1 / 14

Chapter 12 Sections 1 & 2

Chapter 12 Sections 1 & 2. The Effects of Peace on the Public • War leaves Americans exhausted; debate over League divides them • Economy adjusting: cost of living doubles; farm, factory orders down - soldiers take jobs from women, minorities - farmers, factory workers suffer

garth
Download Presentation

Chapter 12 Sections 1 & 2

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. Chapter 12 Sections 1 & 2

  2. The Effects of Peace on the Public • • War leaves Americans exhausted; debate over League divides them • • Economy adjusting: cost of living doubles; farm, factory orders down • - soldiers take jobs from women, minorities • - farmers, factory workers suffer • • Nativism—prejudice against foreign-born people—sweeps nation • • Isolationism—pulling away from world affairs—becomes popular

  3. The Red Scare • • Communism—economic, political system, single-party government • - ruled by dictator • - no private property • 1919 Vladimir I. Lenin, Bolsheviks, set up Communist state in Russia • U.S. Communist Party forms; some Industrial Workers of the World join • Bombs mailed to government, businesses; people fear Red conspiracy • Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer takes action

  4. The Palmer Raids • • Palmer, J. Edgar Hoover hunt down Communists, socialists, anarchists • • Anarchistsoppose any form of government • • Raids trample civil rights, fail to find evidence of conspiracy

  5. Sacco and Vanzetti • Red Scare feeds fear of foreigners, ruins reputations, wrecks lives • 1920, Sacco and Vanzetti, Italian immigrants, anarchists, arrested • - charged with robbery, murder • - trial does not prove guilt • Jury finds them guilty; widespread protests in U.S., abroad • - Sacco, Vanzetti executed 1927

  6. Anti-Immigrant Attitudes • Nativists: fewer unskilled jobs available, fewer immigrants needed • Think immigrant anarchists and socialists are Communist • The Klan Rises Again • Bigots use anti-communism to harass groups unlike themselves • KKK opposes blacks, Catholics, Jews, immigrants, unions, saloons • - 1924, 4.5 million members • Klan controls many states’ politics; violence leads to less power

  7. The Quota System • • 1919–1921, number of immigrants grows almost 600% • • Quota system sets maximum number can enter U.S. from each country • - sharply reduces European immigration • • 1924, European arrivals cut to 2% of number of residents in 1890 • • Discriminates against southern, eastern Europeans • • Prohibits Japanese immigration; causes ill will between U.S., Japan • • Does not apply to Western Hemisphere; many Canadians, Mexicans enter

  8. The Teapot Dome Scandal • • Teapot Dome scandal—naval oil reserves used for personal gain • • Interior Secretary Albert B. Fallleases land to private companies • • Takes bribes; is first person convicted of felony while in cabinet • • August 1923, Harding dies suddenly • • VP Calvin Coolidge assumes presidency, restores faith in government

  9. Chapter 13 Section 1

  10. The New Urban Scene • 1920 census: 51.2% of Americans in communities of 2,500 or more • 1922–1929, nearly 2 million people leave farms, towns each year • Largest cities are New York, Chicago, Philadelphia • -In 1920s, people caught between rural, urban cultures • - close ties, hard work, strict morals of small towns • - anonymous crowds, moneymaking, pleasure seeking of cities

  11. The Prohibition Experiment • 18thAmendment launches Prohibition era • - supported by religious groups, rural South, West • • Prohibition—production, sale, transportation of alcohol illegal • • Government does not budget enough money to enforce the law • Speakeasies and Bootleggers • •Speakeasies (hidden saloons, nightclubs) become fashionable • • People distill liquor, buy prescription alcohol, sacramental wine • • Bootleggers smuggle alcohol from surrounding countries

  12. Organized Crime • Prohibition contributes to organized crime in major cities • Al Capone controls Chicago liquor business by killing competitors • 18thAmendment in force until 1933; repealed by 21st Amendment

  13. American Fundamentalism • • Fundamentalism—movement based on literal interpretation of Bible • • Fundamentalists skeptical of some scientific discoveries, theories • - reject theory of evolution • • Believe all important knowledge can be found in Bible • • Fundamentalist preachers lead religious revivals in South, West

  14. The Scopes Trial • •1925, Tennessee passes law making it a crime to teach evolution • • American Civil Liberties Union backs John T. Scopes challenge of law • • Clarence Darrow, most famous trial lawyer of day, defends Scopes • • Fundamentalist William Jennings Bryan is special prosecutor • • Scopes trial—debates evolution, role of science, religion in school • - national sensation; thousands attend • • Bryan admits Bible open to interpretation; Scopes found guilty

More Related