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The Decade of Normalcy

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Title: The Decade of Normalcy


1
The Decade of Normalcy
  • 1920-1929

2
The Flapper
  • The 1920s are a time of rapid social change, when
    people adopt new lifestyles and attitudes
  • Nothing better symbolizes this decade of normalcy
    and growth than the Flapper of the 1920s
  • A rebellious, fun-loving, bold young woman who
    wore short dresses and cut her hair, and smoked
    and drank in public

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4
The Flapper
  • Not every woman was a flapper, and not everyone
    challenged tradition, but those who did helped
    create modern American society
  • Women were working, voting, and attaining
    political offices
  • Flappers were trying to break with the past and
    create a new future for participation by all in
    society

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Women in the Workplace
  • But for most women in the workplace, very little
    changed during the 1920s
  • They were still only allowed to work in certain
    fields, were prohibited from certain activities,
    and were still believed to be too weak ??

7
Demographic Change
  • Along with the social changes, America undergoes
    a major demographic change statistics that
    describe a population
  • Millions of people moved from rural to urban
    areas suburbs emerge and car become more
    affordable (thanks to Henry Ford)

8
The Great Migration
  • The Great Migration of A-A from the South to
    northern cities increase in the 1920s as blacks
    were drawn by urban jobs
  • This migration and changing perceptions would
    help lay a foundation for future changes in
    society

9
Hero Worship
  • With the idea of a return to normalcy, many
    Americans turned to heroes who seemed to embody
    values of an earlier and simpler time
  • Aviation heroes like Charles Lindbergh and Amelia
    Earhart and sport stars like Babe Ruth, Jack
    Dempsey, and Jim Thorpe fascinated Americans

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11
Charles Lindbergh
  • Lindbergh and Earhart became the heroes and
    symbols of the age of mechanical stuff
  • Helped restore confidence in people who had
    become disillusioned after WW I
  • Came to symbolize a pioneering spirit in a
    machine age

12
Lindbergh and Spirit of St. Louis
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14
Recreational Time
  • With more leisure time and more money from better
    paying jobs, many Americans also indulged in
    recreational activities for the first time
  • Mass media the use of print and broadcast
    methods to communicate to large numbers of people
    was also growing with the help of radio and
    movies helped to create a national culture

15
Harlem Renaissance
  • NYCs Harlem was the center of the jazz world and
    becomes the cultural center for African-Americans
    and location of literary awakening known as the
    Harlem Renaissance
  • Marcus Garvey formed the Universal Negro
    Improvement Society and proposed that blacks go
    back to Africa people do not, but it does
    stimulate pride in history/heritage of A-As

16
Marcus Garvey
17
Prohibition
  • When the 18th Amendment prohibited the
    manufacture and sale of alcohol, rural areas
    tended to obey the law
  • In urban areas, the law was ignored and demand
    for alcohol created a new kind of criminal a
    bootlegger person who sold alcohol (hooch)
    illegally
  • Illegal (and hidden) bars spring up everywhere
    and are called speakeasies

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21
Prohibition
  • Prohibition had been designed to stop some social
    problems associated with alcohol (WHAT??) but it
    only created an organized crime network
    (gangster/mobster) when these groups began to
    control the liquor trade
  • Illegal drinking created illegitimate
    billion-dollar industry controlled (by force) by
    gangsters such as Al Capone

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24
Scopes Trial
  • Religion was also an issue of change during the
    1920s as fundamentalism traditional Christian
    views clashed with scientific theories such as
    evolution
  • Major battle took place in Dayton, TN during the
    Scopes Trial in 1925
  • This court case came to symbolize the tensions of
    the 1920s resist change (normalcy) and preserve
    older values

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27
Scopes Trial
  • Scopes found guilty, later overturned (law
    unconstitutional)
  • Symbolized tensions of 1920s resist change
    preserve older values/beliefs

28
Warren G. Harding
  • In the Election of 1920 Warren G. Harding wins
    the Presidency and immediately embraced the
    policy of isolationism avoiding political
    alliances with foreign nations
  • His campaign slogan becomes the motto for the
    1920s Return to Normalcy

29
Warren G. Harding
30
The Harding Years
  • Following WW I US turned to conservative
    leaders who promised a return to NORMALCY
    away from Europe (isolationism)
  • For many, this meant preserving rural American
    values and enjoying the growing wealth/prosperity
  • For others, meant fascination with technology,
    stuff and fashions, etc

31
The Harding Years
  • Internationalism of Wilson would be reversed
    under the next three Republican Presidents
  • Republican Party slogan becomes America First
    looking inward and not outward
  • The 1920s also sees great achievements in
    business and pleasure

32
Washington Conference
  • Harding proposes a policy of disarmament
    nations would voluntarily give up their weapons
    and convenes the Washington Conference in 1921 to
    discuss this idea with the world
  • 3 major treaties were signed with foreign nations
    limiting the size of navies and promising to be
    open with one another

33
Causes of Nativism
  • As the US became isolationist, they also became
    nativist again, for several reasons
  • Patriotism immigrants never fully
  • Religion mistrust of immigrants
  • Urban conditions immigrants blamed for slums
    and corruption
  • Jobs take away the jobs

34
Causes of Nativism
  • Red Scare believed those Russians and others
    might adopt or hold radical political ideas
    (communism)
  • Nativists reacted harshly by passing a series of
    laws intended to stop immigration by placing a
    quota numerical limit on certain ethnic groups

35
Nativism Again
  • 1921 Emergency Quota Act cut of people
    admitted only 3 to total ethnic group living
    in the US in 1910
  • 1924 National Origins Act made quota
    restrictions a permanent policy lowered to 2
    and based on 1890 census (less immigrants then)
  • Intention was to discriminate and most
    low-paying jobs went to MIGRANT workers from
    Mexico and Canada

36
Trial of Sacco and Vanzetti
  • The one event that came to symbolize the hatred
    and mistrust of immigrants was the trial of Sacco
    and Vanzetti
  • 2 Italian immigrants (anarchists) were accused of
    killing 2 men during a robbery were convicted
    with weak evidence (unfair trial many said) and
    were executed in 1927

37
Sacco Vanzetti
38
Schenck v. US
  • The Supreme Court also made an important ruling
    in the 1920s
  • Schenck v. U.S. stated that the govt had the
    right to silence free speech when there is a
    clear and present danger
  • Used to silence anarchists, communists, and those
    who had opposed WW I

39
Teapot Dome Scandal
  • A major scandal scars Hardings administration in
    1923 with the Teapot Dome Scandal there was NO
    evidence that Harding was involved, but public
    opinion goes bad and so does Hardings health
  • Hardings Sec of Interior Albert Fall, secretly
    sold oil lands to private companies in return for
    a bribe of 300,000

40
Calvin Coolidge
  • Harding dies in office in 1923 and his VP Calvin
    Coolidge becomes the President
  • Adopts a laissez-faire approach to business which
    helps fuel an economic boom
  • Also continues disarmament with the
    Kellogg-Briand Pact in 1927 nations agree NOT
    to use threat of war in dealing with other nations

41
Calvin Coolidge
42
Calvin Coolidge
  • Coolidge is elected in 1924 and continues his
    laissez-faire approach to business
  • Business boomed, wages rose, former luxuries
    became necessities and people had leisure time
  • New gadgets, new technology, and more money to
    spend helped make the the 1920s Roaring

43
  • The symbol of this new age was the Ford
    automobile the Model T Tin Lizzie
  • Almost single-handedly Henry Ford changed the
    auto from the toy of the wealthy to a necessity
    for ALL used newer, cheaper, and quicker
    methods
  • Standardized Parts, Vertical Consolidation, and
    Assembly Line worker does one special task over
    and over

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45
Henry Ford
  • Ford also grew his empire by keeping unions
    away (by paying his workers more ) other
    employers hated him b/c of this (their workers
    wanted more too)
  • The auto revolutionized US life new fields of
    business (???) rural areas were now closer to
    cities, the country was within reach of
    city-dwellers

46
Henry Ford
47
Consumer Economy
  • The 1920s created a consumer economy one that
    depends on people spending large amounts of money
  • Traditionally, the US had been thrifty but with
    extra money and time, Americans became attached
    to things

48
Big-Time Business
  • Businesses also introduced paying by installment
    plan (credit) on this plan, the customer makes
    partial payment at set times over a period of
    time
  • Americans began spending beyond their means (DEBT
    BAD!!)
  • This buying on credit would be one of the major
    causes of the Great Depression!!!

49
Mass-Media
  • Mass-media advertising also began in the 1920s,
    persuading people to buy more and more
  • Advertisers appealed to peoples emotions,
    promoting products by implying that they would
    enhance someones image or make someone socially
    acceptable Keeping up with the Jones

50
Industrial Growth
  • As consumers bought, productivity rose to meet
    the demand
  • The Gross National Product (GNP) the total
    value of goods and services a country produces
    annually rose also
  • Industrial growth spurred by Henry Ford grew,
    but some people and industries did not profit

51
Left Behind
  • Unskilled laborers (immigrants) and migrant
    workers remained poor and farmers were completely
    shut out of the prosperity of the 1920s
  • Technology on the farms led to more production
    and lower prices while the farmers costs grew
  • Cycle of debt kept farmers poor and many got out
    or went broke!!

52
Herbert Hoover
  • Entering the late 1920s, the economy appeared in
    good shape, and people were optimistic about the
    future
  • When Herbert Hoover became President in 1928, he
    sought to keep govt out of business and promoted
    rugged individualism very Republican ideas
    encourage people to make investments in business
    (mostly thru STOCKS)

53
Herbert Hoover
54
Business Normalcy
  • During the late 1920s, labor enjoyed prosperity
    as well
  • Employers promoted open shops did not have to
    join unions
  • Also promoted Welfare Capitalism system to make
    workers feel a part of business sold stocks,
    fringe benefits (med, retirement, play stuff)
  • With good wages, and good jobs, unions were NOT
    needed strikes pointless

55
Souring Economy
  • The truth was that looks were deceiving for the
    economy there were warning signs that serious
    problems existed, but most disregarded them (some
    of which exist again today!!???!!)
  • There was an uneven distribution of wealth most
    held by just a few thousand people and large
    companies dominated

56
Bad Decisions
  • Tax policies benefited the rich by NOT taxing
    them or by reducing their taxes
  • Many Americans bought on credit, increasing their
    personal debt (DEBT BAD!!)
  • Others began playing the stock market,
    indulging in speculation the practice of making
    high-risk buys in hopes of making lots of

57
Major Problems
  • Some people also invested in stocks by buying on
    margin investors buy a stock for a fraction of
    its price and borrowed the rest (interests) in
    hopes of price going up
  • Overproduction caused problems, too
  • There were too many goods, more than consumers
    could buy and industry became stagnant and dropped

58
The Beginning of the END
  • Again, farmers, factory workers, and miners were
    some of those hardest hit by the slow downs in
    the last years of the 1920s most faced poverty
    and starvation
  • Clearly, by 1929, the economy was in bad shape,
    but Americans never slowed in their buying or
    their unwise investments in the stock markets
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