1 / 18

The New Era: The Roaring 20’s

The New Era: The Roaring 20’s. Economic Boom. New or Improved Technologies Auto industry Frederick Taylor Ford and GM. Economic Boom. The invention of the Radio Mass production Buying on time. Economic boom . Commercial Aviation Wright Brothers Charles Lindbergh.

dusty
Download Presentation

The New Era: The Roaring 20’s

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. The New Era: The Roaring 20’s

  2. Economic Boom New or Improved Technologies Auto industry Frederick Taylor Ford and GM

  3. Economic Boom The invention of the Radio Mass production Buying on time

  4. Economic boom Commercial Aviation Wright Brothers Charles Lindbergh

  5. Economic boom Early computers Genetic research Gregor Mendel Thomas Hunt Morgan

  6. Plight of the Workers Henry Ford “welfare capitalism” Unionization in the 1920’s The “American Plan” Working women and minorities “pink-collar” jobs minorities and unions Philip Randolph’s Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters

  7. Plight of the Workers (con’t) Farmers Increased technology Supply & demand McNary-Haugan Bill

  8. New Consumerism Mass production Advertising Bruce Barton Mass communication Mass circulation magazines Movies “Talkies” are introduced The Jazz Singer

  9. Radio broadcasting Radio KDKA National Broadcasting Co.

  10. The New Professional Woman John B. Watson Margaret Sanger National women’s party Alice Paul ERA Sheppard-Towner Act

  11. Arts and Literature “Debunkers” H.L. Mercken Sinclair Lewis F. Scott Fitzgerald Earnest Hemingway Harlem Renaissance Tin Pan Alley Langston Hughes “Duke” Ellington Billie Holiday Bessie Smith Irving Berlin The Jazz Age Flappers

  12. Harlem Renaissance • Literary movement • “problem of being black in a white culture” • Social movement • Marcus Garvey • United Negro Improvement Association • Back to Africa movement • Mail fraud—deportment

  13. Traditional values vs. Modern culture Prohibition Ushering in the Gangster Era Johnny Torrio Al Capone “Public Enemy #1” “Big Bill Thompson” "We'll not only reopen places these people have closed, but we'll open 10,000 new ones (speakeasies). 1927 in Chicago St. Valentine’s Day Massacre (1929)

  14. Nativism New immigration restrictions Quota system The National Origins Act of 1924 Nativism Rebirth of the KKK Leo Frank D.W. Griffith The Birth of a Nation

  15. Religious Modernists vs. Fundamentalists Creation vs. Evolution Scopes “Monkey” Trial

  16. The Great “Bull” Market • Wild speculation in the Stock market • Buying stocks “on-margin” • Wildcats schemes • Selling under-water lots in Florida devastated by hurricanes and advertised as “soothing tropical winds” • Secretary of the Treasury-Mellon • Reduced the national debt by $10 million • “Spare the rich” policies • High taxes discouraged business • Eliminating the excess-profits taxes, gift taxes, and income taxes for the rich

  17. Democratic Party Al Smith William McAdoo John Davis

  18. Presidency in the New Era Warren G. Harding (1921-1923) Ohio Gang Scandal in the White House Teapot Dome & Elk Hills Calvin Coolidge (1923-1929) World War I debt Herbert Hoover

More Related