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1930s
Images of a Decade
The Wall Street crash of 1929 when millions of dollars were wiped off US share values heralded the start of a worldwide depression which lasted well into the 1930s.
Unemployment was rife and thousands of people lost their fortunes during the economic slump as prices fell, businesses collapsed and international trade declined sharply.
The misery and poverty caused by the financial crisis sparked the Jarrow March of 1936 when 200 men from the North East of England, which had been particularly hard hit, walked from Jarrow to lobby Parliament for support. On their 280-mile journey the marchers passed through Chesterfield.
Other notable events included the shock decision by Edward VIII in 1936 to abdicate so that he could marry an American divorcee. But it was not all doom and gloom. The early 1930s saw the introduction of talking pictures, or “talkies” as they were known, which provided much needed light relief, and there was great excitement when the Gaumont Palace opened in Derby in 1934.
We also had a Wimbledon hero in Bunny Austin, a former Repton School pupil, who reached the Men’s Singles Final in 1938. Storm clouds, however, were gathering over Europe and the decade ended with war being declared when Hitler invaded Poland.
Your Pictures of the 30s
Sisters Trix Smith and Evelyn Aspdin skate on the Mundy paddling pool in Derby in the 1930s. |
Click on the link below to listen to Bernice Hall's recollection of the poverty of the 1930s in and around South Derbyshire and what life was like growing up in the area at the time.
Pages linking here
- 'Fressingfield' - Littleover's 'Secret House' Revealed
- 1700s: US patriot and his links to Derby
- 1930s: An unforgettable Christmas in the deep mid-winter of the 1930s
- 1930s: Henry Royce is mourned
- 1930s: No radio but we were surrounded by music
- 1930s: The never-ending delights of housework was the future offered to teenage girls
- 1940s
- 1960s: Kennedy elected as Presidential candidate
- 30s
- Adnams, Marion - Derby's Surrealist Painter
- Allen, Harry Epworth - Derbyshire's Artistic Heritage
- Anyone For Tennis?
- Athletics - A potted History of the Derby club
- Bemrose and Sons: Childish Destruction of Loo Rolls
- Bolam, James - The Likely Lad of Bemrose School
- Borrowash Victoria FC - A Potted History
- Boxing: Billy Pritchard the Fighting Postman
- C S Lewis: Peak was author’s “ideal country”
- Cavendish, Lady Elizabeth: Poet Laureate inspired by love of a Lady
- Central Bus Station opens October 2 1933
- Central Educational - Not as boring a shop as it sounded!
- Cobblers: Did you know the Crewe Street Cobbler?
- Cook, Thomas
- Cooper, Lady Diana: Society beauty was stage and screen star
- Cromford and High Peak Railway
- Crooks, Sammy - A Derby County Legend Speaks!
- Darley Abbey - Tea and Tragedy at Folly Houses
- Derby: Open your eyes to Derby, the city of curving Modernist lines
- Derby County: Bromages were all footballers
- Derby County: Players saw Nazi war preparations
- Derby County - In Troubled Waters
- Derby County - Rare Vintage Film Archive
- Derbyshire in Art - A Virtual Gallery
- Dexter, John - Ashamed of his Derby roots?
- Dobson, Viki - Mystery Screen Starlet
- Duffield: Carnival day cancelled
- Election fever of the 1930s
- Gaumont Palace: Palace of dreams
- Gee, Joan - A golfing tigress
- Gollancz, Victor - Repton's Loss Was A Publishing Gain
- Greengrocer: Grandad ran grocery store
- Gresley family: Forever grateful to Alabaster Bill for inspiring interest in art history and antiques
- Half a century at the Midland Hotel
- Hay, William Thompson
- Holidays: Great to be a child beside the seaside
- If you go down to the woods, you’re sure of a big surprise
- Ilam Hall
- Jobey, George: Signings were key to successful era
- Joicies Bakery - Crusty bread for lusty men
- Knighton, Leslie - Church Gresley's Most Famous Resident?
- Littleover and the Blagreaves area
- Locomotive of Yesteryear - The 'Derby County'
- Markeaton Park: Baked hedgehogs and the watercress-picker
- Maschwitz, Eric - His Nightingale Still Sings
- Midwifery: Midwife attended family of 22 in 1930s
- Mills: The mill owner, the factory girl and their lasting love
- Motorcycling legends - Alf and Molly Briggs
- Mystery still surrounds why Mary quit Derby's footlights
- Offilers' Brewery - A lost Derby pint
- Oxford Street, Ripley - then and now
- Pantomimes and mummers provided traditional New Year entertainment
- Plaza Ballroom - Sam Ramsden and his Derby Legend
- Police
- Ripley All Stars: Team of superstars but they still lost
- Rolls-Royce: Ivan took Saturday off work for a honeymoon
- Scarratt, Francis William
- Shedding light on sundials
- Steve Bloomer's 'Old Codgers XI'
- Strange, Alf - Marehay lad captained England
- Sunday best, no shopping, no washing and no bad language on a day of rest now extinct
- Tennis - Littleover Tennis Club
- The 'Great Northern' - 'Steve Bloomer Slept Here'
- The Derby airport plan which never took off
- The Old Bell Hotel
- The Ritz: How the Ritz started out back in the 1880s
- The Ritz Cinema: Cinema gets a new lease of life and some very ritzy new decor
- The Royal Standard - Will Old Derby Pub Fly The Flag Again?
- The Travellers Rest - Derby pub had sporting links
- The taxi business that Jack built in a car park hut
- They just don't make picture postcards like that any more
- Thirties
- Thrower, Percy: Percy was the forerunner of TV's gardening celebrities
- Trolleybus era comes to an end September 9 1967
- Trolleybuses offered us a great night out before the war years
- Trouncer, Margaret - Derby High School's Forgotten Novelist
- WWII: Life goes on as war is declared
- WWII: Palestine posting after the war
- Welch, Denton - 'Delicate Boy' Had Tough Times at Repton School
- Well dressing
- Wheeler-dealing became a life-saver for our family
- When Derby's streets were our playground
- When horses were made to take the strain
- Winfield, Jack - He Just Kept Running
- Wirksworth, JW Beeson's Excelsior School
- Women's football: They were first belles of the ball
- Wright, Joseph: American buyer paid a record £3.8m for portrait
- You and Yesterday
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