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The Roaring Twenties.

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Presentation on theme: "The Roaring Twenties."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Roaring Twenties

2 American Society of the 1920s

3 Age of Excess Increased standard of living
Consumerism and mass advertising Entertainment – radio, phonograph, movies

4 End of the Progressive Era
Last two amendments 18th amendment – prohibited the manufacture, sale, transportation, or importation of intoxicating liquors. Passed into law by the Volstead Act – effective January 1, 1920

5 Life during Prohibition
Speakeasies Drinking Dancing Jazz

6 The American Economy Inflation
Prices were 105% higher in 1920 than prior to WW I 2,655 strikes in the US in 1919 4 million workers, 20% of work force

7 Boston Police Strike 1919 Massachusetts Governor Calvin Coolidge called the National Guard to end the strike “no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, anytime!”

8 Race Riots in 1919 Why ? Summer 1919
Unemployed WW I veterans blamed job losses on the Great Migration Summer 1919 Riots in 20+ US cities

9 “Treat ‘em rough”

10 THE RED SCARE

11 The Red Scare Fear of Communist revolution among working class
Strikes “caused” by Communists

12 Renewed Fear of Unions Change in attitude toward unions after the large number of strikes Americans feared a “people’s revolution” COMMUNISM

13 Bombings – April to June 1919
At least 36 dynamite filled packages were mailed to prominent Americans (Rockefeller, JP Morgan, Chief Justice Holmes, Attorney General Mitchell Palmer)

14 Seattle General Strike
35,000 shipyard workers strike Within 5 days – 60,000 on strike all over Seattle

15

16 Palmer Raids US Attorney General – A.Mitchell Palmer
Created special division of Justice Dept General Intelligence Division Led by J. Edgar Hoover

17 Nativism Returns Immigration limitations Emergency Quota Act (1921)
Immigration Quota Act (1924) Both focused on reducing immigration, especially from Southern and Eastern Europe, Asia

18 Sacco and Vanzetti Italian born anarchists
Sentenced to death with little evidence

19 Rebirth of the KKK – targeted Catholics, Jews, immigrants, blacks, and other “non-Americans”

20 Warren Harding “Return to normalcy” Isolationism
Laissez-faire economics Lowered taxes Fortney McCumber Tariff Purpose: protect American business and farming

21 Scandals Most scandalous administration since Grant
Teapot Dome scandal

22 Calvin Coolidge The man who builds a factory builds a temple
Four-fifths of all our troubles in this world would disappear if only we would sit down and keep still

23 The Business Civilization
“The business of America is business” - Calvin Coolidge

24 Coolidge Continuation of laissez-faire economic policies
Lowered taxes even more Reduced the power of the FTC and ICC Against unions

25 Economic boom (1922 – 1929) Electrification of industry
Assembly line production Automobiles – ownership from 8.1 million to 26.7 million

26 Electricity 2/3 of all Americans had it Electrical appliances invented

27 Installment Plans Easy credit, more people used it
Large purchases made with payment plans

28 Expansion of Branch Banking
25,568 banks by 1929 Increase in loans for real estate, stocks and bonds purchases

29 Tough times for Farmers
European demand down Prices drop, costs go up (new machinery) Foreshadows an economic decline

30 Sexual Revolution

31 Influences on Independence
Women’s suffrage Increased college attendance Advertising and consumerism Hollywood The Jazz Age

32 Margaret Sanger and Birth Control
Promoted birth control for women in the US, Japan, and Europe

33 Education Free elementary education was available to most whites during the 1920s Longer school year Increased higher education

34 Creationism vs. Science
Fundamentalism – strict interpretation of the Bible, conservative religious philosophy Aimee Semple McPherson Tennessee Law  the Butler Act (1925), cannot teach any evolution theory in public schools

35 Scopes Trial – “Monkey Trial”
Clarence Darrow vs. William Jennings Bryan Science vs. Creationism/Fundamentalism

36 Harlem Renaissance

37 Causes Great Migration - Jim Crow laws and the KKK in the South
WW I – jobs left open in northern industries Modernization of the cities “New Negro” Movement

38 Significance / Impact African American pride
Intellectual identity, change in how they were viewed and accepted in America African Americans defined what it meant to be black – broke the stereotypes Began the integration of the races (whites were exposed to black culture) New art, literature, Jazz


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