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The jazz age. Ch. 10. Politics of the Jazz age. Warren G. Harding. “A return to normalcy” Many of his cabinet appointments were his friends The Ohio Gang
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The jazz age Ch. 10
Warren G. Harding • “A return to normalcy” • Many of his cabinet appointments were his friends • The Ohio Gang • Some members used their government positions to sell jobs, pardons, and immunity from prosecution. Before most of the scandals became public knowledge, Harding fell ill and died in 1923 • Teapot Dome • Albert B. Fall, secretly allowed private interests to lease lands containing U.S. Navy oil reserves at Teapot Dome, Wyoming. • He received bribes totaling over $300,000. The Teapot Dome scandal ended with Fall being the first cabinet officer in history to be sent to prison
Attorney General Harry Daugherty • refused to turn over files and bank records for a German-owned American company. • Bribe money ended up in a bank account controlled by Daugherty. • He refused to testify under oath, claiming immunity, or freedom from prosecution, on the grounds that he had confidential dealings with the president. • Calvin Coolidge demands Daugherty’s resignation
Calvin Coolidge • Focus on prosperity through business leadership with little government intervention. • Is elected again in 1924
Policies of Prosperity • Under secretary of treasury, Andrew Mellon, the federal debt was reduced by $7billion between 1921 & 1929 • Mellon applied the idea of supply-side economics (trickle-down) to reduce taxes • Lower taxes would allow businesses and consumers to spend and invest their extra money, resulting in economic growth • Under secretary of commerce, Herbert Hoover, attempted to balance government regulation with cooperative individualism • Manufacturers and distributers were asked to form their own trade associations and share information with the federal governments Bureau of Standards • Hoover believed this would reduce waste and costs and lead to economic stability
Trade & Arms Control • By the 1920’s the US had become an dominant economic power • Allies owed America billions in war debts • Many Americans favored isolationism rather than become involved in more international issues • This was hard to accomplish as America had become so powerful and interconnected in international affairs to stay isolated • Other countries believed that it was Americas responsibility to help with the war’s financial debt • The US argued that the Allies had gained new territories and reparations (huge cash payments) from Germany as punishment for starting the war
Americans begin enjoying a new standard of living • Increased wages and decreased work hours • Mass production leads to increased supply of goods with low production costs • The assembly line
American attitudes about debt shifted, as they became confident that they could pay back what they owed at a later time • Businesses begin hiring professional managers • This will expand the size of the middle class • Unions begin to lose influence • Most employers will promote an open shop
The Farm crisis • Farmers do not share the prosperity of the 1920’s • prices dropped dramatically while the cost to improve farmers’ technology increased • During the war, farmers are encourages to overproduce to support war effort overseas • After WWI, Europeans can no longer afford to buy American products after Congress raised tariffs
Nativism resurges • Racism & nativism increase in the 1920’s • ethnic prejudice • Sacco & Vanzetti • Immigrants accused murder, theft, & anarchy • Sentenced to death in 1927 • Eugenics • Used by nativists • False science • Belief that human inequalities are inherited, inferior people should not be allowed to breed • Ku Klux Klan • Wants to restrict immigration • Targeted not only blacks, nut also Catholics, Jews, immigrants and people with “un-American values” • Surge in membership in early 1920’s • will again lose popularity as the decade closes
Emergency Quota Act- 1921 • limiting immigration to 3 percent of the total number of people in any ethnic group already living in the United States. • This discriminated heavily against southern and eastern Europeans • National Origins Act- 1924 • made immigrant restriction a permanent policy • lowered the quotas to 2 percent of each national group living in the U.S. in 1890 • exempted immigrants from the Western Hemisphere from the quotas
Immigration acts reduced labor pool in the US • Mexican immigrants begin moving into the US between 1914 until the end of the 1920’s
New Morality • challenged traditional ideas and glorified youth and personal freedom • Flappers • young, dramatic, stylish, and unconventional woman, exemplified the change in women’s behavior • Women begin making advances in fields of science, medicine, law, & literature
Fundamentalism • feared the new morality and worried about America’s social decline • rejected Darwin’s theory of evolution, which suggested that humans developed from lower forms of life over millions of years. Instead, • Fundamentalists believed in creationism—that God created the world as described in the Bible
Prohibition • 18th amended goes into effect in 1920 • Banned the manufacture, sale, transport, import, or export of alcohol • Believed it would stop unemployment, domestic violence, & poverty • Volstead Act • Makes the enforcement of prohibition the responsibility of the US Treasury
The Great Migration • In large northern cities, particularly New York City’s neighborhood of Harlem, African • Americans created environments that stimulated artistic development, racial pride, a sense of community, and political organization, • This will lead to a massive creative outpouring of African American arts.
Writers • Claude McKay • Langston Hughes • Zora Neale Hurston • Music • Louis Armstrong • Duke Ellington • Bessie Smith • Theatre • Paul Robeson • Josephine Baker • Artists • Aaron Douglas • Augusta Savage
The NAACP • Battled against segregation and discrimination. • The NAACP’s efforts led to the passage of anti-lynching legislation in the House of Representatives, but the Senate defeated the bill. • UNIA • promoted black pride and unity • encouraged education as the way for African Americans to gain economic and political power • Voicedthe need for separation and independence from whites