The Great Depression of the 1930s is not a time in history that we would want to repeat. Unemployment was high, housing prices plummeted, international trade collapsed, and there was a rapid rise in crime rates.
By adopting frugal habits from the Great Depression that are surprisingly useful today, we may be able to break free from the “struggle mindset” and move into a more comfortable situation where we can save, invest, and plan for the future.
The 20th century was replete with brightly colored Depression glass. Once an affordable necessity, it's now a lively way to brighten your bar carts and kitchen shelves.
Many people today are unfamiliar with the term "Great Depression" and the profound significance it holds in global history. The
Stocks, the S&P 500 index, and ETFs were big winners in a very good year for the stock markets. Click here to find out what will happen in 2025.
Democrats "would prefer 'Depression' as long as it hurt the Republican Party," the president-elect wrote on his Truth Social platform.
Columnist R. Bruce Anderson writes that the knuckleheads in Washington do not know better than states. And what goes around comes around.
We look at what life would be like in a deflationary environment, and what you can do to protect your investments.
Historians who have studied Chicago's immigrant communities say the conversations around Donald Trump's plan for mass deportations echo calls that sought to drive out immigrants during the 1930s and the 1950s.
Speaker Mike Johnson’s historically narrow majority just shrunk even further, creating a major challenge for congressional Republicans as they seek to enact President Donald Trump’s agenda.
The incoming president has told allies he wants to seize momentum and avoid the missteps of his first administration.
In 1935 agents traded fire with Barker-Karpis Gang members for over 4 hours at their Florida hideout. 90 years on, it's open to the public Retired United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agent Doug Jones stood before a small crowd in front of the Bradford-Ma Barker House in Ocklawaha,