HOOVERVILLE

HOOVERVILLE

von Gregory Simonds

€4,49 inkl. MwSt.
Format: EPUB DRM: Adobe DRM 376.2 KB

Beschreibung

HOOVERVILLE: The Shantytown Collapse of the American Dream

During the darkest years of the Great Depression, thousands of Americans were forced to build entire cities from scrap wood, rusted metal, and broken furniture.

They were called Hoovervilles.

For decades, these settlements have been remembered through iconic photographs: quiet rows of shacks, families gathered around cook fires, children standing bravely in patched clothing. The images suggested resilience, dignity, and community.

But the reality was far more brutal.

In Hooverville: The Shantytown Collapse of the American Dream, investigative historian Gregory Simonds dismantles the myth of Depression-era shantytowns using a powerful analytical framework known as The Hooverville Exposure Protocol™. Drawing from firsthand accounts, relief reports, and forgotten newspaper archives, this book reveals what life inside the camps actually looked like.

Inside Hooverville, survival depended on improvisation.

Families crowded into one-room shelters built from packing crates and billboard scraps. Residents scavenged rail yards for coal before dawn. Rancid stew simmered in battered iron pots while children searched through restaurant garbage for scraps of food. Theft, disease, and fires spread through tightly packed settlements where contaminated water and collapsing shelters were constant threats.

Meanwhile, politicians blamed the unemployed for their condition, and the camps themselves were turned into campaign symbols.

Over time, the raw reality of Hooverville was softened into a story of heroic endurance. This book strips away that comforting narrative and reconstructs the camps as they truly existed: fragile, desperate, and volatile communities created by the largest economic collapse in modern American history.

Through cinematic storytelling and meticulous historical reconstruction, Hooverville exposes the hidden world behind the photographs.

What emerges is not a nostalgic tale of resilience-but a powerful historical autopsy of America's Depression-era shantytowns.

If you think you know the story of Hooverville, think again.

Editorial Reviews

"A stunning excavation of one of the most misunderstood landscapes of the Great Depression. Simonds dismantles the romantic myth of Hooverville and replaces it with a gripping, unsettling reality." - Dr. Eleanor K. Marsh, Economic Historian

"Reads like investigative journalism wrapped inside cinematic history. The Hooverville Exposure Protocol™ is a brilliant framework for confronting how myths are built from selective memory." - James Talbot, Author of Cities of Collapse

"Brutal, vivid, and unforgettable. This book forces readers to look beyond the famous photographs and see the camps as they truly were." - The American Historical Review

"A powerful reminder that the Great Depression was not just an economic event-it was a human catastrophe that unfolded in shantytowns across the nation." - Margaret Lowell, Social History Journal

Produktdetails

ISBN 9798295704666
Verlag G. Culver Publishing
Erscheinungsdatum 16.03.2026
Sprache Englisch