My father was a child during the depreession. The only "real" money being made here was rum running. Simply, only the criminal class had a living income. Dad would watch the Cadillac and Lincoln 12 cyl. "tanker" sedans driving down MainSt. headed for NYC as soon as the sun set.
Otherwise, you lived off the land and Bays, shooting your own Ducks, catching yiour own fish for protine.Bartering for vegetables or farming. Everyone had a "root cellar". MY G. Father operated SIX businesses at the same time to make a living. A lumber and Coal bus, an insurance bus, a small bank, the electric company , the water company and a small drygoods & pharmacy. STILL he had to do some small farming , including a small vineyard, to suppliment income, and HE was considered RICH!
Cheap as gasoline was, a couple of "old timers" modified their Model A SO ONCE AT SPEED, AND HOT, THEY SWITCHED FROM gASOLINE TO kERO. TO SAVE MONEY.
tHE AREA WAS NOT BROUGHT OUT OF the depression by anything FDR did, but by smuggling and the VERY rich dec iding to live here. Juan Tripp, "Black Jack" Bouvier (Jackie's Dad), a few shipping magnates (MO NAMNES THERE, THE FAMILY IS STILL HERE), John Drew, Howard Hughs, and hangers on.
By WW2 the NATIONAL unemployment had dropped fron 25% to a mere `14%, and the market did not fully recover until 1954. And, BTW, the 1987 recession was "worse" than today as far as realestate is concerned. People WALKED AWAY from 5000 sq ft NEW homes, just walked away.....