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Title: GCSE%20REVISION


1
GCSE REVISION
  • America
  • 1919-1941

2
America 1919-1941 4 key questions
  • How far did the US economy boom in the 1920s?
  • On what factors was the economic boom based? (6)
  • The USAs Wealth
  • Rich in raw materials e.g. iron, coal and oil. A
    growing urban population of hardworking and
    ambitious immigrants. WW1 had made the USA an
    economic world leader.
  • New Industries
  • Consumerism fuelled the boom with new electrical
    goods and new materials e.g. plastics. During the
    1920s industrial production grew by 50. The
    growth of car industry and Fords assembly line
    model was the most significant.
  • Rising wages and stable prices
  • Real value incomes rose by around 25. Prices of
    white goods dropped due the introduction of the
    assembly line to mass production.

3
On what factors was the economic boom based?
continued
  • Government policies
  • Republican policies of laissez-faire, tariffs,
    low taxation and trusts helped to create an
    economic boom in 1920s America
  • Hire Purchase
  • Credit was easily available. Hire purchase
    required a small deposit and further instalments.
    The popularity of mail order catalogues meant all
    Americans could become consumers.
  • Weak Trade Unions
  • There was great hostility towards Trade Unions
    from government and businesses. The car industry
    had none until the 1930s. This kept wages low and
    hours long as profits rose. Henry Ford paid above
    the going rate!

4
Now try to come up with a mnemonic about the
reasons for the boom in the 1920sMock 6 mark
questionWhy was there a boom in America during
the 1920s?
5
2. Why did some industries prosper while some
did not?
  • The growth of national wealth meant that people
    had money to spend on new white goods and
    luxuries. The construction industry boomed - new
    roads and skyscrapers changed the face of
    America.
  • However, more traditional industries such as
    textiles, coal mining and shipbuilding declined.
    The textile industry was unable to compete with
    the southern factories where labour was cheaper.
    People now used electricity to heat their homes.
    The least profitable mines were forced to close.

6
3. Why did agriculture not share in the
prosperity?
  • The 1920s were years of hardship.
  • Having benefited from high prices during wartime,
    overproduction plagued the over successful
    farmer.
  • Exporting the surplus was stopped by tariffs.
  • Prices collapsed.
  • Loans mounted up as farmers borrowed in the hope
    of better times.
  • In 1920 one-third of the population was in
    farming families, that dropped to one-quarter as
    farmers lost their farms to the banks.
  • Black sharecroppers faced the worst hardships.

7
4. Did all Americans benefit from the boom?
  • In 1929 60 of Americans lived below the poverty
    line.
  • Many of these families were in rural areas. The
    boom had benefited the rich and the middle class.
  • In 1929 one-third of all income was earned by 5
    of the workforce.
  • The boom did not really spread to the south where
    the majority of people were farmers.
  • Americas black population suffered
    discrimination. Those that had moved North in
    search of work in the new factories were resented
    by whites workers as competition for jobs
    increased.

Mock 10 mark question Did all Americans benefit
from the boom in the 1920s?
8
How far did the US society change in the 1920s?
  • What were the Roaring Twenties?
  • The popular image of the USA in the 1920s is of
    life as one long, crazy party, with jazz music
    playing on the radio, young fashionable women
    known as flappers wildly dancing the Charleston,
    large quantities of illegal alcohol being
    consumed, and everyone behaving in an scandalous
    a manner as possible. Consider the following
    topics
  • The movies
  • Sport
  • Music
  • Radio

Mock source question 7 marks How useful is this
source as evidence in telling us about life for
Americans during the Roaring Twenties?
9
2. How widespread was intolerance in US
society?
  • Immigration
  • In the 1920s the land of immigrants started to
    close its doors to newcomers. This stirred up
    feelings of hatred and fear in the crowded slums
    of the cities.
  • Red Scare
  • The government feared immigrants may bring with
    them socialist ideas. Americans were concerned
    that communism could spread to the USA. Some were
    deported as part of round-ups.
  • Sacco and Vanzetti case Two Italian immigrants
    accused of robbery and murder were put on trial
    on little evidence. The trial was a farce and
    they were later executed more for their radical
    political views than the crime.
  • Segregation and black people
  • Black Americans were disadvantaged. In the South
    they were kept in a permanent state of poverty
    restricted by the Jim Crow Laws. They were
    segregated from whites in every sphere of
    society. They had little or no political power in
    which to change things.

10
2. How widespread was intolerance in US
society? cont.
  • The Ku Klux Klan
  • The Klan was formed after the Civil War. They
    struck terror in the black community with
    night-time raids, crosses and lynchings. The Klan
    led a campaign of terror throughout the 1920s
    however, their membership fell when the Klans
    leader was convicted for the rape and murder of a
    women on a train.
  • The Monkey Trial
  • In 1925 the state of Tennessee banned the
    teaching of evolution due to the pressures of
    Christians who thought Darwin was teaching
    children to go against God. John Scopes a
    biology teacher was arrested for teaching Darwin.
    The trial meant that Darwinism and creationism
    was put on trial. Creationism fell down in court
    and Scopes was fined but the law was disgraced.

11
Now think of a way to memorise the different
examples of prejudice experienced during the
1920s. This could beA mind mapStory / rap /
song / rhymeMnemonic
Mock 10 mark question The most serious problem
faced by American society during the 1920s was
the poor treatment of black people. Do you
agree with this statement? Explain your answer
12
3. Why was prohibition introduced and later
repealed?
  • In January 1920 the Volstead Act was passed
    banning the sale, manufacture and transportation
    of alcohol. The noble experiment had begun. Why?
  • 1. It existed already
  • 13 states were already dry by 1919
  • 2. Moral reasons
  • People argued it caused social problems such as
    crime, abuse, violence, poor working habits and
    death
  • 3. Campaigners
  • Groups worked for prohibition e.g. The
    Anti-Saloon League. They and other popular
    temperance movements attacked the government and
    campaigned in rural areas.
  • 4. The First World War
  • German brewers were targeted as anti-American.

13
3. Why was prohibition introduced and later
repealed? cont.
  • The Effects of Prohibition
  • Prohibition seemed to do the exact opposite from
    what it intended. Now banned it became more
    attractive and popular, speakeasies opened and
    millions ignored the law.
  • Moonshine was illegal alcohol often badly made
    and lethal. Thousands of illegal stills supplied
    the speakeasies.
  • Smuggling was one way of getting alcohol.
    Rum-runners like William McCoy illegally imported
    alcohol from Canada.
  • Organised crime and gangs controlled the whole
    industry. They paid officials to turn a blind
    eye, with gangsters such as Al Capone using
    profits in other areas such as gambling and
    labour rackets.
  • The law was repealed in Dec 1933. It was clearly
    ineffective and doing more damage than good. The
    biggest effect was the Depression and the need
    for further taxation and better use of police
    and government resources.

14
Mock question 6 marksWhy did prohibition fail
in the 1920s?
15
4. How far did the roles of women change during
the 1920s?
  • Young women in the 1920s were changing in every
    way. They began to reject the traditional image
    and roles of women and turned against the way
    things had been pre WW1.
  • 1920 Women gained the right to vote.
  • Many grew financially more independent.
  • Contraception became available.
  • Divorce rate rose.
  • New white goods cut down on housework.
  • Women changed their appearance. Flappers wore
    shorter hair and skirts.
  • Older people were threatened by this and most
    womens lives did not change at all.
  • Rural women experienced little changes to their
    roles and lives.

16
What were the causes and consequences of the Wall
Street Crash?
  • How far was speculation responsible for the Wall
    St Crash?
  • During the 1920s the stock market was a good
    place for people who bought shares (speculators).
    The rise in value in shares during the 1920s
    created a boom.
  • The role of the speculators was key to the
    crash. Speculators used a practice called buying
    on the margin, where the money used to buy shares
    was borrowed originally. As the share prices
    rose, money was made through the sale of the
    shares. Banks were keen to lend money. However
    few people stopped to ask about the true value of
    the shares.
  • The State of the American economy was good
    during the 1920s. By 1928 growth was slowing,
    foreign trade declined, consumer markets became
    saturated. A realisation was being reached that
    the boom was based on debt and the ability to
    repay that debt.

17
2. What impact did the Crash have on the economy?
  • On 24th October 1929 (Black Thursday) traders
    were nervous. The day before shares and prices
    dropped sharply. On this day the whole market
    collapsed. Every investor was selling and prices
    free falled.
  • The USAs biggest banks started to buy shares
    worth millions to stable the market but this was
    not able to solve the overall problems. Thousands
    were ruined in one day.
  • The next week saw even worse losses. 10,000m
    lost in one day
  • The market continued to fall until 1932 when
    share prices were at one-fifth their 1929 value.

18
Mock questionAre you surprised by what this
source says? Explain your answer fully. 7 marks
  • The stock market hysteria reached its apex that
    year 1929 . . . Everyone was playing the market
    . . . On my last day in New York, I went down to
    the barber. As he removed the sheet he said
    softly, Buy Standard Gas. Ive doubled . . .
    Its good for another double. As I walked
    upstairs, I reflected that if the hysteria had
    reached the barber level, something must soon
    happen.
  • Cecil Roberts, The Bright Twenties, 1938.

19
2. What impact did the Crash have on the economy?
cont.
  • The financial and economic effects of Wall
    Street Crash
  • The American economy went into a vicious slump
    which caused the collapse of international trade,
    mass unemployment, bankruptcy and a slump in
    production
  • The crash meant people had less to spend on
    consumer items. So companies had to produce less,
    needing fewer workers. Unemployment rose rapidly
    to 4.3m in 1930, 8m in 1931 and 12.1m in 1932.
  • It was now difficult to borrow money as well.
    Banks were closing 5000 closed in the 3 years
    after the crash. Industry shut down.
  • One-third of the population were members of
    families in which the breadwinner was out of
    work.
  • The reaction of President Hoover
  • As a republican Hoover was unwilling to act at
    first. He said prosperity is just around the
    corner. But soon realised that he had to act. He
    set up the Reconstruction Finance Commission to
    grant loans to businesses. He encouraged job
    creation through public works and the Federal
    Farm Board bought surplus crops. These methods
    did not work. Hoovervilles sprang up around
    cities. Even raising tariffs made matters worse.

20
3. What were the social consequences of the crash?
  • The numbers of the unemployed increased daily.
  • Homes were lost, families split up.
  • There was no unemployment benefit and people
    relied on charity. Soon even the charity money
    started to run out.
  • The Bonus Marchers
  • Were ex-servicemen who wanted a government bonus
    to be paid to them (it was due in 1945). They
    camped outside of the White House. Hoover called
    in the army to evict them and the situation ended
    in violence.

21
4. Why did Roosevelt win the election of 1932?
  • Hoovers inadequacies
  • By 1932 Hoover was extremely unpopular. His
    policies were not working as he had failed to see
    it as the responsibility of government to stop
    the depression. He was called the do nothing
    president and placards read hang Hoover
  • Roosevelts strengths
  • His personality won over many. It was not clear
    what he was going to do to solve the crisis but
    his campaign was energetic and optimistic.
  • Roosevelt won the election by a landslide.
    However he could not take power until his
    inauguration some months later. The economy
    plunged deeper into depression.

Mock question 6 marks Why did Roosevelt win the
election of 1932?
22
How successful was the New Deal?
  • Roosevelt had promised America a New Deal a
    programme of public spending with the government
    taking a central role in trying to cope with the
    effects of the depression. Many have said that
    the New Deal was unconstitutional and the Supreme
    Court ruled against many aspects. It did not
    solve unemployment but cut the numbers
    significantly. WW2 finally brought back full
    employment.
  • What was the New Deal?
  • In the first 100 days of power, Roosevelt
    introduced his New Deal.
  • Banks
  • Emergency Banking Act - closed banks until they
    were checked over
  • Farmers
  • The Agricultural Adjustment Agency AAA
    destroyed surplus and aimed to reduce production.
  • Unemployed
  • Civilian Conservation Corps CCC providing work
    for the unemployed usually in the countryside
    e.g. fighting forest fires.

23
What was the New Deal? Cont.
  • Industry
  • The National Recovery Administration NRA tried
    to agree fair prices for fair conditions for
    workers. The Public Work Administration PWA aimed
    to use the unemployed on large scale public
    schemes e.g. the bridges and roads.
  • Home owners
  • The government granted low interest loans to
    help people to pay their mortgages.
  • Depressed areas
  • Tennessee Valley Authority TVA regenerated the
    Tennessee river region which had suffered floods
    and soil erosion. Dams were constructed.
  • Alphabet Agencies
  • The sheer number of new government agencies was
    huge.

24
2. The New Deal after 1933
  • The Supreme court had challenged some of the New
    Deal laws. Some claimed the New Deal was helping
    the people too much like a communist state.
    Others claimed to was not doing enough. A second
    wave of measures were introduced.
  • The Second New Deal
  • Works Progress Administration WPA found short
    term employment for 8 million people
  • Social Security Act established a national
    insurance scheme (pensions, disability pay and
    unemployment benefits.
  • The AAA had to close down but the Resettlement
    Administration RA gave grants and equipment to
    the very needy.

25
An American cartoon entitled The New Driver
published in 1933 The figure at the bottom of
the cartoon represents Roosevelt. Mock source
question 6 marks What is the message of this
cartoon?
26
3. Why did the New Deal encounter opposition?
  • Republicans were opposed to the New Deal as they
    felt it interfered in areas which had nothing to
    do with government.
  • They thought freedoms were being lost in a new
    socialist America?
  • Taxes were raised to pay for the New Deal
  • After his re-election in 1936, FDR tried to
    control the Supreme court. His plans backfired
    and he lost respect.
  • Father Coughlin claimed the New Deal was not
    doing enough.
  • Dr Francis Townsend campaigned to get the
    Social Security Act passed.
  • Huey Long Governor of Louisiana he spoke for
    the poor and used every trick in the book (some
    criminal) to get more power and improve public
    services. A critic of Roosevelt he claimed he was
    not doing enough to help the poor.

27
4. Why did unemployment persist despite the New
Deal?
  • Critics claim the alphabet agencies did not
    create real jobs.
  • Work was created for the sake of it.
  • Unemployment was reduced but not solved.
  • Employers resented the power of the New Deal
    especially unionism.
  • Strikes became more common and 80 were settled
    in favour of the workers.
  • Many farmers had not been helped by the New Deal
    e.g. sharecroppers. Large areas of the dust bowl
    were empty as farmers left to seek work in
    America.
  • The poorest people were not helped to improve
    their position.
  • Black Americans were not helped directly. FDR did
    not wish to rock the boat on the race issue.
  • In 1938 the New Deal was scaled down as the
    economy seemed to be coping. However this lead to
    a further slump.

28
  • Mock 10 mark question
  • Did the fact that the New deal did not solve
    unemployment mean that it was a failure?
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