1 / 30

A Republican Decade

A Republican Decade. Angela Brown Chapter 11. http://www.fcps.edu/westspringfieldhs/academic/english/1project/99gg/99gg2/clothe2.htm. The Red Scare. “Normalcy” appealed to American in 1920 Events convinced people U.S. threatened by political violence.

porter
Download Presentation

A Republican Decade

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Republican Decade Angela Brown Chapter 11 http://www.fcps.edu/westspringfieldhs/academic/english/1project/99gg/99gg2/clothe2.htm

  2. The Red Scare • “Normalcy” appealed to American in 1920 • Events convinced people U.S. threatened by political violence. http://www.fcps.edu/westspringfieldhs/academic/english/1project/99gg/99gg2/clothe2.htm

  3. Russian Revolution • Czar Nicholas II forced to abdicate March 1917 • Vladimir Lenin and Bolsheviks took control • Bolshevik government put all privately owned farms, industries, land, and transportation under government ownership.

  4. http://cla.calpoly.edu/~lcall/lenin.gif

  5. 1918 Civil War Lenin forces “Reds”, opponents “White” • Britain, France Japan, U.S. whose investments had been seized – backed Whites (farmers/landowners) • Reds triumphed in 1920 = Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR)/Soviet Union

  6. Soviet Union Map http://depts.washington.edu/caict/images/map.gif

  7. Communism as practiced in Soviet Union • government owned all land-property • single political party controlled government • Individuals had no rights • government vowed to spread communism

  8. Redscare – intense fear of communism and other extreme ideas • Known communists jailed or driven out of country.

  9. Schenck Vs U.S. • Government justified in silencing free speech when “clear and present danger” stated Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. • Charles Schenck – letters to draftees urged them not to report to duty • Convicted of violating espionage act

  10. The Palmer Raids • 1919 Attorney General Mitchell Palmer of Justice Department set up special force to overthrow “subversives” – targets included communists, socialists, anarchists • Thousands jailed, 500 immigrants deported most innocent – none convicted of any crime

  11. http://www.kirkwood.k12.mo.us/parent_student/KHS/plattes/topics17and18/topics17and1821.jpghttp://www.kirkwood.k12.mo.us/parent_student/KHS/plattes/topics17and18/topics17and1821.jpg

  12. At first supported – went to far • 1920 NY State assembly expelled (5) socialists (had done nothing wrong – legally elected)

  13. Sacco and Vanzetti http://thegurglingcod.typepad.com/thegurglingcod/cheffelation/ • 1920 gunman robbed /killed guard and paymaster of shoestore • Nicola Sacco, shoemaker; Bartolomeo Vanzetti, fish peddler – both carrying guns when arrested • Drew international attention/controversy

  14. Americans suspected/accused because they were immigrants (Italian) • Many appeals upheld conviction – electrocuted 1927 • Labor Strikes • Americans believed communists behind strikes • Simpler cause, cost of living double prewar levels

  15. Boston Police Strikes • Strike – no pay increases since before WWI • Rioting began – Calvin Coolidge (Governor) called out state guard

  16. Steel and Coal Strikes • 1919 U.S. Steel Corp. used force to break strike (private police force) – killed 18 – beat hundreds • United mine Workers of America – no strike agreement during war • Governor Court ordered strikers back to work • UMW cancelled strike – got raise • 1920’s economy boomed – strikes/unions decreased

  17. Republican Leadership • Republican Party dominated all (3) branches of government (President Harding, Coolidge, Hoover 1921-1933) • William H. Taft – Chief Justice of Supreme Court • Favored business, social stability = economic growth

  18. The Harding Presidency • Herbert Hoover, Secretary of Commerce • Many appointments to friends – incompetent and dishonest – overwhelm his presidency and life

  19. Isolationism • Foreign policy reflected Americans’ postwar desire for isolationism • Isolationism – a policy of avoiding political or economic alliances with foreign countries • No attempt to join League of Nations

  20. Support disarmament – program for nations to voluntarily give up weapons • 1921 Washington Conference nations signed treaties limiting size of navies • 1922 Fordney – McCumber Tariff – raised rates on a number of imports – discouraged imports that competed with goods made by U.S.

  21. Limiting Immigration • Nativist movement became stronger • immigrants could never be fully loyal • mostly protestants – disliked Catholics, Orthodox Christians, or Jews • Blamed immigrants for city problems (slums, corruption)

  22. feared would take away U.S. jobs • came from unstable parts of Europe – might hold or adopt dangerous political ideas • 1921, 1924 Congress passed laws restricting immigration at Harding’s request • 350,000 total immigrants

  23. quotas, numerical limits form each foreign nation • low quotas for southern/eastern European countries – Asian immigration banned altogether

  24. Teapot Dome Scandal • Harding died of heart problems Aug 2, 1923 • Possibly due to upset from corruption scandals of his administration- stolen government funds, bribes taken, two committed suicide.

  25. Sec. of Interior, Albert Fall, secretly gave oil drilling rights on government oil fields (Elk Hills, California and Teapot Dome, Wyoming) • Fall received $300,000 disguised as loans – jailed

  26. The Coolidge Presidency • Vice- President Calvin Coolidge’s father, a justice of the peace administered him oath of office of President of the United States by kerosene lamp • Coolidge respected as governor of Mass. – not part of Harding scandals

  27. 1924 election won in own right “Keep Cool with Coolidge” slogan • skilled public speaker, privately man of few words (could be silent in (5) languages

  28. Laissez Faire • “The business of the American People is Business” • Republican decade – theme – do not interfere with big business – tried to make federal government smaller • Coolidge’s efforts to have government do less drew criticism from those who saw it as failure to take action

  29. Continued Isolationism • Sec. of State, Frank Kellogg – French Foreign minister, Aristide Briand • Kellogg-Briand Pact – 15 nations agreed not to use the threat of war in their dealings with one another – more than 60 nations joined (unrealistic, unworkable – no way to enforce) • 1941 many nations that signed at war

  30. Election of 1928 • Coolidge chose not to run again. • Herbert Hoover Republican Nominee • Won by large margin against Alfred E. Smith first Roman Catholic to run – Governor of NY. • U.S. hoped Coolidge prosperity would continue.

More Related