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1. American Life in the “Roaring Twenties” By: Megan Moore
2. Red Scare 1919-1920 Bolshevik Revolution, 1917
Brought small communist party the U.S.
Billy Sunday- “If I had my way, I’d fill the jails so full of them that their feet would stick out the window”
3. Red Scare 1919-1920 Murder Case, 1921
Nicola Sacco (shoe factory worker)
Bartolomeo Vanzetti (fish peddler)
Convicted of murdering a Massachusetts paymaster and his guard
Throughout the trial the jury was prejudiced against the two men because they were Italians, atheists, anarchists, and draft dodgers
Both electrocuted in 1927
Controversial because without the anti-red atmosphere they might have only received a prison sentence
4. Red Scare 1919-1920 Conservative business men loved the red scare because it allowed them to break up unions
Labors’: closed shop
“Sovietism in disguise”
Employers :open shop
“The American Plan”
5. Knights of the Invisible EmpireKKK
6. Knights of the Invisible EmpireKKK Spread through Midwest and South
By mid-twenties members
Political influence
Positions: Imperial Wizards, Grand Goblins, King Kleagles
With a congressional investigation the Klan collapsed in the late 1920s from internal embezzling by Klan officials
the KKK had 50 million due paying
7. Immigration 800,000 immigrants came to America in 1920-1921 (2/3 from Southern & Eastern Europe)
Americans felt they had no use for the massive amounts of immigrants
Claimed Europe was “vomiting” on the US
“New Immigration”
8. Immigration
9. Immigration Reformers, Horace Kallan (philosopher) and Randolph Bourne (critic), were known as “cultural pluralists”
Criticized the idea that America as a “melting pot” would eliminate cultural diversity
10. Prohibition 18th Amendment, 1919
“Dry Amendment”
Banned alcohol unless used for religious means
Supported by churches and women
Implemented by Volstead Act
Defined intoxicating liquors
Popular in the South and the West
South: Southern whites wanted to keep the stimulants out of the hands of blacks
West: Ended the saloon (replaced by “speakeasies”) , public drunkenness, prostitution, corruption and crime
Disliked by large Eastern cities because drinking was apart of their culture
11. Prohibition Prohibitionists did not realize that is was impossible for the Federal authorities to be able to enforce a law that the majority of the people disagreed with
Had there been more enforcement officials, prohibition might have stood a chance
Banks savings increased while absenteeism in industry decreased
Moonshiners: makers of illegal liquor
Anti-prohibitionists felt it necessary to break the law in order to protest
12. The Golden Age of Gangsterism Prohibition brought crimes
Bribery of police came from the large profits of illegal alcohol
Violent wars broke out between gangs over who was to control the booze market
Known as “The Wars of the 1920s”
Chicago= most lawlessness
13. The Golden Age of Gangsterism “Scarface” Al Capone
“Public enemy number one”
Murderous booze distributor
Involved in 6 years of gang warfare
14. The Golden Age of Gangsterism Gangsters participated in prostitution, gambling, and narcotics
Honest merchants paid “protection money” so that themselves and their property would not be harmed
Organized crime became BIG BUSINESS
Made more money (3X) than the government in Washington
15. The Golden Age of Gangsterism
16. Monkey Business in Tennessee Education in the 1920s boomed
Professor John Dewey, principle of “learning by doing”, foundation of progressive education
17. Monkey Business in Tennessee Fundamentalists were against science and progressive education
Hated Darwinism
By teaching Darwinian evolution the faith in God and the Bible were being destroyed
18. Monkey Business in Tennessee 1925 Trial in Dayton, TN
John T. Scopes indicted for teaching evolution
Defended by Clarence Darrow
Prosecuted by William Jennings Bryan
Found guilty and fined $100 (fined was put aside to due a technicality)
Hollow win for the Fundamentalists
19. The Mass-Consumption Economy Capital investment expanded rapidly with the recent war and Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon’s tax policies
“Ingenious machines” led to a boom in prosperity- powered by cheap energy from oil fields
Ex: Henry Ford’s factory would complete an automobile every 10 seconds
New big business came with the electrical power companies
Cars became extremely popular
20. The Mass-Consumption Economy Advertising
Used persuasion, seduction, and sexual seduction
Bruce Barton –founder of advertising
1925 The Man Nobody Knows
Jesus was the greatest adman
21. The Mass-Consumption Economy Sports became big business
George H. “Babe” Ruth was more well known than statesmen
Yankee Stadium- “the house that Ruth built”
1921 heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey knocked out French light weight George Carpentier
Fans paid over a million dollars- the first in a series of million-dollar gates
22. The Mass-Consumption Economy Credit
“Possess today and pay tomorrow”
People went into debt quickly (especially Puritans)
Growth of debt brought an unstable credit structure
With a nation in debt comes vulnerability.
23. Putting America on Rubber Tires Automobile industry brought industrial revolution in 1920s
Detroit = motor capital of the U.S.
Henry Ford (father of the assembly line)
Fredrick W. Taylor- sought to eliminate wasted motion “Father of Scientific Management”
24. Putting America on Rubber Tires Henry Ford brought the rubber tire into business
“Fordism” techniques of assembly line production
1914 “Automobile Wizard” released 500,000th Model T
Ford was the people’s choice for the presidential nominee for the election of 1924
25. The Advent of the Gasoline Age Brought many jobs
Supporting industries include rubber, glass, and fabrics
California, Texas,& Oklahoma were home to oil derricks that expanded the wilderness frontier to the industrial frontier
Railroad industry struggled with the new petroleum industry
26. The Advent of the Gasoline Age Automobiles became a need instead of a luxury
Form of freedom
Women were finally free of the restraints of men
Isolation decreased
By late 1920s America owned more automobiles that bathtubs
Nation of commuters
Negatives include deaths and “a house of prostitution on wheels”
27. 17 December 1903, Kitty Hawk, NC the Wright brothers, Orville and Wilbur, made the first airborne flight for 12 seconds @ 120 feet
1920 –first transcontinental airmail route from New York to San Francisco
Charles Lindbergh ‘Flyin Fool’ ‘Lone Eagle”
First man to fly solo across Atlantic, 1927
Boosted aviation industry
Spirit of St. Louis
By 1930s-1949s travel by air= safer than travel by highway
28. The Radio Revolution Guglielmo Marconi invented wireless telegraphy (the telegraph)
Pittsburgh KDKA- first radio station, 1920
News of Harding landslide
1920s technological improvements made long-distance broadcasting possible
National commercial networks overpowered local programming
Advertising commercials= another way of free-enterprise
29. The Radio Revolution Radio made contributions to sports, gossip, politics, music, and gospel
“Tuning In” “Amos and Andy” “A&P Gypsies” “Everyday Hour”
30. Hollywood’s Filmland Fantasies The Great Train Robbery was the first movie
$0.05 ----- ‘nickelodeons’
Hollywood = movie capital of the U.S.
Movies included nudity -- censorship was required
Movies were used as anti-German propaganda
31. Hollywood’s Filmland Fantasies 1927 the first “talkie” was made, The Jazz Singer”
Al Jolson
Movie stars made more money and were more popular than the president
Movies helped immigrants integrate into society by helping them speak the language – put an end to most racial diversity
32. The Dynamic Decade Census of 1920 showed growth in population in urban areas
Woman began working, “women's work”
Margaret Sanger led birth-control movement and introduced the use of contraceptives
Alice Paul formed the National Women’s Party in 1923
33. The Dynamic Decade Fundamentalists were replaced by Modernists
Churches tried to be competitive
“come to church: Christian worship increases your efficiency”
God was a ‘good guy’ and universe was a friendly place
34. The Dynamic Decade Flappers
Women became more provocative
Elevated hemlines, cheeks rouged, breasts taped flat, rolled stockings, smoking
One piece bathing suits
Dr. Sigmund Freud explained the new sexual frankness by arguing that sexual repression caused many nervous and emotional ills
35. FLAPPERS
36. The Dynamic Decade Jazz was the music of the time and were headed by black men yet white men reaped the profits
37. The Dynamic Decade Harlem, New York
Langston Hughes, famous black poet The Weary Blues 1926
Marcus Garvey, political leader and founder of UNIA (promoted replacement of blacks in Africa)
Sponsored stores and businesses led by blacks
Black Starline Steamship Company
Nation of Islam
Convicted and deported in 1927
38. Cultural Liberation New Literature and New Writers
H. L. Mencken ‘Bad Boy of Baltimore’-American Mercury
F. Scott Fitzgerald- This Side of Paradise 1920, The Great Gatsby 1925
Theodore Dreiser- An American Tragedy
Ernest Hemingway- The Sun Also Rises 1926, A Farewell to Arms 1929
Sherwood Anderson- Winesburgh, Ohio
Sinclair Lewis – Main Street 1920, Babbitt 1922
William Faulkner- The Sound and the Fury 1929, 1930 As I Lay Dying, Absolom, Absolom! 1936
39. Cultural Liberation Poetry
Ezra Pound- “Make It New”
T.S. Eliot- “The Waste Land” 1922
Plays
Eugene O’Neil- “Strange Interlude”
40. Cultural Liberation Black Culture Renaissance led by Claude McKay, Langston Hughes, Zora Neal, Louis Armstrong, Eubie Blake
“New Negro” full citizen/ social equal to whites
Architecture
Frank Lloyd Wright wanted to stray away from Roman/Greek
Empire State Building
41. Wall Street’s Big Bull Market The Stock Market became increasingly popular
Little effort was made by Washington to control money management
42. Wall Street’s Big Bull Market 1921, the Republican Congress created the Bureau of the Budget
Assist president in preparing estimate receipts for submission to Congress
Prevent extravagant appropriations
Treasury Secretary, Andrew Mellon, believed that taxes forced the rich to invest in tax-exempt securities vs. factories that provided payroll
Created tax reductions 1921-1926
Shifted tax burden from the rich to the middle class
Reduced national debt by $10 billion
44. Sources www.apnotes.net
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