In 1932 with the Northwest lumber industry hit especially hard by the Depression and with Hoovervilles springing up in the citys Sullivan Gulch and elsewhere Portland became a center of activity for a direct-action political movement known as the Bonus Army. The Bonus Army was the popular name of an assemblage of some 43000 marchers17000 World War I veterans their families and affiliated groupswho gathered in Washington DC in the summer of.
Oregon Wwi Vet Led 20 000 Strong Bonus Army In 1932 That Marched On Nation S Capital Met Brutal Resistance Oregonlive Com
- July 29 1932.
Bonus army 1932. Senate defeated a bill that would have advanced the date of payment of bonuses to the veterans. The Bonus March May-July 1932 Few images from the Great Depression are more indelible than the rout of the Bonus Marchers. Members of the Bonus Army encamp within sight of the Capitol 1932 However by 1932 the nation had slipped into the dark days of the Depression and the unemployed veterans.
They occupied abandoned shacks shanties and tents. Out of work destitute and with families to feed the veterans organized a march on Washington in May of 1932 to force Congress to immediately pay their bonus. Bonus Army gathering of some 10000 to 25000 World War I veterans who with their wives and children converged on Washington DC in 1932 demanding immediate bonus payment for wartime services to alleviate the economic hardship of the Great Depression.
The WWI vets were part of a Bonus Army who came to Washington DC. Bonus Army Protest In Washington On October 6Th 1932 Erstklassige Nachrichtenbilder in hoher Auflösung bei Getty Images. July 29 1932 Other Significant Dates.
Government attacked World War I veterans with tanks bayonets and tear gas under the leadership of textbook heroes Douglas MacArthur George Patton and Dwight D. March of the Veterans Bonus Army Key Participants. In 1932 tens of thousands of members of the Bonus Army marched on Washington demanding payment for their service in WWI from Hoover and their government.
On July 28 1932 the US. An estimated 15000 made their way to the nations capital and dubbed themselves the Bonus Expeditionary Force. Although President Hoover refused to address them the veterans did find an audience with a congressional delegation.
On the order of. Bonus Army of 1932. To make a demand for their promised wartime bonuses.
Hitching rides hopping trains and hiking finally brought the Bonus Army now 15000 strong into the capital in June 1932. An article that appeared just one day before the eviction in The Nation The Bonus Army Scares Mr. They called themselves The Bonus Expeditionary Force a play on the American Expeditionary Force of WWI.
Hoover July 27 1932 gives an interesting account of the mood in the camps andperhaps due to its publication before the most controversial eventsis surprisingly. In May 1932 more than 20000 veterans came to Washington from all over the country. Roberts Fifty years ago today the ragtag bonus army of jobless World War I veterans was driven out of Washington an act that symbolized the depth of the Great Depression and the paralysis of the federal government in dealing with Americas worst economic disaster.
Life Without a Safety Net Chalmers M. Led by Walter Waters of Oregon the so-called Bonus Expeditionary Force set out for the nations capital. Hitchhiking riding the rails using whatever way they had to get there.