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10.3 A Clash of Values

10.3 A Clash of Values. I. Nativism Resurges. The Sacco-Vanzetti case reflected the prejudices & fears of the era They were Italian immigrants & anarchists accused of murder Even though there was little evidence, Judge Thayer & the jury were biased. Vanzetti and Sacco.

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10.3 A Clash of Values

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  1. 10.3 A Clash of Values

  2. I. Nativism Resurges • The Sacco-Vanzetti case reflected the prejudices & fears of the era • They were Italian immigrants & anarchists accused of murder • Even though there was little evidence, Judge Thayer & the jury were biased Vanzetti and Sacco “In all my life I have never stole, never killed, never spilled blood…. We were tried during a time …when there was a hysteria of resentment and hate against the people of our principles, against the foreigner…. I am suffering because I am indeed a radical; I have suffered because I was an Italian and indeed I am an Italian…. If you could execute me two times, and if I could be reborn two other times, I would live again to do what I have done already.” -B. Vanzetti

  3. I. Nativism Resurges… 3. Found guilty & executed (1927) amid protest & controversy

  4. I. Nativism Resurges… • Rebirth of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s • Targeted African Americans, non-Protestants, & many new immigrants “We believe that the pioneers who built America bequeathed to their own children a priority right to it, the control of it and of its future, and that no one on earth can claim any part of this inheritance except through our generosity…. We hold firmly that America belongs to Americans and should be kept American.” - Imperial Wizard Hiram Evans The KKK held numerous marches in Washington D.C., including this one in 1925, where over 60,000 marched down Pennsylvania Avenue.

  5. I. Nativism Resurges… 2. Scandals & power struggles between leaders led to its rapid decline in the late 1920s Year Membership 4,000,000 1925 6,000,000 30,000 David Stephenson, leader of Indiana’s KKK, was convicted & jailed for murder.

  6. I. Nativism Resurges… • Immigration policies changed in the 1920s in response to nativist pleas to “Keep America American” • National Origins Act (1924) restricted immigration to the U.S. • Quota was 2% of the # of people from their country who lived in the U.S. according to the 1890 census • Favored N. & W. Europeans • Excluded East Asians • Exempted those from the Western Hemisphere

  7. I. Nativism Resurges… D. Large number of Mexican immigrants came here as the demand for cheap farm labor increased More than 890,000 legal Mexican immigrants came to the U.S. between 1910-1920 to escape revolution, social chaos, & economic catastrophe. The numbers continued to rise during the 1920s.

  8. All of the following are TRUE about the Sacco-Vanzetti Case EXCEPT… • They were supported by the public throughout the trial • They were found guilty & executed • The judge & jury were biased against them • They were feared because they were Italian immigrants & radicals who believed in anarchy

  9. The KKK of the 1920s targeted… 1. African Americans • non-Protestants • New immigrants • All of the above

  10. The National Origins Act… • Increased immigration in the 1920s • Excluded Eastern Europeans • Favored Northern & Western Europeans • Reduced the number of Mexican immigrants to the U.S.

  11. Who came to the U.S. to provide cheap farm labor? • Europeans • Mexicans • Asians • Africans

  12. All of the following is TRUE about life in the U.S. in the 1920s EXCEPT… • People wanted to “keep America American” • Southern & Eastern Europeans were viewed as “unfit” for our society • Nativists encouraged ethnic diversity • Laws were passed to reduce the number of immigrants coming to the country

  13. II. A Clash of Cultures • Women sought to break free from their traditional roles & behaviors • More women entered the workforce • More women entered college • Some women became “flappers”

  14. WOMEN AT TURN OF THE CENTURY WOMEN IN THE 1920s

  15. THE NEW WOMAN OF THE 1920s

  16. WOMEN BEING ARRESTED IN 1922 FOR WEARING REVEALING BATHING SUITS Legislators from several states introduced bills to reform feminine dress. In Ohio… -shirts & evening gowns couldn’t display more than 2 inches of the throat -wanted to prevent the sale of any garment which accentuates the lines of the female figure -females over 14 couldn’t wear a skirt that doesn’t reach to the part of the foot known as the instep

  17. II. A Clash of Cultures… B. Science & religious fundamentalists clashed in the Scopes Trial (1925) • Fundamentalists believe in the literal truth in the Bible • John Scopes was put on trial for teaching evolution in Tennessee • Found guilty In his biology class, Scopes read a passage from Civic Biology stating: “We have now learned that animal forms may be arranged so as to begin with the simple one-celled forms and culminate with a group which includes man himself.”

  18. II. A Clash of Cultures… C. Prohibition, the movement to ban alcohol, gained many supporters in the early 1900s

  19. II. A Clash of Cultures… • 18th Amendment (1919) prohibited the manufacture, sale, & transportation of alcoholic beverages Amendment XVIII Section 1. After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited. Section 2. The congress and the several states shall have concurrent power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

  20. II. A Clash of Cultures… 2. Congress passed the Volstead Act to enforce Prohibition Federal agents had over 2000 square miles to patrol and received little money for doing so. Many accepted bribes and “looked the other way.”

  21. II. A Clash of Cultures… 3. People went to speakeasies to obtain illegal liquor 4. Organized crime grew as bootleggers earned huge profits making & selling alcohol Al Capone was a famous Italian American gangster during the Prohibition era who had a leading role in illegal activities in Chicago. He was eventually charged with tax evasion and sent to prison. George Remus was known as the “King of the Bootleggers” for illegally selling whisky. He made $40 million in 3 years.

  22. II. A Clash of Cultures… 5. Prohibition was repealed with the 21st Amendment (1933) Deaths due to alcohol, Cook County, Illinois 1910-1926 Source: US Senate Judiciary committee Hearings on national prohibition, 1926

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