Architecture in the 1930’s changed drastically from
older styles, with the new Art Deco style arriving to
more modern houses.
The new art
deco look relied
on geometric
shapes as
opposed to the
flowing lines of
the earlier style,
art nouveau .
The name art deco
came from an
exhibition held in
Paris in 1925 called
the Exposition
Internationale des
Arts Decoratifs.
Whilst many new houses would be
built with the art deco style, that's not
to say everyone lived in them. many
people still lived in older homes and
different styles of houses
The state of housing in the 1930's
Since the 1920s 4.3m houses had been built, and
by the end of the 1930s one family in three was
living in an interwar house and spurred on by
low interest rates, there was also a rise in home
ownership, from 10% of families in 1914 to 31%
by 1939.
the majority of new houses
wouldn't be built in the
crowded inner cities but
instead be built on the
outskirts of the city, or the
suburbs, which at the time
was a new idea.
The new homes of 1930s suburbia featured a
bathroom, inside toilet and a third bedroom.
They also tended to be dry, better insulated,
light and airy. The homes of this era
featured a new style kitchen in which the
cooking and washing were both done. The
new kitchens would have gas or electric
cookers and a freestanding hot water boiler.
However, not everything was
all good. In fact, many many
houses would be ruled as
unsafe for human habitation
with around 40% of the
houses in Hull and as much
as 90% of the houses in
Stepney listed as not having
even a bath. There were also
350000 houses that were
decided to be overcrowded
Effects of the Great depression on employment
The great depression was a global economic
collapse, caused by a stock market crash. Stock
market crashes happen when is a sudden dramatic
decline of stock prices across a major cross-section
of a stock market, resulting in a significant loss of
Cash.
The great depression started in
1929 in Wall Street, due to a
global economic collapse. This
had a devastatingly significant
impact to Britain: since they were
already in deep financial trouble
from WW1.
As well as that,
Winston Churchill,
who at the time was
Chancellor of the
Exchequer, who
decided to restore the
pound to its pre-war
standard, making it
exceedingly difficult
to trade, further
hurting the British
economy.
This in turn led to all-time highs in unemployment. In the first year, the numbers rose from 1
million unemployed people to 2 million: yet, still it rose to 3.5 million by 1935. Also at the time,
welfare schemes were still in their ‘infancy,’ meaning they had not yet developed to a point of
helping those who needed it the most – until august of 1931 their system worked where
unemployment benefits were dependent on the recipient’s contributions to the scheme, so many
working-class people who found themselves out of work may never have been paid well enough
to contribute- and in turn a massive wave of poverty and homelessness
thankfully the massive wave of unemployment
would slow down a bit in the latter parts of the
decade, due to the country re-arming itself
again, creating many new job opportunities and
things seemed to look on the up. these moves
would certainly not recover all of the
unemployment however. There were still 0.5
million more people unemployed in 1937, than
pre-depression rates, but things seemed to
improve.
Slum living and
homelessness became
common, with malnutrition
and its associated illnesses
rife in certain parts of the
country, particularly in the
industrial north and
Scotland, where a sudden
lack of demand for products
meant sweeping
unemployment
Entertainment and leisure in 1930's Britain
in Britain it was a period of huge popularity for
cinemas and films, where often times people went
once, or even twice a week, The earlier films were
mastered in grayscale, but later on, films would
start to be mastered in colour. It would be quite
some time before all were mastered in colour.
Public broadcasting
Television began in Britain in 1936 when the BBC began
broadcasting. Although at the time it was a relatively new,
complicated and most of all, expensive medium of broadcasting
public information, as well as that there were hardly any
channels, for as mentioned before it was still VERY early days for
commercial electronic TV (and even then the earlier mechanical
devices were loud, inefficient and not mass produced.)
It was very
uncommon to find
a TV set anywhere
during the 1930's .
yet despite that
by 1933 alone,
half of all British
households had a
radio.
Radio broadcasting began in 1922 in
Britain when the BBC was formed. By
1933 half the households in Britain
had a radio.
Confectionery in
1930's Britain
Sales of ice cream boomed in the 1930s (
originally ice cream was sold on British shores
on small tricycles with refrigerated boxes on
front of them.) As well as that, many new
confectioneries were introduced. Some
examples of this would be Milky Way (1935 in
Britain, for in America it was introduced 12
years earlier), Crunchie (1929), Snickers (1930),
Mars Bar (1932), Whole Nut (1933), Aero and
Kit Kat (1935), Maltesers and Blue Riband
(1936) and Smarties, Rolo and Milky Bar (1937).
Meanwhile, Jaffa cakes went on sale in 1927.