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America in the Roaring Twenties

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Title: America in the Roaring Twenties


1
America in the Roaring Twenties
2
Palmer Raids, 1919
Attorney General of USA, A. Mitchell Palmer
  • Arrested 6000 radicals after bombings in 8 cities
  • Galleanists There will have to be murder we
    will kill, because it is necessary
  • Palmers own home in DC was damaged by a bomb
  • 249 communists and anarchists deported to
    Russia, 1919

3
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4
  • Exiled, imprisoned, escaped
  • Promised We will dynamite you! after passage of
    Anarchist Act
  • Published bomb-making manual, The Health is In
    You!

Anarchist Luigi Galleani, deported to Italy 1919
5
Emma Goldman deported, 1919
  • J. Edgar Hoover led Department of Investigation
    (later the FBI)
  • Subscription list of Mother Earth provided govt
    with names during Red Scare

Alexander Berkman
6
Red Scare
  • Anarchist Act, 1920
  • State laws against Criminal Syndicalism
  • Prosecution of Industrial Workers of the World
    (Wobblies)

7
Sacco and Vanzetti Case, 1927
  • Charged with murder of paymaster and security
    guard in armed robbery
  • Braintree, MA 1921
  • Italian immigrants, draft dodgers, anarchists
  • Executed 1927 after high-profile trial
  • Radicals claimed political frame-up

8
American Legion
  • Patriotism
  • Veterans Rights and Benefits, especially the
    Bonus
  • Conservatism
  • Law and Order
  • Anti-radicalism

9
Revival of Ku Klux Klan
Invisible Empire
  • Anti-foreign, anti-black, anti-Catholic
  • Strong in Midwest and South
  • 5 million dues-paying members
  • Powerful in Democrat Party
  • Led parade of 40,000 in Washington, DC 1925

10
Immigration Quota Act, 1924
  • New laws limited a countrys immigration to 3
    of the number who had been in the US in 1910
  • Intended to cut back on those coming from Eastern
    Europe
  • Changed to 2 of those in 1890 census, 1924
  • Total exclusion of Japanese
  • No quotas for Canadians or Latin Americans

11
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12
Prohibition the Noble Experiment
  • Popular in South and Midwest, not in big cities
  • Difficult to enforce
  • Corruption, bribery
  • Bootleggers, smugglers, moonshiners
  • Gangsterism, organized crime worth 12 billion

13
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14
Al Capone aka Public Enemy 1
15
Scopes Monkey TrialDayton, TN 1925
  • John Scopes was fired for teaching evolution,
    illegal in Tennessee
  • Fundamentalists vs Darwinists
  • Wm J. Bryan vs Clarence Darrow
  • H.L. Mencken wrote about the trial, ridiculing
    Bryan and his followers
  • Inherit the Wind is based on this case

16
Economic Prosperity
  • Cheap fuel, coal and oil
  • Electrification of cities
  • Automobile
  • Household appliances refrigerators, washers,
    vacuums, radios
  • Advertising
  • Credit buying, installment plan, buy now, pay
    later
  • Mass entertainment spectator sports, movies
  • High profits and wages

17
Auto Industry
  • Assembly line, mass production techniques
  • Industry leaders Ford, Sloan, Olds
  • Detroit became the Motor City
  • 500,000 Model Ts by 1914
  • Rubber, glass, fabric, repair, gas stations,
    travel industries grew rapidly
  • Freedom, tourism, leisure
  • Growth of suburbs
  • 6 million jobs by 1930

Henry Ford with Tin Lizzie
18
Charles Lindbergh Spirit of St. Louis
19
Jazz Age
  • Hollywood movie industry first talkie was The
    Jazz Singer
  • Jazz bands popular in New Orleans, Chicago, New
    York
  • Widespread popularity of radio programs news,
    sports, music, drama, religion
  • Harlem Renaissance displayed black musicians,
    singers, dancers, artists, writers

20
A typical Flapper
21
Movie Stars of the 1920s
Clara Bow
Charlie Chaplin
Rudolph Valentino
22
George Herman Babe Ruth
The Bambino The Sultan of Swat
New York Yankees
23
Louis Armstrong, Satchmo
24
Jazz Band, Harlem 1920s
25
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26
Langston Hughes
The Weary Blues
The Negro Speaks of Rivers
27
Marcus Garvey
  • Jamaican immigrant
  • Black Nationalist
  • Favored black-owned businesses, racial pride and
    unity
  • Universal Negro Improvement Association
  • Popular among working-class blacks in Harlem
  • Back-to-Africa Movement
  • Black Star Steamship Co.
  • Convicted of fraud, deported

28
The Lost Generation
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • Ernest Hemingway

The Sun Also Rises
The Great Gatsby
29
Cynicism, alienation, pessimism
  • H.L. Mencken
  • Sinclair Lewis

Baltimore Sun American Mercury
Main Street Babbitt Elmer Gantry
30
The Politics of Boom and Bust
31
The Politics of Boom and Bust
  • Warren G. Harding
  • Republican from Ohio
  • Back to Normalcy
  • Easygoing, amiable, intellectually flabby
  • Not a bad man, just a slobAlice Roosevelt
  • Pro-business, anti-reform
  • Appointed Taft as Chief Justice
  • Pardoned Eugene Debs
  • Poker-playing whiskey drinker
  • Enjoyed socializing with his cronies, the Ohio
    Gang
  • Died of a stroke, 1923

32
Presidential Election of 1920
33
Eugene Debs received pardon from Harding, left
federal prison
34
Hardings Cabinet
Andrew Mellon, Secretary of Treasury
Charles Evans Hughes, Secretary of State
Albert Fall, Secretary of Interior
Herbert Hoover, Secretary of Commerce
35
Republican Foreign Policy
  • IsolationismNo membership in League of Nations
  • Negotiations for oil drilling rights in Middle
    East
  • No diplomatic relations with communist govt of
    Russia
  • Disarmament Conference reduced size of naval
    fleets
  • Kellogg-Briand Pact renounced war, declared it
    illegal
  • Tariffs raised, reducing world trade, causing
    retaliation, hurting Europes ability to
    repay debts from WW I
  • Left problems such as Japans invasion of
    Manchuria to a weak League of Nations

36
Teapot Dome scandal leads to bribery conviction
of Albert Fall
37
Calvin Coolidge, 1923-1929
  • Honest, frugal, hard-working, laconic Silent
    Cal
  • Favored lower taxes, reduction of public debt
  • The business of America is business
  • Sworn in as president after sudden death of
    Harding
  • Conservative Republican from Massachusetts
  • Enforced Prohibition
  • Kept Mellon as Sec of Treasury
  • Allowed loans to Germany, which paid Br and Fr,
    who repaid USA

38
Presidential Election, 1924
39
Herbert Hoover, 1929-1933
  • Coolidge said I do not choose to run in 1928
  • Republicans nominated Hoover, a Quaker engineer
    from Iowa, former Sec of Commerce and Food
    Administrator in WW I
  • Rugged Individualism
  • Isolationism, small government, low taxes, free
    enterprise
  • Signed Hawley-Smoot Tariff, his worst mistake

40
Presidential Election of 1928
41
Stock Market Crash October 1929
42
5000 Banks Failed
4 million unemployed in 1930 12 million
unemployed in 1932
Soup Kitchens fed jobless men
Hooverville
43
  • Hoovers Policies
  • Govt loans to railroad, banks, rural credit
    corporations Reconstruction Finance Corporation
  • Public Works like Hoover Dam
  • Encouragement of private charity and local
    government to provide direct relief
  • Norris-LaGuardia Act to help labor unions no
    yellow-dog contracts, no court injunctions
    against strikes and boycotts
  • Optimistic speeches Prosperity is just around
    the corner
  • Hawley-Smoot tariff

44
Bonus Army veterans protest in Washington, 1932
45
Douglas Macarthur led troops to expel Bonus
Marchers from DC, 1932
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