fortune he moved on to various jobs and positions abroad and at home, in 1921 he was appointed by President Harding to the position of Secretary of Commerce. During his tenure as Secretary of Commerce for the Harding-Coolidge administrations, McElvaine reveals that Hoover “was the greatest secretary of commerce in our history”. McElvaine explains that Hoover “had no use for the strict laissez-fair attitude of the nineteenth century” and goes on to say that Hoover often said “the root of problem in our economic system was the unfair distribution of income between labor and capital”. Divine et al., affirm McElvaine’s statements adding that Hoover “sought...

You must Login to view the entire paper.
If you are not a member yet, Sign Up for free!