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The ROARING 20s

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The ROARING 20s Introduction to the Roaring Twenties One of the most boisterous and rowdy decades in US History A new prosperity allowed Americans to enjoy luxuries ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The ROARING 20s


1
TheROARING 20s
2
Introduction to the Roaring Twenties
  • One of the most boisterous and rowdy decades in
    US History
  • A new prosperity allowed Americans to enjoy
    luxuries and embrace new forms of entertainment.
    America resembled a boiling kettle, fairly
    bursting with the wailing of the sounds of jazz,
    wildly dancing feet, the roar of thousands
    cheering on sports, and conversations laced with
    slang terms.

3
Introduction to the Roaring Twenties
  • A number of significant and enduring trends
    emerged altering the American landscape
  • New forms of transportation, a new woman, and
    increased manufacturing of a wide variety of
    goods emerged
  • Radios became a household necessity, talkie
    movies replaced silent film, and this decade
    would also bear witness to the flowering of
    African American culture known as the Harlem
    Renaissance.

4
Facts about the Roaring 20s
  • FACTS about this decade.
  • 106,521,537 people in the United States 
  • 2,132,000 unemployed, Unemployment 5.2
  • Life expectancy  Male 53.6,   Female 54.6 
  • 343,000 in military (down from 1,172,601 in
    1919) 
  • Average annual earnings 1236  Teacher's salary 
    970
  • Dow Jones High 100  Low 67  
  • Illiteracy rate reached a new low of 6 of the
    population.  
  • Gangland crime included murder, swindles,
    racketeering 
  • It took 13 days to reach California from New
    York.  There were 387,000 miles of paved roads. 

5
Jigsaw Activity
  • Expert Groups on the following topics
  • Changing Role of Women
  • Sports, Leisure Time, and American Culture
  • The Harlem Renaissance and Jazz Age
  • Technology and Transportation
  • Consumerism
  • Prohibition
  • Radio and the Movies
  • Fundamentalism vs. Evolution

6
  • Each group will create an informational poster on
    their topic using the information provided in
    your topic folder and textbook.
  • Your informational poster should tell a person
    everything they need to know about your topic. Be
    sure to in some way answer the essential
    questions provided for each topic on your poster
    board! You have 30 minutes!
  • When time is up, the posters will be placed
    around the room, and you will have an opportunity
    to read about and answer the questions for each
    topic.

7
The Changing Role of the Woman
  • What characteristics identified a flapper?
  • What were the fashion and social trends that
    young women of the 20s embraced?(4)
  • How did womens sexual ideas and practices change
    during the 1920s?
  • What was the double standard?
  • Who was Margaret Sanger?

8
Sports, Leisure Time, and American Culture
  • What factors led sports to flourish?
  • What sports were popular and who were the people
    that made them popular? (2)
  • How did literature change?
  • What was the Lost Generation?
  • Who were the prominent authors of the 1920s?(4)
  • What Jazz age author wrote the Great Gatsby?

9
The Harlem Renaissance and the Jazz Age
  • What was the Harlem Renaissance?
  • Where did Jazz come from and what was its appeal?
  • What are some of the cultural accomplishments of
    the Harlem Renaissance and how did they increase
    the pride of African Americans?
  • Who were the prominent writers, artists, and
    musicians of this time period? (5)
  • What is Black Nationalism and who is Marcus
    Garvey?

10
Technology and Transportation
  • How did Henry Ford change the way automobiles
    were produced?
  • How did automobiles change the lives of
    Americans? (3)
  • How did aviation capture the attention of the
    American people?
  • Who were Charles Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart?
  • In what ways did the standard of living increase
    for Americans during the 1920s? (4-5)

11
Consumerism in the 1920s
  • How did consumerism change in the 1920s and why?
  • How did advertising change?
  • Explain how the installment plan worked for the
    American consumer and what dangers might easy
    credit create?
  • Why was the term prosperity used to describe the
    time period?
  • What were the differences between urban and rural
    life?

12
Prohibition
  • What previous movement finally led to
    prohibition?
  • What did the 18th amendment outlaw and how did it
    effect society?
  • What methods did Americans use to acquire and
    conceal alcohol during prohibition? (3)
  • What role did organized crime play during the
    1920s?
  • Why was prohibition difficult to enforce?
  • What is a speakeasy?

13
Radio and the Movies
  • Why did broadcasting become widespread during the
    1920s?
  • How did the radio industry grow and transform
    American lifestyle?
  • What were some of the limitations and criticisms
    of the movie industry?
  • How did fans idolize movie stars and who were the
    movie stars?
  • What is a talkie?

14
Fundamentalism v. Evolution
  • What is fundamentalism and in what ways was it
    expressed?
  • What is Darwins Theory of Evolution?
  • Why was John Scopes arrested?
  • Who was the prosecuting attorney?
  • What was the verdict?
  • The Scopes Trial is an example of
    __________________ vs. _________________

15
  • The Roaring Twenties in Summary
  • The 1920s was a time of prosperity, but also a
    time of many downfalls. It was an era of change .
    . . a time when people began to do what they
    wanted to do instead of following social norms.
    The  U.S. prospered as Henry Ford developed the
    automobile assembly line, as the nation had its
    first ever TV broadcast in New York, and as mail
    was delivered via airplanes. Women fought for the
    right to vote and changed the rules of fashion.
    Prohibition made it illegal to drink alcohol,
    creating organized crime with Al Capone leading
    the way. Warren Harding's administration
    participated in the Teapot Dome Scandal, but
    Harding's death left Calvin Coolidge to deal with
    the aftermath. Babe Ruth and the Yankees ruled
    the arena of Baseball. The first ever sports
    broadcast was delivered during a Jack Dempsey
    fight. Charles Lindbergh got the name "Lucky
    Lindy" and became a national hero. Americans
    feared a Communist takeover, especially A.
    Mitchell Palmer who sent suspected Communists
    back to the Soviet Union on what was deemed "The
    Soviet Ark." Italian immigrants, Sacco and
    Vanzetti, were executed in one of the biggest
    trial of the Twenties. W.E.B. DuBois, Marcus
    Garvey, and Langston Hughes led the Harlem
    Renaissance period. Garvey spoke of his ideas for
    Black Nationalism while DuBois and Hughes became
    leading writers of the black movement. The Ku
    Klux Klan began their prejudice spree, preaching
    white supremacy. Clarence Darrow prosecuted John
    Scopes during the "Monkey Trial," after Scopes
    admitted to disobeying the Butler Act by teaching
    evolution. In this decade following the First
    World War, America prospered as the leading
    nation of the world. It is clear to anyone that
    the memories of the Roaring Twenties are still
    vivid as we prepare to enter the 21st Century.

16
Essential Questions
  • 3. How did the economy grow during the 1920s?
  • 4. How as life changed by the prosperity of the
    1920s?
  • 5. How did the Harlem Renaissance challenge the
    perception of race in America?

17
Review Questions
  • Which communications medium was most important in
    shaping life during the 1920s?
  • Newspapers
  • Telephones
  • Radio
  • Television

18
  • 2. The term flapper refers to
  • The people who talked too much during the war
  • The illegal drinking clubs of the Prohibition era
  • The new body style of the Model A car by Ford
  • The new attitudes and lifestyles of the 20s
    woman.

19
  • 3. What was the Scopes trial about?
  • The arrest of a communist leader
  • The arrest of a KKK member who had killed a black
    man
  • The arrest of a teacher for teaching evolution
  • The attempt to ban religion from the school system

20
  • 4. Which famous flyer of the 20s was the first
    to fly across the Atlantic Ocean?
  • Red Baron
  • Amelia Earhart
  • Charles Lindbergh
  • John Glenn

21
  • 5. Which of the following is NOT true about the
    20s?
  • Women began to reject the old fashioned values of
    their mothers
  • Many black Americans moved North in search of
    better opportunities
  • Rock-n-roll music developed
  • The Harlem Renaissance showed black cultural
    achievements

22
  • 6. Which of the following caused the Harlem
    Renaissance to flower in the 1920s?
  • Immigration and overcrowding
  • New pride in the African American experience
  • The NAACP
  • Marcus Garveys organization

23
  • 7. Which was most responsible for what led to the
    Scopes Trial?
  • Judaism
  • Agnosticism
  • Theosophy
  • Fundamentalism
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