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The Roaring Twenties

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Title: The Roaring Twenties


1
The Roaring Twenties
  • Unit 8A
  • AP U.S. History

2
Fundamental Questions
  • To what extent did developments during the
    Roaring Twenties continue the reforms of the
    Progressive Era?

3
Election of 1920
  • Warren G. Harding (R)
  • A Return to Normalcy
  • James M. Cox (D)
  • Eugene V. Debs (Socialist)
  • Received 913,664 votes despite incarceration

4
Warren G. Harding (R) (1921-1923)
  • A Return to Normalcy.
  • Emergency Quota Act (1921)
  • Fordney-McCumber Tariff (1922)
  • Washington Naval Conference (1922-1923)
  • Teapot Dome Scandal
  • Harding died in office
  • Calvin Coolidge assumed presidency

5
Election of 1924
  • Calvin Coolidge (R)
  • Booming economy and conservatism
  • John W. Davis (D)
  • Democrats split between conservatives and
    liberals (LaFollette)

6
Calvin Coolidge (R) (1923-1928)
  • The business of the American people is
    business.
  • National Origins Act (1924)
  • Kellogg-Briand Pact (1928)

7
Election of 1928
  • Herbert Hoover (R)
  • Al Smith (D)
  • First Catholic major party candidate

8
Herbert Hoover (R) (1929-1933)
  • Given the chance to go forward with the policies
    of the last eight years, we shall soon be in
    sight of the day when poverty will be banished
    from this nation.
  • Great Depression
  • Volunteerism
  • Stock Market Crash of 1929
  • Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act (1930)
  • Reconstruction Finance Corporation (1932)
  • Bonus Army (1932)

9
American Consumer Society
  • Welfare Capitalism
  • Real income increases
  • Higher rate for owners, managers, skilled labor
  • Minimal increased rates for unskilled labor and
    working class
  • Insurance, profit-sharing, worker safety
  • Decreased influence of unions
  • Mass Production
  • Wide variety and availability of consumer
    products at affordable prices
  • Model T
  • Domestic appliances
  • Installment Plans
  • Impact of the Automobile

10
Consumer Ads
11
1920s SocietyBlacks
  • White Resentment
  • Lynchings increased especially in the South
  • Universal Negro Improvement Association
  • Marcus Garvey
  • Economic solidarity and advancement for blacks
  • Failed attempt of mass migration to Africa
  • Inspired black pride and nationalism

12
1920s SocietyImmigrants
  • First Red Scare and Nativism
  • Quota Laws
  • Emergency Quota Act (1921)
  • 3 of 1910 Census
  • National Origins Act (1924)
  • 2 of 1890 Census
  • Sacco and Vanzetti Trial (1920-1927)
  • Two Italian immigrants executed for murder
    despite little evidence

13
1920s SocietyWomen
  • Nineteenth Amendment and Voting
  • Usually voted as husbands
  • Politicians catered to female-friendly
    legislation and programs
  • Employment
  • Clerical, teachers, nurses, domestic servants
  • Lower wages and no managerial positions
  • Margaret Sanger
  • American Birth Control League
  • Established Planned Parenthood
  • Flapper Girl
  • Young women of the Jazz Age
  • Short hair, short hemline, cosmetics, cigarette

14
1920s Culture WarsProhibition
  • Eighteenth Amendment and Volsteadt Act
  • Supported by middle-class progressives and rural
    Protestants especially in South and West
  • Generally ignored in urban centers
  • Bootleggers/Rumrunners
  • Smuggling of alcohol
  • Rise of organized crime
  • Al Capone
  • Speakeasies
  • Underground saloons

15
1920s Culture WarsKu Klux Klan
16
1920s Culture WarsReligion
  • Fundamentalism
  • Literal view of Bible Creationism
  • Attacked urban lifestyle and culture
  • Revivalists
  • Billy Sunday
  • Aimee Semple McPherson
  • Modernism
  • Liberal view of religion
  • Acceptance and coordination of science and
    context with faith
  • Scopes Monkey Trial (1925)
  • Law against teaching of evolution in Tennessee
    public school
  • Creationism
  • William Jennings Bryan
  • Evolution
  • Clarence Darrow

17
1920s Culture WarsHero Worship
  • Athletes, celebrities, innovators famed for
    individual accomplishment
  • A personification of American individualism
  • Babe Ruth
  • Charles Lindbergh
  • Fueled tabloid and gossip columns in newspapers
    and magazines

18
1920s Culture WarsThe Jazz Age
  • Inspiration of rebellious youth and liberal
    reaction to conservatism and fundamentalism
  • Song and Dance
  • Jazz
  • Louis Armstrong
  • George Gershwin
  • Speakeasies
  • Dance Clubs
  • Waltz to Foxtrot to Charleston
  • Josephine Baker
  • Flappers
  • Radio
  • Mainstream medium
  • Networks NBC, CBS
  • Cinema
  • Talkies
  • The Jazz Singer
  • Nickelodeons
  • Charlie Chaplin

19
1920s Culture WarsLiterature
  • The Lost Generation
  • Disillusioned by World War I, consumerism, and
    modernism
  • Ernest Hemingway
  • The Sun Also Rises
  • A Farewell to Arms
  • Sinclair Lewis
  • Babbitt
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • The Great Gatsby

20
1920s Culture WarsHarlem Renaissance
  • Fueled by the Great Migration
  • Black is beautiful
  • Black nationalist themes challenged racial
    stereotypes
  • Promote social and racial integration
  • Langston Hughes
  • Zora Neale Hurston
  • Sometimes I feel discriminated against, but it
    does not make me angry. It merely astonishes me.
    How can anyone deny themselves the pleasure of my
    company? Its beyond me.
  • The New Negro An Interpretation (1925)

21
H.L. Mencken Critiques AmericaA Critique of
H.L. Mencken
  • H.L. Mencken On Being American (1922)
  • Catherine Beech Ely The Sorrows of Mencken
    (1928)
  • Apparently there are those who begin to find it
    disagreeable nay, impossible. Their anguish
    fills the Liberal weeklies and every ship that
    puts out from New York carries a groaning cargo
    of them, bound for anywhere to escape the great
    curses and atrocities that make life intolerable
    for them at home The government of the United
    States, in both its legislative and its executive
    arm, is ignorant, incompetent, corrupt, and
    disgusting...It is a belief no less piously
    cherished that the administration of justice in
    the Republic is stupid, dishonest, and against
    all reason and equity...It is another that the
    foreign policy of the United States its
    habitual manner of dealith with other nations,
    whether friend or foe is hypocritical,
    disingenuous, knavish, and dishonorable...And it
    is my fourth conviction that the American people
    constitute the most timorous, sniveling,
    poltroonish, ignominious mob of serfs and
    goose-steppers ever gathered under one flag in
    Christendom since the end of the Middle Ages, and
    grow more timorous, more sniveling, more
    poltroonish, more ignominious every day.
  • Mencken deplores our antiquated regard for the
    sacredness of home, church, and history. We are
    so slow to learn that there is no such word as
    tradition in the lexicon of modern thought.
    Tradition implies affection for the past, whereas
    the Mencken school would have us understand that
    we have no past and no future worth cherishing,
    only the present for donning harlequins attire
    and proclaiming the farcical futility of human
    endeavor For the Mencken school faith is
    demoded, aspiration a weak delusion. Yet America
    refuses to repudiate religion. She makes it the
    foundation of her institutions, the motive-power
    of her charities, the keynote of her progress.
    Mencken sorrows over Americas narrow
    conformities, so contrary to the self-sufficiency
    of intellectualism. The American bourgeois
    blunders onward and upward instead of reclining
    at full length in the dry lands of Rationalism.
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