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Title: The 1920s (


1
The 1920s (Jazz Age, Roaring 20s) and The
Great Depression
  • McFarland

2
I. Life in the 1920s
  • Changing Role of Women
  • 19th Amendment (1920) granted women suffrage
    (right to vote)
  • New jobs opened up during WWI and the women
    didnt want to give their jobs up when the men
    came back home somore women began to go to
    college

3
I. Life in the 1920s
  • Jeanette Rankin first woman elected to Congress
    (1916) served throughout the 1920s
  • Flappers modern women of the 1920s young,
    rebellious, fun-loving, and bold short hair,
    short dresses (to the knees), more makeup (esp.
    lipstick) attitudes changes ex began to
    smoke and drink in public

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I. Life in the 1920s
  • Prohibition Era (1919-1933)
  • 18th Amendment (1919) prohibited the making,
    selling, or transportation of alcohol
  • Volstead Act law passed by Congress to enforce
    prohibition ignored by most of the cities on
    the east coast

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I. Life in the 1920s
  • Success of prohibition
  • -consumption of alcohol decreased
  • -arrest for drunkenness decreased
  • Why did Prohibition eventually fail?
  • Not enforced some police depts. were corrupt,
    just didnt care, or were scared of the gangsters
  • Most people didnt take prohibition seriously
    drank anyway

8
I. Life in the 1920s
  • The crime wave that began made most people think
    that the amendment should be repealed
  • -organized crime got involved in bootlegging
    (the illegal selling of alcohol)
  • -the most famous gangster of the 1920s was Al
    Capone from Chicago

9
I. Life in the 1920s
  • Al Capone nicknamed Scarface
  • -had a talent for avoiding jail by buying off
    policemen, city officials, and politicians
  • -made up to 60 million a year from bootlegging
  • -convicted of tax evasion in 1931 and sent to
    prison
  • -released in 1939 after becoming ill with
    syphilis died in 1947

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I. Life in the 1920s
  • 21st Amendment (1933) repealed the 18th Amend.
    and allowed local communities to decide whether
    or not to legalize alcohol
  • Slang Words from prohibition era
  • -bathtub gin
  • -moonshine (made at night)
  • -white lightning
  • -speakeasy secret club or bar usually in a
    basement needed a password to get in

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I. Life in the 1920s
  • Entertainment in the 1920s
  • Shorter working hours and higher wages gave
    Americans more spare time and more money for
    entertainment
  • 1) Radio first radio station in Pittsburgh, PA
    in Nov. 1920 only news at first baseball and
    music broadcasted later

14
I. Life in the 1920s
  • Moving Picture Shows (movies) all movies were
    silent films at first (had music but no talking)
  • -Charlie Chaplin was the most famous silent film
    star
  • -first talking movie was The Jazz Singer
    (1927) staring Al Jolston
  • -famous movie stars of the 20s
  • -Rudolph Valentino, Clara Bow, Mary
  • Pickford, Lillian Gish, Charlie Chaplin

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I. Life in the 1920s
  • 3) Sports the 1920s is often called the
    Golden Age of Sports radio made sports more
    popular baseball became Americas Favorite
    Pastime famous athletes included

17
I. Life in the 1920s
  • Babe Ruth nicknamed The Sultan of Swat or
    The Great Bambino
  • -most famous baseball player of the 20s
  • -played most of his career with the NY Yankees
  • -hit 60 homeruns in 1927 (remained a record
    until 1961)
  • -hit 714 career homeruns (remained a record
    nearly 40 years)

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I. Life in the 1920s
  • Harold Red Grange famous football player
  • -nicknamed The Galloping Ghost
  • -played for Illinois Univ. and Chicago Bears
  • -made Pro football very popular

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I. Life in the 1920s
  • Jack Dempsey famous heavyweight boxer
  • -over 100,000 attended his 2nd match with Gene
    Tunney, which Dempsey lost

22
I. Life in the 1920s
  • Man o War famous race horse
  • -named horse of the century
  • -lost only 1 time in 21 races
  • -the horse that beat him was named
  • Upset

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I. Life in the 1920s
  • Gertrude Ederle 1st woman to swim across the 35
    mile wide English Channel
  • -her time beat the mens record by nearly 2 hours

25
I. Life in the 1920s
  • Music / Dance the radio made music more popular
  • -Jazz was the most popular music of the 20s
    started in New Orleans
  • -Louis Armstrong was the most popular jazz
    musician of the 20s
  • -George Gershwin was a popular composer wrote
    Rhapsody in Blue
  • -popular dances included Charleston, Fox-trot,
    and Tango

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I. Life in the 1920s
  • Literature famous authors included
  • -F. Scott Fitzgerald The Great Gatsby
  • -Sinclair Lewis Main Street
  • -Ernest Hemingway A Farewell to Arms

28
I. Life in the 1920s
  • Transportation
  • Henry Ford made the 20s happen
  • -responsible for changing the automobile industry
    by using the assembly line each worker had a
    specific job
  • -1920 8 million cars on the road
  • -1929 23 million
  • -developed the Model T car (every one was exactly
    the same

29
I. Life in the 1920s
  • -before the assembly line it took approx. 12 hrs
    to build a car
  • -after assembly line it took approx. 28 minutes
    to build a car

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I. Life in the 1920s
  • Charles Lindbergh nicknamed Lucky Lindy or
    the Lone Eagle
  • -the first to fly solo, non-stop across the
    Atlantic
  • -flew from NYC to Paris May 20th and 21st of 1927
  • -no parachute, no radio, no heat, no sleep
  • -name of the airplane was Spirit of St. Louis
  • -son was kidnapped and killed in the early 1930s
    (great mystery)

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I. Life in the 1920s
  • Amelia Earhart the 1st woman to fly across the
    Atlantic without stopping (1932) disappeared
    while trying to fly around the world

34
I. Life in the 1920s
  • Return of the Ku Klux Klan
  • From the Greek word kyklos which means circle
  • Revived in the 1920s
  • Membership
  • -1916- 100,000 -1924- 2 million
  • -1928- 4 million -today- approx. 6,000
  • Attacked African Am.s, Jews, Catholics, and
    immigrants

35
I. Life in the 1920s
  • Scopes / Monkey Trial
  • The state of TN passed a law in 1925 that made it
    illegal to teach evolution (Charles Darwin
    theory) in public schools
  • John Scopes, a teacher from Dayton, TN, was
    chosen by the ACLU to challenge the law

36
I. Life in the 1920s
  • He was arrested and charged defense attorney
    was Clarence Darrow
  • William Jennings Bryan was the prosecutor
  • The judge refused to allow scientists to testify
    for the defense since they were not around
    during creation
  • Scopes was found guilty and fined 100, however
    the law was later changed

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I. Life in the 1920s
  • The Red Scare
  • The fear of radicals (esp. communists and
    socialists)
  • Causes
  • 1) the communist revolution in Russia (1917)
    scared many Americans If it can happen there,
    it can happen here.
  • 2) terroristic violence in the U.S. mail
    bombs were sent to local, state, and national
    leaders

39
I. Life in the 1920s
  • Because of the Red Scare and the power of the
    KKK, limits were placed on immigration
  • Sacco and Vanzetti Case two Italian immigrants,
    who were anarchists, were accused of killing 2
    men during a robbery in MA convicted without a
    fair trial both were executed in 1927

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I. Life in the 1920s
  • Republican Presidents
  • Warren G. Harding won the election of 1920 by
    promising a return to normalcy - remembered for
    scandals
  • -his advisors, called the Ohio Gang, were
    corrupt (sold govt offices, took bribes, etc.)
  • -died in 1923

42
I. Life in the 1920s
  • Calvin Coolidge became Pres. after the death of
    Harding
  • -nicknamed Silent Cal because he was a very
    quite man
  • -also won the election of 1924

43
I. Life in the 1920s
  • Herbert Hoover won the election of 1928 because
    people were pleased with the economy and didnt
    want a lot of change
  • -promised a chicken in every pot, and a car in
    every garage
  • -also said, I have no fears for the future of
    our country, it is bright with hope.

44
II. The Great Depression
  • Hidden Causes
  • Unequal distribution of wealth
  • -people were very rich or very poor
  • -20 of the nation lived in poverty (late 1920s)

45
II. The Great Depression
  • Installment buying
  • -the buyer pays a certain amount down, and then
    pays the rest in installments (payments) with
    interest -easy credit
  • -some people created huge debts

46
II. The Great Depression
  • Bank failures
  • -banks were poorly managed
  • -people lost money (sometimes their life
    savings) when their bank closed
  • -7,000 banks closed in the 1920s

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48
II. The Great Depression
  • Increase in unemployment
  • -new factory machinery required fewer workers
  • High tariffs (tax on imports) on foreign goods
  • -decreased competition, which increased prices
    of certain goods

49
II. The Great Depression
  • Huge farm surpluses
  • -led to a drop in farm prices
  • -many farmers lost their farms because no one
    needed their food

50
II. The Great Depression
  • Immediate Cause the Stock Market Crash
  • Prices of stock rose throughout the 20s
  • By Sept. 1929, the Dow Jones average reached 381
  • -Dow Jones the price of stocks from 30 of the
    largest companies in the U.S.

51
II. The Great Depression
  • Thursday, October 24, 1929 some stockholders
    began to pull out of the market afraid of a
    crash
  • Tuesday, October 29, 1929
  • -Black Tuesday -the day the stock market
    crashed
  • -investors panicked and started selling before
    their stock became worthless
  • -Dow Jones fell to 261 (41 in 1932)
  • -between 6 and 9 billion was lost

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III. Daily Life during the Depression
  • Children were forced to work
  • Many people became homeless
  • -many of the homeless lived in small villages
    made of cardboard boxes and crates nicknamed
    hoovervilles (named after Pres. Hoover who was
    blamed for the Depression)

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III. Daily Life during the Depression
  • Some men and families became hobos rode the
    rails looking for work and food
  • Many farmers had more food than they could sell
  • -people didnt have the money to buy it
  • -some food was destroyed in an effort to
    decrease the supply so prices could increase

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III. Daily Life during the Depression
  • Droughts occurred on the Great Plains
  • -this region became known as the Dust Bowl
    because it was so dry
  • -many moved west to CA looking for work because
    the dust storms destroyed their crops
  • -these people were often called okies because
    most were from OK

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III. Daily Life during the Depression
  • The Grapes of Wrath (1939) novel written by
    John Steinbeck about one familys struggle in
    moving to CA
  • Pres. Hoover wasnt willing to spend enough money
    to provide relief to the people

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III. Daily Life during the Depression
  • Bonus Army March
  • -in 1924 Congress approved a bonus payment to
    all who served during WWI
  • -the money was to be paid in 1945
  • -June 1932- 20,000 veterans marched into Wash.
    D.C., set up camps, and said they wouldnt leave
    until they received their bonus

62
III. Daily Life during the Depression
  • -Hoover ordered the police to remove the
    protesters
  • -2 veterans were killed made Hoover look bad

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IV. Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • Defeated Hoover in the election of 1932
  • Cousin of Teddy Roosevelt
  • Became ill with polio in 1921 forced him to use
    a wheelchair
  • 1st Pres. to use the radio regularly Fireside
    Chats explained his plans and programs to the
    people

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IV. Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • Handled the press well ex pictures not taken
    of him in his wheelchair (did not want to appear
    weak)
  • Famous quote All we have to fear, is fear
    itself.
  • The Brain Trust was a group of advisors that
    helped him attorneys, economists, political
    scientists, etc.

67
IV. Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • His wife, Eleanor Roosevelt, was his most
    important advisor
  • -FDR said she was his eyes and ears outside
    the White House
  • -she could travel and meet with people he
    couldnt because of his disability

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IV. Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • Bank Holiday 1st action as Pres.
  • -closed every bank in U.S. for 4 days
  • -sent people out to determine which ones were
    strong and those were re-opened
  • -almost all were re-opened
  • -trying to restore confidence in banks people
    began to put their money back in

70
V. New Deal Programs
  • The New Deal was FDRs response to the Great
    Depression
  • Created new agencies to help the people
  • -nicknamed alphabet soup because of all the
    abbreviations that were used
  • From 1933 to early 1935, the dominating goals of
    FDR were
  • reform relief recovery

71
V. New Deal Programs
  • This phase was called the First New Deal
  • -tried to get the economy moving again and give
    help to those in need

72
V. New Deal Programs
  • First New Deal Programs
  • Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC)
  • -1933
  • -insured bank deposits up to 5,000
  • -prevented people from losing their money when
    their bank closed
  • -reform

73
V. New Deal Programs
  • 2) Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) 1933
  • -built dams, power plants
  • -provided cheap electricity, recreation, and
    encouraged businesses to come to the region
  • -employed up to 40,000 workers
  • -relief

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V. New Deal Programs
  • Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) 1933
  • -offered outdoor work to unemployed single men
  • -recruited young men (18-25) from the cities
  • -set up camps - planted trees, fought forest
    fires, built dams, etc. (environmental work)
  • -relief

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V. New Deal Programs
  • Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) 1933
  • -paid farmers not to produce certain crops
    (cotton, wheat, tobacco, corn, etc.)
  • -trying to eliminate the surplus which would
    increase prices of goods
  • -relief for farmers

78
V. New Deal Programs
  • National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) -1933
  • -controlled business practices
  • -set minimum wage levels (usually .30 to .40
    cents an hour depending on job)
  • -shortened workers hours to create new jobs
  • -created the National Recovery Adm. (NRA) to
    enforce these new codes
  • -relief

79
V. New Deal Programs
  • Second New Deal
  • Works Progress Adm. (WPA) 1935
  • -employed writers, teachers, librarians, actors,
    musicians, and artists
  • -also expanded the number of workers in existing
    organizations (ex CCC)
  • -created 100,000s of jobs - relief

80
V. New Deal Programs
  • Social Security Act (SSA) 1935
  • -required a social security tax to be taken out
    of every workers paycheck
  • -gave money to those who were disabled or to old
    to work
  • -relief

81
VI. Impact of the New Deal
  • Increased the power of the Pres.
  • Conservation gains dams built, trees planted,
    etc.
  • Created new federal social programs social
    security, welfare
  • Deficit spending the govt spends more money
    than it brings in from taxes
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