How Were Shantytowns, Soup Kitchens And Bread Lines A Response To The Depression?
Because they showed that people literally had no food to eat. People would stand in lines to get food to feed themselves because they had very little to no money. People also lived in shantytowns, called “Hoovervilles,” which consisted of little make-shift homes made by homeless people with scraps of materials. The number of shantytowns, soup kitchens, and breadlines greatly increased during the Great Depression.