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1920s/1930s. 1918-1929/1930-1941. The End of the War. Before the end of the war President Wilson formulated his Fourteen Points as the basis for peace Germany signed the armistice on November 11, 1918 mainly because of the potential of the American forces
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1920s/1930s 1918-1929/1930-1941
The End of the War • Before the end of the war President Wilson formulated his Fourteen Points as the basis for peace • Germany signed the armistice on November 11, 1918 mainly because of the potential of the American forces • Wilson became a hero to the people of a liberated Europe • During the war partisan politics did not afflict Congress as the country united behind the war effort • In 1918 Wilson asked for a Democratic victory, but the Republicans ended up with a narrow advantage • Wilson went to Paris for the peace talks and left the country in the hands of a Republican Congress
Wilson was the first president to travel to Europe but he alienated the Republicans by not inviting one republican to the Peace Conference • The chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts was particularly angered • Lodge and Wilson shared a mutual hatred • The Paris Conference was dominated by the Big Four – Wilson, Lloyd George of Britain, Orlando of Italy, and Clemenceau of France • The matter which caused the greatest concern was to stop the spread of Communism
Wilson’s main goal was to establish a League of Nations • He imagined an organization of representative who would meet to discuss world problems • Few, especially among the Republicans, shared his enthusiasm for a League of Nations • The Republicans declared they would not approve the League in its current form • Opposition from the Republicans weakened Wilson’s diplomatic power in Paris • When he did return to Paris he found that the opinion of the major powers had become much more aggressive
The Versailles Treaty • France was determined to occupy the German-Rhineland and the Saar Valley • Wilson persuaded the French to accept occupation of the region by the League of Nations for 15 years • France also received a security pledge from Britain and America – both countries promised to help if Germany re-armed • The final treaty was given to the Germans to sign in June 1919
When the Germans saw the treaty they were shocked to see so few of Wilson’s Fourteen Points, which had been the basis under which they had surrendered • Wilson had been forced to compromise his original ideals to keep the bickering Europeans happy • As soon as he returned to America, Wilson was confronted with a hostile Congress • Isolationists wanted no part of foreign treaties • Some thought the agreement did not punish Germany enough for starting the war • Irish-Americans, German-Americans and Italian-Americans all hated Wilson
The End of Wilson • Wilson still felt confident the Versailles Treaty would be ratified. Even Lodge only wanted to make the treaty more “American” • The Treaty became bogged down in Senate as Lodge examined every page • Wilson set off around the country to muster public support – even though he was advised against such a move by his own physicians • While in Colorado in September, 1919, Wilson collapsed from exhaustion • He was quickly returned to Washington, but suffered a stroke only days later
Wilson remained out of circulation for over six months • Lodge saw the opportunity to step up. Lodge had failed to get the Treaty amended but now was his chance • Critics were especially annoyed over Article X which promised the United States would give aid to any country that faced external aggression • Lodge attached a series of amendment to the original treaty so the Republicans could claim some of the credit • Wilson told the Democrats to vote against the amended treaty
The treaty was defeated in the Senate • The public was angry and upset that the Senate could not agree on a simple resolution and they demanded a second ballot • The Democrats would have to accept the amended packet otherwise the whole treaty would fail • Wilson refused to compromise and ordered the Democrats to once again vote against the amended treaty • The treaty died in the Senate
New Era: The 1920s Republican governments Business creed Harding scandals Economic development Prosperity and wealth Farm and labor problems New culture Consumerism: automobile, radio, movies Women, the family Modern religion Literature of alienation Jazz age Harlem Renaissance Conflict of cultures Prohibition, bootlegging Nativism Ku Klux Klan Religious fundamentalism versus modernists Myth of isolation Replacing the League of Nations Business and diplomacy AP Outline
The Election of 1920 • The Republicans eventually selected Senator Warren G. Harding of Ohio with Massachusetts Governor Calvin Coolidge as his running mate • Coolidge had made a name for himself by defeating the police strike in Boston • Democrats nominated Governor James M. Cox of Ohio with Franklin D. Roosevelt as his running mate • In the first election that included women, (Nineteenth Amendment – 1920) the Republicans won 404-127
The Roaring 20’s Ku Klux Klan Emergency Quota Act, 1921 National Origins Act, 1924 Harlem Renaissance, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong Back to Africa Movement, Marcus Garvey Religious fundamentalism John T. Scopes, William Jennings Bryan, Clarence Darrow Car Culture, Henry Ford, Model T Advertising comes of age, Radio, movies Babe Ruth Charles Lindbergh The Jazz Singer, 1927, Al Jolson Changes for Women, Flappers Margaret Sanger Unions in the 1920’s, “American Plan” Dawes Plan, 1924 Democratic Party turmoil Republican Presidents, ideals Warren G. Harding, Return to Normalcy, scandals, Teapot Dome Calvin Coolidge Herbert Hoover Albert B. Fall Harry M. Daugherty Alfred E. Smith "American Plan" Norman Thomas Fordney-McCumber Tariff, 1922 “Lost Generation”, F. Scott Fitzgerald, John Dos Passos, Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway, Sinclair Lewis, William Faulkner Sacco and Vanzetti Case House Un-American Activities Committee Ku Klux Klan, Nativism Emergency Quota Act 1921 Immigration Quota Act 1924 "Birth of a Nation“Prohibition/Volstead Act Al Capone Organized Crime Election of 1928, Hoover Foreign Policy-Japan attacks China The Great Depression Causes of the Depression “Hooverville” Stock Market Crash, “Black Tuesday” Republican Response to Great Depression, “Trickle Down,” “Pump Priming” Economic Cycle, Chain Reaction, Unemployment Andrew Mellon Banking Crisis Smoot-Hawley Tariff, 1930 Reconstruction Finance Corporation Public Works "Bonus Army," 1932 Election of 1932- “FDR” Key Terms
Harding gained over 7 million more popular votes • Socialist Eugene V. Debs ran as a Third party from the Atlanta penitentiary and gained almost 1 million votes • The public had shown they were tired of Wilsonian politics and European affairs – they wanted what Harding promised – a return to normalcy • Unfortunately Harding was a poor choice and proved to be an even worse president, mainly because of his poor choice of appointments
The Red Scare • In 1917 the Bolshevik Revolution forced Russia out of the war, changed the Russian government, created a small Communist party in America, and caused fear and concern among non-Communist nations • In the wake of the war the country was gripped by a series of strikes • Most people assumed the strikes were part of a Communist/Bolshevik plot • The “red scare” of 1919 created political careers, ruined some lives, caused pain and anguish to anguish to many innocent people
In 1919 a bomb exploded at the home of Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer (the Fighting Quaker) who had been leading the campaign against possible Bolsheviks • The explosion caused Palmer to increase his efforts and gained him enormous public support • In December 1919 the government deported 249 suspected aliens and Bolshevik sympathizers on the Buford • The following year another bomb exploded on Wall Street and killed nearly forty people • Many states joined together to pass “anti-red” legislation
Critics of the paranoia protested that basic American rights were been ignored • But the red scare served the conservatives and businessmen well – they could now complain about troublemakers and unions and associate them with the Bolsheviks • Unions found it hard to even exist. Any appeal for a union was seen as un-American • The most notorious case of anti-foreign sentiment was the Sacco-Vanzetti case in Massachusetts
Sacco and Vanzetti • Nicola Sacco a factory worker and Bartolomeo Vanzetti a fish seller were convicted in 1921 of murdering a Massachusetts paymaster and his guard • The defendants were of Italian descent and known as anarchists and atheists • The case lasted six years before both men were convicted and sentenced to death • They were executed in 1927
Prohibition • One of the greatest social experiments in American history was the attempt to prohibit alcohol in the 1920s • The Eighteenth Amendment (1919) (and the Volstead Act) tried to abolish the manufacturing, sale, and transportation of alcohol • The Act was very popular in the South and the West, but in the East there was strong opposition • But the idea was flawed because many people, especially foreign-born Americans found ways around the law
The authorities had not really considered how to enforce a law that so many people opposed and that had been a large part of normal society • Speakeasies with secret passwords and tiny windows sprouted in major cities • Illegal alcohol was shipped from the West Indies or from Canada by gangsters determined to supply the thirsty market – and make a fortune • Bootleggers produced homemade alcohol that often caused blindness or death • But there were some benefits to the Prohibition era • Absenteeism from work decreased and people saved more money • The “noble experiment” failed because so many people simply refused to accept the law, even though most believed it would be permanent
Isolationism • The large number of immigrants that were entering the country from Europe worried many people • The Emergency Quota Act of 1921 was attempt to limit immigration by only allowing a certain quota from each country – 3% of that nationality living in America in 1910 • Favored those from Southern and Eastern Europe • Congress approved the Immigration Act of 1924 which cut the quota of foreigners from 3% to 2% and changed the date to 1890 from 1910
This new changed favored immigrants from Northern Europe at the expense of those from the South and East who called the legislation discriminatory • Nativist believed a stronger, better America could be attained though people with light hair and blue eyes • The Act also stopped completely the immigration of Japanese • Exempt from the quota system were Canadian and those from Latin America – because they were needed to take the lowest paying jobs • Act ended the belief that all were welcome
The Ku Klux Klan • Another element of the anti-foreign campaign was the reemergence of the KKK • The KKK had been around since the middle of the nineteenth century, but after the Civil War it had become known as an antiblack movement • In the 1920s, the new KKK reinforced the nativist spirit that was sweeping the country – they were anti-foreign, antiblack, anti-Jewish, anti-Communist, anti-Catholic, anti-international, anti-birth control, anti-drinking, and anti-gambling
They were pro-American, pro-Anglo-Saxon, pro-Protestant – they were ultra-conservative and dedicated to maintaining traditional American morals, standards, and culture • The new KKK had a great deal of support, especially in the southern “Bible Belt” states • At its height of popularity it claimed to have over 5 million members • The organization collapsed in the late twenties when it was investigated for corruption and embezzlement • The KKK was a realization of what can happen when people are confronted with social change
The Fordney-McCumber Tariff (1922) • Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon also wanted higher tariffs • The Fordney-McCumber Tariff increased tariffs against chemicals and metal products that were been imported from Germany • During the war the United States had moved from a creditor to a debtor nation • The tariff made it harder for European nations to sell in America and consequently prevented them from making money and repaying their war debt
Harding appointed Republicans dedicated to his ideals to all the main committees • In 1923 news was leaked about members of the administration robbing the Veteran’s Bureau • The official ran away to Europe • Other cronies were charged with a variety of crimes • The biggest scandal was the Teapot Dome scandal
Crime • Prohibition created untold opportunities for criminals to make money • In many major cities like Chicago, virtual gang wars erupted as rival crime bosses competed for the millions of dollars associated with alcohol • The most famous crime boss was “Scarface” Al Capone who controlled a crime empire that was worth millions of dollars • The gangsters were hard to catch and harder to prosecute • Capone was eventual found guilty of tax evasion
The “Ohio Gang” • Many of Harding’s appointments were members of a group called the “Ohio Gang” • Harding met with the “Ohio Gang” on a regular basis and often in places outside the White House • They earned a reputation as drinking, women, and gambling even during a time of Prohibition • Once in office the administration started dismantling Progressive legislation, especially the social reforms • Harding was able to appoint four Supreme Court justices
McNary-Haugen Bill • Farmers suffered in the post-war years as they could not sell their products • Many looked to farmer cooperatives and associations to protect their interests and give them greater political leverage • In 1924 Senator McNary and Representative Haugen introduced a bill to help the framers • The idea was to dump surplus crop on the world market to raise domestic prices • In 1927 and 1928 the bill passed both Houses but was vetoed by Coolidge
It was clear that the administration was pro-business • Secretary of Treasury Mellon reduced government spending and lowered taxes mostly for the rich • Mellon believed that by giving money to the rich they would have more to invest and that would stimulate the economy • In 1921 he persuaded Congress to pass the Budget and Accounting Act, which created the Bureau of Budget • The Revenue Act of 1926 lowered taxes even more for the rich
Teapot Dome • Oil reserves under the Teapot Rock in Wyoming had been set aside by Albert Fall of the Interior Department for the naval oil reserves • Fall signed contracts with private companies letting them use the oil reserves • Fall’s standard of living skyrocketed including a “loan” of $400,000 from the oil companies which was delivered in a bag • Harding claimed to have had no knowledge of the extent of the scandals, but he obviously knew there was a problem
In 1923 Harding went to Alaska Territory and on the way back he stopped in Seattle • He suffered food poisoning and died • The public was distraught as they didn’t know the extent of the problems • Calvin Coolidge was sworn in as president • Coolidge promised to return the White House to the Gilded Age philosophies • Even more than Harding, “silent Cal” advocated supporting big business “the man who builds a factory builds a temple” • He distanced himself from the scandals and became the Republican nominee for 1924
The Election of 1924 • The Democrats were divided and nominated John Davis a Wall Street lawyer • A farmer-labor coalition third party appeared • The Progressive party led by Robert La Follette from Wisconsin was backed by the Socialist party and the American Federation of Labor • Coolidge accused La Follette of wanting to turn America into a communist and socialist state • Coolidge won easily with Davis only winning the South – the Progressives gained the most third party votes
Scope Monkey Trial (1925) • By the 1920s many states required students to wait until they were 16 before graduating • The type of education and the quality of education had changed dramatically as new philosophies swept the teaching field • But there was always an issue about how to teach evolution • Fundamentalists believed the one true way was to reinforce biblical teachings about creationism • Science leaned more toward Darwin and evolution
Several states, including Tennessee, passed laws prohibiting the teaching of evolution • In 1925, at Dayton Tennessee, a high school biology teacher, John T. Scopes was indicted for teaching evolution • Scopes was defended represented by the American Civil Liberties Union and by famed trial lawyer Clarence Darrow an agnostic • The Fundamentalists hired former presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan to lead the prosecution • Bryan defending creationism was made to look foolish in the cross examination
In the end Scopes was found guilty and fined $100 – the fine was eventually set aside on a technicality • The Fundamentalists had won the case but in doing so they had weakened their own argument for teaching creationism
Foreign Policy • Washington Naval Conference (1925) - attempted to prevent a naval arms race among United States, Britain, and Japan. Also included France, Italy, the Netherlands, China, and Portugal and created 3 treaties
1. The Five-Power Pact (1922) - U.S., G.B., Japan, Italy, and France agreed to build no more warships for 10 years. Also limited naval tonnage:5 tons for U.S. and G.B.3 tons for Japan1.75 tons for France and Italy • 2. Nine-Power Pact - Promised to maintain China’s territorial integrity and support the “open door” policy • 3. Four-Power Pact - U.S., G.B., France, and Japan agreed to respect each other’s rights in the Pacific and promised to settle disputes through negotiations
Dawes Plan (1924) • After World War I the European nations owed $26 billion • Hyperinflation in Germany (1923-4) caused them to default on their payments forcing other nations to default • The French occupied the Ruhr - the Germans stopped working in protest • American banker Charles Dawes negotiated large loans from American banks to help Germany • Britain and France reduced the amount of reparations over 5 years