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The 1920s

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Title: The 1920s


1
The 1920s Everything you need to know
2
A little before the 1920s
3
Russian Revolution
  • 1917
  • Czar Nicholas II is extremely unpopular amongst
    the Russians
  • Vladimir Lenin and his followers, the Bolsheviks,
    lead a successful revolution
  • 1918
  • Civil War engulfed Russia
  • Lenins forces- the Reds
  • Opposition- the Whites
  • 1920
  • Reds win the civil war
  • Renamed the nation Union of Soviet Socialist
    Republics (USSR)
  • Communism named the official ideology of USSR
  • Effect on the US- RED SCARE intense fear of
    communism and other extreme ideas

4
Red Scare
  • Caused by labor unrest, hikes in cost of living
    and distrust of Communism

5
Schenck v. US (1919)
  • Charles Schenck mailed letters to WWI draftees
    urging them not to report for duty.
  • He was convicted under the Espionage Act, which
    was meant to catch spies and opponents to the
    war.
  • His appeal to the Supremes claimed he was
    exercising his right to free speech.

Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. was the author of the
Courts opinion. One of the best legal writers
of the time and always the best moustache!
6
  • Supreme Court decision established the
    justification of silencing free speech when there
    is a clear and present danger to the nation.
  • Holmes compares Schencks actions to shouting
    FIRE! in a crowded movie theatre, which would
    cause a dangerous panic.

7
Palmer Raids
  • Atty. General A. Mitchell Palmer set up a special
    force to conduct raids and arrest suspected
    subversives. His targets included Communists,
    Socialists, and anarchists.
  • Palmers forces jailed thousands, most of whom
    were born overseas. More than 500 immigrants
    were deported even though they were accused of no
    crime.
  • Had popular support at first, but lessened as the
    raids became more outrageous and aggressive.

8
Sacco and Vanzetti
  • In 1920, gunmen robbed and killed a guard and
    paymaster of a shoe factory, and two Italian
    immigrants are arrested.
  • Many Americans suspect that they are arrested
    because they are immigrants.
  • Ruckus ensues.
  • S and V are convicted and sentenced to die, on
    repeated appeals the conviction holds. They are
    electrocuted in 1927.

9
Society in the 1920s
10
Flappers and Changes for women
  • Women prefer their dresses and hair shorter!
    Skirts rise from 6 inches off the ground to knee
    length or higher by the mid 1920s clothes were
    worn tighter as well!
  • Women also begin to wear makeup which was once
    thought to be a sign of immorality!

11
Jazz Age
  • Jazz grew out of African American music in the
    south, especially ragtime and the blues younger
    people loved to dance to it, and a survey of
    radio stations shows that 2/3 of all air time is
    devoted to jazz!
  • The hottest clubs were the jazz clubs too. The
    most famous was the cotton club in Harlem, and
    the most famous band was Louis Armstrongs Jelly
    Roll Morton Band.

12
The Lost Generation
  • A set of writers lost in the greedy materialism
    of the era most of them were living in
    Greenwich Village
  • Included ee Cummings, Hemingway, John Dos Passos,
    and F. Scott Fitzgerald

13
Harlem Renaissance
  • African American literary awakening, centered in
    Harlem, NY
  • Zora Neale Hurston, Langston Hughes, Countee
    Cullen

14
The jazz Singer
  • First film with sound
  • Featured a Vaudeville star, Al Jolson
  • Talkies

15
Conflicts and drama
16
Prohibition
  • 18th Amendment ignored on much of the east coast
  • 1924 report 95 of Kansas obeys the law, and 5
    of New Yorkers obey it
  • Bootlegging illegal sale and transport
  • Speakeasies clubs where liquor is served
  • Organized crime the mob got its roots and
    gained lots of influence during this period
    bootlegging for a wide range of people
  • The most famous was Al Capone, nicknamed
    Scarface

17
Scopes monkey trial
  • Can you teach evolution in school?
  • Scopes tried, but loses to William Jennings
    Bryan!
  • Broadcast over radio, reported in papers first
    nationwide coverage of a trial (like an early OJ
    trial)

18
Revival of the KKK
  • This time, its against immigrants, minorities,
    catholics, jews, and others who dont fit in

19
A Republican Decade
20
Warren G. Harding
  • looks like a president
  • Speeches often left people wondering what his
    views were
  • One democrat called his words an army of pompous
    phrases moving across the landscape in search of
    an idea

21
Harding presidency
  • Isolationism foreign policy reflected the
    American postwar desire to turn away from foreign
    entanglements.
  • This included discouraging economic imports by
    passing tariffs!
  • While we did avoid joining the League of Nations,
    Harding did participate in a call for
    disarmament. Under this program, the nations of
    the world would give up their weapons voluntarily.

22
Immigration
  • Along with an isolationist policy towards
    politics, Americans sought to limit the number of
    foreigners admitted to the US.
  • Why? Here are 5 arguments of nativists
  • People from foreign countries would never be
    fully loyal to the US
  • Dislike of Catholics, Jews, and Orthodox
    Christians
  • Immigrants would take jobs from Americans
  • Slums are caused by immigrants who dont know how
    to live correctly
  • Immigrants are coming here from the unstable
    parts of Europe and might infiltrate the American
    public with dangerous ideas or start a revolt
    themselves
  • How did we appease these fears? We set up a
    quota system, numerical limits on the number of
    entries into the US. Europeans were limited,
    Asians were banned.

23
Teapot Dome
  • While Hardings involvement is uncertain, his
    administration was filled with scandal illegal
    bribes, embezzlement, and blackmail were among
    the many crimes.
  • The worst was the Teapot Dome scandal. Hardings
    Secretary of the Interior gave oil drilling
    rights on government land to private oil
    companies. In return, he received more than
    300,000 in payments and gifts.

24
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25
Labor strikes
  • Boston police
  • Police officers had not received a pay increase
    since the beginning of WWI. In the fall of 1919,
    they went on strike and rioting broke out in
    Boston.
  • Mass. Governor Coolidge called out the state
    guard saying that there is no right to strike
    against public safety by anybody, anywhere, any
    time.
  • Steel and coal
  • Strikes in several cities, broken with force,
    some workers are killed.
  • Strike activity dies down during the 1920s.
    Union memberships drop during 1921 and 22, and
    will not grow again the rest of the decade.

26
Coolidge
  • When Harding died mid-term, his VP Calvin
    Coolidge took over. He was not affiliated with
    any of the Harding scandals, so Americans were
    ready to have him restore the dignity and
    prestige of the Presidency.
  • He finished Hardings term and then was elected
    to one of his own in 1924 as Americans decided to
    keep it cool with Coolidge

27
The business of the American People is Business
  • Coolidge supported a laissez faire approach to
    business, making sure not to interfere with
    growth. This policy is the spark for a huge
    economic boom in the 20s. (Quite different from
    past presidents, right?)
  • Coolidge combines this with a belief that we
    should shrink the federal government. His
    commitment to have government do less was
    criticized as inaction.

28
Kellogg Briand Pact
  • Coolidge continued the isolationist policies of
    his predecessors, leaving most decisions up to
    his Secty. of State, Frank B. Kellogg.
  • Kellogg and the French worked out a deal under
    which 15 nations agreed not to use the threat of
    war in their dealings with one another. More
    than 60 countries joined the pact eventually, but
    it proved unrealistic and unworkable.

29
Kellogg was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1929 for
his work with the pact!
This is his acceptance speech!
30
Business boom
  • a.k.a. How to Succeed in Business and then
  • Really Screw It Up.

31
  • As the US adjusted to a postwar economy, wages
    rose by almost 28 and the number of millionaires
    doubled in just under 10 years. Why?
  • The US developed a consumer economy, one that is
    supported by the vigorous buying and selling of
    goods by consumers
  • One of the things that helped consumers buy
    things were the creation of Installment plans,
    letting customers make partial payments at set
    intervals over a period of time
  • Influence of electricity new electric-based
    appliances fueled a need for electricity in
    just over 10 years, the number of people with
    electricity jumped from 16 to 63!

32
  • This is the era of Ford and assembly line,
    influencing sweeping changes of industrial
    procedures and labor needs in every part of the
    economy!
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