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Chapter 12: Politics of the Roaring Twenties

Chapter 12: Politics of the Roaring Twenties. Rumrunners doc. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O4wl9n-Gmsw. Section 1: America Struggles with Postwar Issues. Journal. How are people with unpopular views treated?. Postwar Trends. Americans were tired and wanted normal lives

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Chapter 12: Politics of the Roaring Twenties

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  1. Chapter 12: Politics of the Roaring Twenties

  2. Rumrunners doc. • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O4wl9n-Gmsw

  3. Section 1: America Struggles with Postwar Issues

  4. Journal • How are people with unpopular views treated?

  5. Postwar Trends • Americans were tired and wanted normal lives • Leads to nativism – prejudice against foreign-born people and isolationism – pulling away from involvement in world affairs

  6. Reaction to the Perceived Threat of Communism • Communism • Asingle-party government ruled by a dictatorship • No private property • Government owns factories, railroads, other businesses

  7. Reaction • Red Scare • Communist revolution in Russia (1919) • Communist Party forms in the U.S. • Palmer Raids • Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer hunts down suspected political radicals (Communists, anarchists, socialists) • Sacco and Vanzetti • Foreigners and immigrants were easy targets • Italian immigrants and anarchists found guilty of robbery and murder

  8. Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were charged with _____________ because they were ______________.

  9. What were some the reactions in the U.S. to the perceived threat of communism? • What role did General A. Mitchell Palmer play? • How were Sacco and Vanzetti affected by the social climate (nativist attitude) • of the 1920s

  10. Limiting Immigration • 1880s – new immigrants from southern and eastern Europe worked for low wages • After WWI there were fewer unskilled jobs

  11. Limiting Immigration • Ku Klux Klan (KKK) uses anti-communism as an excuse to harass “outsiders” • Blame problems on immigrants • Paid to recruit

  12. In the 1920s, the Ku Klux Klan was able to greatly increase its membership by ________________________________________________________________________________________.

  13. Limiting Immigration • Emergency Quota Act of 1921 • Limits immigration from eastern and southern Europe • Prohibits Japanese immigration • 1.5 million Canadians and Mexicans arrive in the U.S.

  14. Immigration policy of the 1920s limited people coming from _______________.

  15. Conflicts Between Labor and Management • During WWI = no strikes • After the war, wages were not increased • Employers said Union members were Communists to keep wages low • Major strikes • Boston Police • Steel Mill • Coal Miners

  16. Conflicts Between Labor and Management • By then end of the 1920s union membership greatly declined • Immigrants worked for low wages

  17. During the 1920s Union membership was greatly _____________________________.

  18. Assignment • 1. What were the Palmer raids? • 2. What did the Ku Klux Klan advocate? • 3. How did the quota system limit immigration? Which groups did it hurt the most? • 4. What prompted the steel strike of 1919? • 5. For what reasons did union membership decline during the 1920s? • 6. What unions were open to African Americans?

  19. Section 2: The Harding Presidency

  20. Journal • How do you feel after getting back from a vacation? Are you glad to get back to your normal routines?

  21. Harding Struggles for Peace • Problems with arms control and war-torn countries • 1921 – Pres. Harding invites world leaders to Washington Naval Conference • U.S., G. Britain, Japan, Italy, and France agree not to build warships • 1928 – 15 countries sign the Kellogg-Briand Pact – give up war as a national policy

  22. Harding Struggles for Peace • Britain and France have to pay back $10 billion to U.S. • Sell goods to the U.S. • Collect reparations from Germany • Fordney-McCumber Tariff (1922) • Raises taxes on U.S. imports to 60 percent! • French troops march into Germany to collect • Dawes Plan – American investors loan Germany $2.5 billion who pay Britain and France who pay the U.S. • No one is pleased

  23. Inflation in Germany

  24. Scandal Hits Harding’s Administration • Govt. stays out of business affairs and social reform • Ohio Gang = poker playing buddies who use their political power to make money (graft)

  25. Teapot Dome Scandal • Oil-rich public lands at Teapot Dome, Wyoming were set aside for naval use • Albert Fall, member of Harding’s cabinet, leases the land to private oil companies and receives $400,000 • Convicted of bribery

  26. Warren G. Harding dies suddenly in 1923 • One of the least successful presidents

  27. Section 3: The Business of America Henry Ford’s Model T

  28. Journal • “It will take us a hundred years to tell whether you helped us or hurt us, but you certainly didn’t leave us where you found us.” • Has the automobile improved American lives? Why? Why not?

  29. The Impact of the Automobile and Consumer Goods • Pres. Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover are pro-business • Govt. stays out + taxes down + high tariffs on foreign imports • Invention of the automobile – 1927 Model T Ford • Paved roads • Garages • Gas stations • Shopping centers • Rural families could travel • Vacation • Young men and women could travel • Urban sprawl = cities spread because people can commute to work • Detroit + Akron = car factories • California + Texas = expansion due to oil

  30. The Impact of the Automobile and Consumer Goods on American Life • “Parking” for teenagers • Status symbol • Common people could afford the Model T

  31. The _________________ was the main factor that contributed to urban sprawl because ________________.

  32. Journal • What products do you use to make your life easier? Imagine life without basic electrical appliances (refrigerator, washing machine, communication devices).

  33. The Young Airplane Industry • U.S. Post Office • Transatlantic flights by Charles Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart • 1927 Pan American Airways had the first transatlantic passenger flight

  34. Airplanes were first used during times of peace for transporting _________________.

  35. America’s Standard of Living Soars • 1920 – 1929 – Americans owned 40% of the world’s wealth • Annual income rose • What to do with the “extra” money?

  36. Electrical Conveniences • Gasoline = cars • Electricity = power for factories, cities, suburbs • Made life easier and more pleasant • Women had more free time

  37. Modern Advertising

  38. A Superficial Prosperity • Many Americans believed prosperity would go on forever • Factories were producing • Corporations were making fortunes

  39. So What Happens? • A large income gap is created between workers and managers • Railroad industries were not successful • New farm machines -> more food -> cheaper prices • Installment plan (easy credit) – buy good over an extended time by paying a little up front -> banks provided the rest at low interest rates

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