Thursday 1/24/13 RAP Why was the KKK so strong in the 1920s? How high up in the public service sector did members of the KKK go in the 1920s? How has the.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 10.3: Clicker Questions “Conflict.
Advertisements

The Roaring 20s: A Clash of Values
The 1920s.
Predict conflicts present in the 1920s. Describe conflicting ideas in the 1920s. Evaluate the impact conflicting ideas had on society in the 1920s.
Changes in the 1920s. Social Changes 1. Prohibition- 18 th Amendment Cause – Progressive Reformers wanted alcohol banned to eliminate family poverty.
The Roaring Twenties!!. The Red Scare With the communist takeover in Russia (the USSR) many Americans became even more fearful of American supporters.
Ch 15: The Jazz Age Section 1: A Clash of Values.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 3 Social and Cultural Tensions Objectives Compare economic and cultural life in rural America to that.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Social Change and Prohibition in the 1920s.
Chapter 24, Section 2 “Life During the 1920s”
Modernity meets traditional America
 Section 1 ◦ Nativism ◦ Isolationism ◦ Communism ◦ Anarchists ◦ Quota system  Section 2 ◦ Ohio gang ◦ Teapot Dome scandal  Section 3 ◦ Urban Sprawl.
A Clash of Values Chapter 20, section 1.
Rural Response to the New Urban Culture of the 1920s.
Why Monday off? Former Arizona governor Bruce Babitt, a Democrat, created the holiday in Arizona by executive order just before he left office in 1986,
1920s: Traditionalism vs. Modernism
Objectives Identify the causes and effects of the Eighteenth Amendment. Explain how the Nineteenth Amendment changed the role of women in society. Describe.
SOCIAL AND CULTURAL TENSIONS
The Scopes “Monkey” Trial Cities drew thousands from farms & small towns Those who stayed rural areas often feared that new ways of life in the city were.
Section 1-A Clash of Values
Cultural Conflicts Section 9.3. Today’s Agenda 9.3 Slide Show KKK Presentation Homework –Read 9.3 –Unit Test on Roaring 20s this Thursday Based on all.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. 1920s Social Change and Prohibition.
Roaring 20s Conflict.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Social Change and Prohibition in the 1920s.
Social and Cultural Tensions Chapter Seven; Section Three.
Prosperity and Depression The 1920s. I: Effects of WWI and into the 1920s.
Depression, War, and Recovery Unit 8. The economy was “ booming ” in the 1920 ’ s People ’ s income had risen about 35% in a ten year period – so most.
10/12 Bellringer 5+ sentences Throughout history, Congress has passed laws to restrict immigration. Laws were sometimes aimed at specific countries, regions,
The Roaring Twenties Cultural Conflicts Scopes Trial Sacco and Vanzetti Prohibition KKK Red Scare Election of 1928.
Chapter 23 Roaring Twenties. 1920’s Republican Presidents Warren Harding (1920)- “Return to normalcy” - Teapot Dome Scandal Calvin Coolidge (1923)- VP.
Section 3 Social and Cultural Tensions DO NOW: Page 677 both “Thinking Critically” questions.
Why Monday off? Former Arizona governor Bruce Babitt, a Democrat, created the holiday in Arizona by executive order just before he left office in 1986,
The Roaring 20’s Chapter 24, Section 4. Charles Lindbergh  In 1927, Charles Lindbergh became the first person to fly alone across the Atlantic Ocean.
American Life Changes  Roaring Twenties – speedy social changes in the U.S. in the 1920s.  Women:  1. Voting – elected in state and local gov  2. Work.
Chapter 7- Section 3 Social & Cultural Tensions
Choose a category. You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question. Click to begin.
Intolerance in America in the 1920’s Does differing values of a society create conflict over time?
USHC- 6.2b Explain the causes and effects of the social change and conflict between traditional and modern culture that took place during the 1920s, including.
 Do Now: What differences do you see between the Victorian woman on the left and the “flapper” on the right? What might that signify about the 1920s?
Anti-Immigration and the Scopes Trial
Topic 5.6 An Unsettled Society
The 1920s: Values in Conflict
Social Change and Prohibition in the 1920s
Objectives Identify the causes and effects of the Eighteenth Amendment. Explain how the Nineteenth Amendment changed the role of women in society. Describe.
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 10.3: Clicker Questions “Conflict.
By 1920, more people lived in cities than in rural areas due to the industrial revolution, mass immigration, and jobs during World War I.
Prohibition, Crime and Civil Rights
Social and Cultural Tensions
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 10.3: Clicker Questions “Conflict.
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 10.3: Clicker Questions “Conflict.
1920s Social Change and Prohibition
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values?
Changes in 1920s: The Bad Stuff
Objectives Compare economic and cultural life in rural America to that in urban America. Discuss changes in U.S. immigration policy in the 1920s. Analyze.
Objectives Compare economic and cultural life in rural America to that in urban America. Discuss changes in U.S. immigration policy in the 1920s. Analyze.
“It is a war against all nations… Our motive will not be revenge or the victorious assertion of the physical might of the nation, but only the vindication.
Changes in American Society
Objectives Compare economic and cultural life in rural America to that in urban America. Discuss changes in U.S. immigration policy in the 1920s. Analyze.
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values?
Social Change and Prohibition in the 1920s
Social Change and Prohibition in the 1920s
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 10.3: Clicker Questions “Conflict.
Objectives Compare economic and cultural life in rural America to that in urban America. Discuss changes in U.S. immigration policy in the 1920s. Analyze.
Chapter 24, Section 2 “Life During the 1920s”
The 1920’s Age of INTOLERENCE
Great Northern Migration
The 1920s was a decade of change
The 1920s was a decade of change
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values?
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 10.3: Clicker Questions “Conflict.
Presentation transcript:

Thursday 1/24/13 RAP Why was the KKK so strong in the 1920s? How high up in the public service sector did members of the KKK go in the 1920s? How has the KKK changed from the 1920s to today? Today: 1.Stamp notes on Ch Review Ch s Arizona 4.Write a rough draft of your essay on the KKKDue Friday SWBAT describe the social and political issues facing people in the 1920s through discussion, readings, and simulation of a radio show.

Cultural Conflicts Ch The Power of Religion: Scopes Trial Trial on evolution –Evolution being taught in public schools in Tennessee in John Scopes, a science teacher, was on trial for teaching evolution. Scopes broke the law (Butler Act) which states that a teacher can not teach any theory that denies the story of the Divine Creation of man as taught in the Bible. Scopes went on trial to test the legality of the Butler Act. Both sides claimed victory when the trial was over; the jury took less than 10 minutes to find John Scopes guilty and fine him $100, but the Tennessee Supreme Court later acquitted him on a technicality.

Prohibition-18 th amendmentVolstead Act Many government officials took part in the bribery and corruption that accompanied the unenforceable law. Enforcing prohibition was a daunting task, in order to enforce and control liquor laws many large U.S. cities would need many more policemen. Speakeasies, or clubs where liquor was sold in violation of the law. Gangsters were taking over the bootlegging (transportation of illegal liquor) business and crime soared. Gangs stationed soldiers to hijack other gangs shipments and killed rivals. –Al Capone- Chicago gangster who was eventually convicted of income tax evasion.

KKK 1920s-The KKK spread north into central U.S., and had the greatest strength in Indiana---where half a million men joined. (Map page 400) The Klan in the 1920s grew to almost 5 million members. The Klan was against Blacks, Jews, Catholics, Mexican Americans, Native Americans, and communists the Klan wanted what they perceived to be as a pure America. They terrorized people by tarring and feathering, flogging, and lynching. By 1925 the Klan was loosing influence due to a widely publicized case in Indiana. It was not what many Christian people had envisioned.

Immigration- National Origins Act pure Americanism of the KKK found many Americans fearing immigrants who may be radical and disloyal. –Palmer raids –Red Scare –Sacco and Vanzetti Immigration Act in reversed the open immigration from Europe. –Law limited the number of immigrants by applying a quota. National Origins Act of 1924 – reduced the number of immigrants and excluded Asians altogether. –Countries seemed unfit for the U.S. and that had very low quotas were countries from southern and eastern Europe, Asians, Africans, and Jews. (graph on page 401) –Due to ideas of eugenics and nativism people of certain countries were limited in coming to the U.S. Many countries, such as Japan, were very upset with the U.S. about the immigration quotas.

1928 Election Many people were moving to the cities from small towns in the 1920s. Why? Jobs Battles of 1920s: –Religion –Drinking –Immigration Republican nominee Herbert Hoover against Democrat New York Governor Al Smith. –Rural people supported Hoover –Hoover won in a landslide but… –Hoover lost the 12 largest cities in the U.S.

Arizona 1920 moving into the modern age Major cities –Tucson – 20,292 –Phoenix – state capital – 29, 053 –Flappers, talkies, route 66, davis monthan air field, skyscrapers, shopping centers. –No air conditioning until the 1930s

Economy –Not industrial 5 Cs –Copper – Phelps Dodge –technology –Cattle- as many as 1.75 million head of cattle providing beef to the nation. –Citrus -Grapefruit, lemons, limes and oranges are among the most popular citrus grown. –Cotton -Pima long-staple cotton started to be grown in the state. –Climate – Tourism IMPORTANT TO ARIZONA EARLY ECONOMY

Workforce –Phelps Dodgestarted company unions –Agriculture – Cotton; citrus Laborers – Mexicans and American Indians. –Poor pay and harsh conditions

Prohibition passed in 1914six years before Federal law. –Failed in Arizona –Speakeasies popped up; homemade liquor Dams –Salt River –Gila River Water usage services Irrigation for farm fields –Hoover Dam – first Boulder Dam 7 states share water rights AZ gov. against ittoo many states sharing Some experts predict that if Lake Mead falls more than about 50 feet below its January 2010 level, power generation will not be possible.

Immigration –Border Patrol Gave literacy tests and poll taxes until the late 1920s. Segregation –KKK Weak in Arizona Arizona Klan burned crosses, wore white-hooded disguises, and brutalized African Americans, Mexican Americans, Catholics, Mormons, and Jews. –Society became segregated and intolerant of ethnic diversity. –Phoenix Built the Phyllis Wheatley Community Center for African American Girl and Boy Scout troops, Elks Clubs, and other groups who were barred from white only facilities. Phoenix Union Colored High School opened in were in separate classrooms in other high schools.

Compare the U.S. to Arizona ProhibitionSegregationTechnology United States Arizona

KKK rough draft Essay Please work on your essay. Work quietly and independently. Use your notes. Use your book. Ask me if you have any questions. Requirements 1.DESCRIBING THE RISE OF THE KKK INTO THE 1920S. (History) 2.DESCRIBE THE ROLE OF THE KKK AND OTHER HATE GROUPS TODAY. 3.Explain what you can do to minimize discrimination in your community, town, country, etc. 12 font Double space 1inch margins---top, bottom, sides Titlecreative Give specific examples.