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THE NEW ERA: 1921 TO 1933

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... Charles Evans Hughes, Herbert Hoover, Andrew Mellon, and Henry ... under Herbert Hoover, American policy began to treat Latin American nations as equals ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE NEW ERA: 1921 TO 1933


1
THE NEW ERA 1921 TO 1933
  • Harding and Normalcy
  • Harding gained Republican nomination largely
    because of genial nature and lack of convictions
  • hard working and politically astute, Harding was
    also indecisive and unwilling to offend
  • Harding appointed able and reputable men to the
    major cabinet posts, including Charles Evans
    Hughes, Herbert Hoover, Andrew Mellon, and Henry
    C. Wallace
  • however, many lesser offices, and a few major
    ones, went to his Ohio cronies

2
  • The Business of the United States is Business
  • Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon dominated
    domestic policy
  • Mellon sought to lower taxes on the rich, reverse
    the low-tariff policies of the Wilson period, and
    reduce the national debt by cutting expenses
  • his policies had considerable merit, but Mellon
    carried his policies to an extreme
  • even with large Republican majorities, Congress
    refused to grant unqualified approval

3
  • moreover, the farm bloc, a coalition of
    mid-western Republicans and southern Democrats,
    offset the Republican majority
  • Mellon nevertheless balanced the budget and
    reduced the national debt by an average of over
    500 million a year
  • the business community heartily approved of the
    policies of the Harding and Coolidge
    administrations

4
  • both Harding and Coolidge used appointments to
    convert regulatory bodies, such as the Interstate
    Commerce Commission and the Federal Reserve
    Board, into pro-business agencies that ceased
    almost entirely to restrict the activities of the
    industries over which they had control

5
  • The Harding Scandals
  • although personally honest, Harding appointed
    cronies known as the Ohio Gang who demonstrated
    a propensity for corruption
  • scandals rocked the Veterans Bureau and the
    office of the alien property custodian
  • the greatest scandal involved Harding's secretary
    of the interior, Albert B. Fall
  • Fall leased naval petroleum reserves to private
    oil companies

6
  • a Senate investigation into the Teapot Dome
    Scandal revealed that Fall had received over
    300,000 in loans from these oil companies
  • the American people, who had not yet learned the
    extent of the scandals, genuinely mourned
    Hardings death

7
  • Coolidge Prosperity
  • Vice-President Coolidge had no connection with
    the Harding scandals and cleaned house on taking
    office
  • his pro-business philosophy endeared him to
    conservatives
  • in 1924, Coolidge easily won the Republican
    nomination
  • the badly divided Democrats finally chose a
    compromise candidate after 103 ballots

8
  • in the general election, Coolidge easily defeated
    the Democratic challenger, John W. Davies
  • Robert M. La Follette, running on the Progressive
    party ticket, finished a distant third

9
  • Peace Without a Sword
  • Disillusion with the results of World War I led
    Americans to withdraw from foreign involvements,
    but American economic interests made complete
    withdrawal impossible
  • while the United States avoided formal alliances,
    diplomatic efforts included the Washington
    Conference (1921), at which leading nations
    agreed to maintain the Open Door in China and to
    limit the costly naval arms race

10
  • three far-reaching treaties were drafted
  • the Five-Power Treaty limited the number of
    battleships of its signatories
  • countries signing the Four-Power Treaty agreed to
    respect each others interests in the Pacific
  • the Nine-Power Treaty pledged to maintain Chinas
    sovereignty and the Open Door
  • by initiating the Conference, the United States
    regained some of the moral influence lost when it
    refused to join the League
  • however, the treaties were essentially toothless

11
  • The Peace Movement
  • while sincerely desiring peace, Americans refused
    to surrender any sovereignty or to build an
    adequate defense
  • so great was the nations desire to avoid foreign
    entanglements that the United States refused to
    join the World Court
  • peace societies flourished
  • the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
    and the Woodrow Wilson Foundation worked for
    world peace

12
  • many Americans urged pacifism in the conduct of
    foreign policy
  • the desire for peace culminated in the
    Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928
  • signed by over fifteen nations, the pact
    renounced war as an instrument of national
    policy

13
  • The Good Neighbor Policy
  • during the 1920s the continued presence of
    marines and the economic power of the Colossus
    of the North fueled anti-Yankee sentiment in
    Latin America
  • under Herbert Hoover, American policy began to
    treat Latin American nations as equals
  • the Clark Memorandum (1930) disassociated the
    right of intervention in Latin America from the
    Roosevelt Corollary

14
  • according to Clark, the United States right to
    intervene depended on the doctrine of
    self-preservation
  • Franklin Delano Roosevelt continued the Good
    Neighbor Policy
  • by 1934 the Marines had withdrawn from Nicaragua,
    Haiti, and the Dominican Republic and the United
    States abrogated the right to intervene in Cuba

15
  • The Totalitarian Challenge
  • the limitations of isolationism became evident in
    1931 when Japan occupied Manchuria in violation
    of both the Nine-Power and the Kellogg-Briand
    pacts
  • China appealed to United States and League of
    Nations for aid, but neither would intervene
  • the United States announced the Stimson Doctrine,
    which stated that the United States would never
    recognize the legality of territory seized in
    violation of American treaty rights

16
  • Stimson Doctrine served only to irritate the
    Japanese
  • in January 1932, Japan attacked Shanghai
  • the League condemned the aggression, and, in
    response, Japan withdrew from the League

17
  • War Debts and Reparations
  • quarrels over war debts hindered efforts by the
    former Allies to deal with Japans aggression
  • the United States demanded repayment of loans
    made to its allies during World War I
  • the Allies could not repay the loans, and the
    American protective tariff made it nearly
    impossible for them to gain the dollars necessary
    to pay the debts
  • the Allies added the cost of their debts to
    German reparation payments

18
  • Germany could not pay the huge sums assessed for
    reparations and was reluctant even to try
  • despite the restructuring of reparations under
    the Dawes (1924) and Young (1929) plans, Germany
    defaulted on its payments in turn, France and
    Britain defaulted on their loans

19
  • The Election of 1928
  • a successful businessman, a technocrat, and a
    skilled bureaucrat, Herbert Hoover easily won the
    Republican nomination
  • he believed that capital and labor could
    cooperate to achieve mutually beneficial goals
  • his opponent, Alfred E. Smith, a New York
    Democrat, was in many ways Hoovers antithesis
  • a Catholic antiprohibitionist, Smith represented
    the urban, immigrant, machine-style politics of
    the nations cities
  • Hoover won a smashing victory

20
  • Economic Problems
  • the prosperity of the 1920s masked serious flaws
    in the economy
  • not all sectors of the economy shared in the
    prosperity the coal and cotton industries lagged
    behind the general economy
  • the trend toward consolidation of industries
    continued throughout the period
  • voluntary trade associations, with government
    backing, now practiced self-regulation
  • the weakest sector of economy was agriculture

21
  • while most economic indicators reflected an
    unprecedented prosperity, the boom rested on
    unstable foundations
  • maldistribution of resources posed the greatest
    problem
  • productive capacity raced ahead of purchasing
    power
  • large sums of money were invested in speculative
    ventures rather than in productive enterprises

22
  • The Stock Market Crash of 1929
  • stock market raced ahead beginning early 1928
  • prices climbed still higher during the first half
    of 1929
  • the market wavered in September, but few saw
    cause for serious concern
  • on October 29, 1929, the stock market collapsed,
    and the boom ended

23
  • Hoover and the Depression
  • stock market collapse was more a symptom of
    economic woe than the cause of the depression
  • the Great Depression was a worldwide phenomenon
    caused primarily by economic imbalances resulting
    from World War I
  • in the United States, concentration of wealth,
    speculative investment, and underconsumption
    contributed to the severity of the depression
  • Hoover relied upon voluntarism and mutual
    self-interest to cure the economic ills

24
  • he rejected classical economics and proposed a
    number of measures to combat the depression
  • however, he overestimated the willingness of
    citizens to act in the public interest without
    legal compulsion and relied too much on voluntary
    cooperation
  • private charities soon ran out of money
  • as the depression deepened, Hoover placed more
    emphasis on balancing the budget, which further
    decreased the supply of money
  • the Hawley-Smoot Tariff (1930) imposed high rates
    on manufactured goods, which contracted trade

25
  • The Economy Hits Bottom
  • in the spring of 1932, thousands of Americans
    faced starvation
  • people unable to pay rent established shantytowns
    they called Hoovervilles
  • people begged for food while agricultural prices
    dropped so low that farmers organized Farm
    Holiday movements
  • in the summer of 1932, twenty thousand World War
    I veterans marched on Washington to seek
    immediate payment of their war bonuses

26
  • when Congress rejected their appeal, some refused
    to leave and established a camp on the Anacostia
    Flats
  • federal troops dispersed the Bonus Army
  • the unprecedented severity of the depression led
    some to propose radical economic and political
    changes

27
  • The Depression and Its Victims
  • the depression had a profound psychological
    impact on the American people
  • there were simply no jobs to be found
  • people who lost jobs at first searched for new
    ones after a few months, however, they became
    apathetic
  • economic stress brought personal stress
  • power shifted within families family size
    decreased
  • hopelessness and malnutrition contributed to the
    lack of political radicalism during the depression

28
  • The Election of 1932
  • Democrats chose Franklin Delano Roosevelt of New
    York to challenge Hoover in 1932
  • Roosevelt campaigned on optimism and grand, but
    unspecified, solutions to the nations economic
    woes
  • desperate for a change in style and substance,
    Americans rallied to Roosevelt's promises of a
    New Deal

29
  • he proposed that the government take whatever
    steps were necessary to protect individual and
    public interests
  • Roosevelt won with an electoral margin of 472 to
    59
  • the last days of the Hoover administration and a
    lame duck Congress witnessed the nadir of the
    depression
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