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| The Coldest Moment of the Great Depression (1933) | | On January 30, 1933, Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany, a turning point for the world. But in the United States, the same winter carried its own kind of darkness: the Great Depression at its harshest, with unemployment soaring, breadlines stretching through frozen streets, and a new president preparing to inherit a nation in crisis. | Franklin D. Roosevelt would take office just weeks later, launching the New Deal and reshaping the relationship between government and everyday life. But in late January, the future still felt uncertain. Across the country, ordinary families faced an unthinkable question: not what comes next year, but what comes tomorrow. | History often remembers the Depression in sweeping numbers, but its true weight was felt in small human moments: a quiet line outside a soup kitchen, a shuttered factory, a kitchen table gone sparse. January 30 is a reminder that endurance, too, is part of the American story. | | | Related Time Capsules | | | Thanks for reading, | The TTC Team | P.S. Email is like hunting buried treasure sometimes. So, please check your junk or promotions folder if this newsletter ever goes missing… and move it to your primary inbox. Feel free to forward Today's Time Capsule to another history fan. |
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