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1920’S

1920’S. “THE JAZZ AGE”. RED SCARE. CZAR NICHOLAS II LOST HIS POPULARITY VLADIMIR I. LENIN TOOK POWER 1917 REFERRED TO AS THE BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION/GOVERNMENT FARMS, INDUSTRIES, LAND, AND TRANSPORTATION BECAME GOVERNMENT OWNED. COMMUNISM.

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1920’S

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  1. 1920’S “THE JAZZ AGE”

  2. RED SCARE • CZAR NICHOLAS II LOST HIS POPULARITY • VLADIMIR I. LENIN TOOK POWER 1917 • REFERRED TO AS THE BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION/GOVERNMENT • FARMS, INDUSTRIES, LAND, AND TRANSPORTATION BECAME GOVERNMENT OWNED

  3. COMMUNISM • LENIN MADE COMMUNISM THE OFFICIAL IDEOLOGY OF THE SOVIET UNION • COMMUNISM: 1) GOVT. OWNS ALL LAND/PROPERTY 2) SINGLE POL. PARTY CONTROLS GOV. 3) INDIVIDUALS HAVE NO RIGHTS 4) GOV. VOWS TO STIR UP OTHER REVOLUTIONS IN OTHER COUNTRIES TO SPREAD COMMUNISM

  4. RED SCARE • AMERICANS CALLED FOR KNOWN COMMUNISTS TO BE JAILED OR DEPORTED • PALMER RAIDS: • ARREST SUSPECTED COMMUNISTS—Many were immigrants and were sent back to their home country—most were innocent • REACTIONS TO PALMER RAIDS?

  5. SACCO AND VANZETTI • APRIL 15, 1920 – GUNMEN ROBBED AND KILLED A GUARD OF A SHOE FACTORY IN MASS. • POLICE ARRESTED TWO ITALIAN IMMIGRANTS IN CONNECTION WITH THE CRIME • NICOLA SACCO AND BARTOLOMEO VANZETTI WERE CARRYING GUNS WHEN THEY WERE ARRESTED • GUN MATCHED THE ONE USED IN THE CRIME • MANY SUSPECTED THE REASON THEY WERE ARRESTED WAS BECAUSE? • They were immigrants • CONVICTED, APPEALED, CONVICTION UPHELD • 1927: Electric Chair

  6. SACCO AND VANZETTI

  7. LABOR STRIKES OF 1919 • BOSTON POLICE STRIKES OF 1919: 19 OFFICERS FIRED FOR UNION ACTIVITY, WHOLE DEPARTMENT WENT ON STRIKE • RESULT OF A POLICE STRIKE: Riot • STRIKERS WERE REPRIMANDED BY THE GOVERNMENT

  8. STEEL AND COAL STRIKES • STEELWORKERS IN GARY, IN • THE CORPORATION’S PRIVATE POLICE FORCE KILLED 18 STRIKERS AND BEAT HUNDREDS MORE • STRIKES DROPPED IN THE EARLY 20’S DUE TO BOOMING ECONOMY AND WAGE INCREASES

  9. FEATURES OF REPUBLICAN ADMINISTRATIONS OF THE 1920’S • SUPPORTED BUSINESSES • WANTED SOCIAL STABILITY THAT WOULD PROMOTE ECONOMIC GROWTH

  10. SIMILARITIES REPUBLICANS BELIEVED IN ISOLATIONISM 3) NATIVIST DIFFERENCES COOLIDGE FAVORED SMALLER FEDERAL GOVERNMENT 2) LAISSEZ FAIRE-Coolidge HARDING AND COOLIDGE PRESIDENCIES HARDING: “GETTING BACK TO NORMALCY” COOLIDGE: “THE BUSINESS OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE IS BUSINESS

  11. TEAPOT DOME SCANDAL • HARDING SCANDAL • 1921-1922 HARDING’S SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR (ALBERT FALL) GAVE OIL DRILLING RIGHTS ON GOVERNMENT OIL FIELDS IN TEAPOT DOME, WYOMING TO TWO PRIVATE OIL CO. • ALBERT FALL RECEIVED $300,000 IN ILLEGAL PAYMENTS (JAIL)

  12. VICE PRESIDENT TAKES OVER • Warren G. Harding suffered a heart attack on August 2, 1923 • Calvin Coolidge took office • Coolidge ran again in 1924 and won • “Keep Cool With Coolidge” • Laissez-faire policy led to a great economic boom and a growth in consumer economy

  13. KELLOGG-BRIAND PACT *15 NATIONS AGREED NOT TO USE THE THREAT OF WAR IN THEIR DEALINGS OF ONE ANOTHER *UNREALISTIC, FAILURE

  14. II. BUSINESS BOOM

  15. GROWTH OF A CONSUMER • 1914-1926: AVERAGE WAGE ROSE MORE THAN 28%, # OF MILLIONAIRES DOUBLED • CONSUMER ECONOMY: ECONOMY THAT DEPENDS ON A LARGE AMOUNT OF BUYING

  16. CONSUMER ECONOMY • INSTALLMENT PLAN… • BY 1929: AMERICANS WERE USING THE INSTALLMENT PLAN TO BUY ALMOST EVERYTHING • BUYING GOODS ON CREDIT • DO WE USE CREDIT TODAY TO BUY GOODS? • AVERAGE CREDIT CARD DEBT OF AN AMERICAN FAMILY IS $8,700 IN 2008 • In 2008, the American public owes 2.6 trillion dollars in consumer debt

  17. HENRY FORD • 1907: FORD SOLD 30,000 MODEL T’s • Wanted more… cheaper… • IMPROVED ASSLY. LINE EFFICIENCY ** • ONE MODEL-T EVERY 24 SECONDS • PRICE IN 1910: $1000 • PRICE IN 1914: $490 See page 348-349 and page 350—MME sheet

  18. BUSINESS BOOM OF THE 1920’S • REASONS: 1) DEVELOPMENT OF A CONSUMER ECONOMY 2) BUYING ON INSTALLMENT PLANS 3) GROWTH OF AUTOMOBILE, STEEL, OIL, ELECTRICAL INDUSTRIES 4) USE OF THE ASSEMBLY LINE 5) LAISSEZ-FAIRE POLICIES

  19. III. SOCIETY IN THE 1920’S

  20. CHANGE’S IN WOMEN • FLAPPER: A NEW TYPE OF WOMAN: YOUNG, REBELLIOUS, FUN LOVING, BOLD • FLAPPER IMAGE: SHORTER DRESSES, SHORT HAIR, WEARING MAKE-UP

  21. WOMEN WORKING AND VOTING • STATUS CHANGED VERY LITTLE DURING THE 1920’S • But women were becoming more social • FIRST WOMAN ELECTED TO THE CONGRESS AND GOVERNOR IN THE 1920’S • VOTER TURN OUT WITH WOMEN WAS LOW IN THE 20’S

  22. POPULATION CHANGES • DEMOGRAPHICS: STATISTICS THAT DESCRIBE A POPULATION • MAJOR CHANGE = 6 MILLION MOVED FROM RURAL AREAS TO CITIES • AFRICAN-AMERICANS STILL LIVING IN THE SOUTH (LOOKING TO MOVE NORTH B/C RACIAL TENSIONS) • Page 355 in text book • FRENCH SPEAKING CANADIANS TRAVELED TO NEW ENGLAND TO WORK • LOS ANGELES BECAME A MAGNET FOR MEXICANS AND DEVELOPED A DISTINCT BARRIO (SPANISH-SPEAKING NEIGHBORHOOD)

  23. DEMOGRAPHICS • GROWTH OF THE SUBURBS: AMERICAN SUBURBS EXPLODED • ELECTRIC TROLLEYS, RAILWAY CARS, AUTOMOBILES, BUSES

  24. AMERICAN HEROES • CHARLES LINDBERGH: FIRST FLIGHT OVER THE ATLANTIC 1927 (Spirit of St. Louis) NEW YORK TO PARIS

  25. AMELIA EARHART • FLEW ACROSS ATLANTIC IN 1932 • FLEW SOLO FROM HAWAII TO CALIFORNIA • 1937: ATTEMPTED TO FLY AROUND THE WORLD (DISAPPEARED IN PACIFIC)

  26. SPORTS HEROES • BOXERS: JACK DEMPSEY, GEORGES CARPENTIER • BASEBALL: GEORGE HERMAN “BABE” RUTH • OLYMPICS: GERTRUDE EDERLE (SWIMMING) ENGLISH CHANNEL

  27. DEMPSEY

  28. RUTH

  29. EDERLE

  30. IV. MEDIA AND THE JAZZ AGE

  31. GROWTH OF THE MASS MEDIA • MASS MEDIA: FILMS, NATIONWIDE NEWS, RADIO BROADCASTING, NEWSPAPER • HOLLYWOOD WAS BORN

  32. MOVIES • BETWEEN 1922-1930 THE # OF PEOPLE ATTENDING MOTION PICTURES ROSE FROM 40 MILLION TO 90 MILLION PER WEEK (125% INCREASE) • THE JAZZ SINGER “Talkies” vs. Silent movies

  33. NEWSPAPERS • 1920-1930: CIRCULATION ROSE 42% • THE NEW YORK TIMES • SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER • NEW YORK JOURNAL • Helped Create a Common Culture

  34. RADIO • 1920-1930: HOUSEHOLDS WITH A RADIO ROSE FROM 20,000 TO 13,750,000 • NBC BORN

  35. FIGURES OF THE JAZZ AGE • Radio combined with the great African American migration to the cities to produce another highlight of the 1920’s : JAZZ • Louis Armstrong • Duke Ellington • George Gershwin (Rhapsody in Blue)

  36. DUKE ELLINGTON

  37. Louis Armstrong

  38. LOST GENERATION • SET OF WRITERS DURING THE 1920’S • BELIEF THAT THEY WERE LOST IN A GREEDY, MATERIALISTIC WORLD THAT LACKED MORAL VALUES • MANY LEFT THE COUNTRY • ERNEST HEMINGWAY, F. SCOTT FITZGERALD (GREAT GATSBY)

  39. HARLEM RENAISSANCE • 1914-1930: HARLEM GREW FROM 14,000 TO 200,000 AFRICAN AMERICANS • HARLEM BECAME A NATIONAL CENTER FOR JAZZ AND LITERARY WORKS • Langston Huges: Most studied African American Poet: “I, Too,” 1926

  40. CULTURAL CONFLICTS • 1920: 18TH AMENDMENT-PROHIBITION • 1919 VOLSTEAD ACT: PASSED TO ENFORCE PROHIBITION (95% OF PEOPLE IN KANSAS OBEYED THE LAW, 5% OF PEOPLE IN N.Y. OBEYED THE LAW) • BOOTLEGGERS: SUPPLIERS OF ILLEGAL ALCOHOL (SMUGGLED FROM CARIBBEAN OR CANADA) (OTHERS MADE IT)

  41. SPEAKEASIES • ILLEGAL BARS • BOOTLEGGERS PROVIDED THEM WITH ALCOHOL

  42. RESULTS OF PROHIBITION • ORGANIZED CRIME • LARGE ORGANIZATIONS WERE FORMED BY CRIMINALS THAT CONTROLLED THE DISTRIBUTION OF ALCOHOL • BOOTLEGGERS OFTEN EXPANDED INTO OTHER ILLEGAL ACTIVITIES

  43. AL CAPONE • MOST NOTORIOUS GANGSTER ORGANIZATIONS WERE IN CHICAGO • TOP OF CHICAGO’S ORGANIZED CRIME NETWORK WAS AL CAPONE (“SCARFACE”) • PAID OFF POLICE, POLITICIANS, JUDGES • 1931: CONVICTED OF TAX EVASION, SENT TO PRISON

  44. St. Valentine’s Day Massacre

  45. FUNDAMENTALISM • SET OF RELIGIOUS BELIEFS INCLUDING TRADITIONAL CHRISTIAN IDEAS • BASED ON INTERPRETATION OF THE BIBLE

  46. SCOPES TRIAL • EVOLUTION: HUMAN BEINGS DEVELOPED OVER TIME FROM SIMPLE LIFE FORMS • ILLEGAL TO TEACH IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS • TEACHER JOHN SCOPES ASKED A FRIEND TO FILE SUIT AGAINST HIM • HUGE TRIAL (BROADCAST OVER AMERICAN RADIO) • William Jennings Bryan: Prosecutor • Clarence Darrow: Defendant • Trial held in Dayton, TN • GUILTY ($100 FINE) • BIGGER ISSUES SUCH AS FUNDAMENTALISM VS. SCIENCE WERE EXPOSED AND DISCUSSED

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