1 / 107

“The Roaring 20s”

“The Roaring 20s”. New Ideas. After WWI, America would become the world’s leading economic power. But the 1920s would be a time of great change in America. People began to question long-held beliefs about the world. New Ideas.

ron
Télécharger la présentation

“The Roaring 20s”

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 Roaring 20s”

  2. New Ideas • After WWI, America would become the world’s leading economic power. • But the 1920s would be a time of great change in America. People began to question long-held beliefs about the world.

  3. New Ideas • A religious revival at the beginning of the 20th century led to a growth in religious fundamentalism. • Religious fundamentalists believe that the Bible is literally true and, because it is from God, cannot contain errors. • Fundamentalists read the Bible literally, and used it to hypothesize that the world is around 6,000 years old. • The ideas of Charles Darwin and others challenged this view. Scientists had theorized that the world was actually around 4 or 5 billion years old. • Furthermore, some people looked at the devastation of WWI and questioned the existence of God.

  4. Scopes Trial • The debate between scientific theory and religious fundamentalism gained national attention in the “Monkey Trial” of 1925. • A teacher named John Scopes was arrested for violating a Tennessee law that forbade teaching Darwin’s theory of evolution, instead of the Bible’s account of creation. • Fundamentalist William Jennings Bryan volunteered to prosecute John Scopes. • Clarence Darrow was the lawyer defending Scopes. He was a lawyer for Eugene Debs during WWI. • The trial reached a climax when William Jennings Bryan took the stand himself to testify.

  5. Scopes Trial • Through his questioning, Darrow was able to get Bryan to say that he does not interpret everything in the Bible literally. (clip) • Scopes was ultimately found guilty and fined $100 after the jury deliberated for 9 minutes. • The law against teaching evolution remained in effect.

  6. New Technology • Henry Ford was able to make cars cheap enough for regular people to buy through “mass production” using the assembly line. • He also wanted to his workers to be able to buy his cars, so he paid them an unheard of $5 per day. • By the 1920s, a Model T car cost about $260. • The car changed America. People could live in a different area than they worked. • The car and public transportation systems led to the development of some of the first suburbs in America. • It was also much easier to go on dates with the use of a car.

  7. https://maps.google.com/maps?um=1&hl=en&q=hardin%20st%20columbia%20sc&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.r_cp.r_qf.&bpcl=38625945&biw=1366&bih=622&wrapid=tlif135333452181631&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=ilhttps://maps.google.com/maps?um=1&hl=en&q=hardin%20st%20columbia%20sc&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.r_cp.r_qf.&bpcl=38625945&biw=1366&bih=622&wrapid=tlif135333452181631&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=il

  8. Consumer Goods and Mass Media • The assembly line meant that people could afford things that they could not before. • Radios and refrigerators became more common in homes. • Sewing machines, vacuum cleaners, and washing machines greatly reduced the amount of time people had to do chores at home. • This led to more leisure time and a bustling nightlife, when people would venture out into the city after dark. • Mass media also formed during the 1920s. Mass media came in the form of radios, newspapers, and magazines.

  9. Consumer Goods and Mass Media • Because of the radio, people around the country enjoyed the same shows and hearing the same news reports. • The movie industry also boomed. The first movies were actually silent pictures, and then moved to movies with sound called “talkies.” • “The Jazz Singer” was one of the first very popular talkies.

  10. Women in the 1920s • By 1920, half of the American population lived in large cities. Large cities had very different, less traditional cultures. • The movement of people to the cities changed the role of women during the 20s. • During WWI, women had taken new jobs that men had to leave to go and fight. When the men returned, they took their jobs back. • Suffrage means the right to vote. Women had been fighting for suffrage since the Seneca Falls Convention of 1848. • Finally, women got the right to vote when the 19th Amendment was passed.

  11. Women in the 1920s • Many people were worried about the decline of morals during the 20s. They were especially worried about the decline of women’s morals. • Women began to change their dress and behavior. They started wearing shorter hairstyles and skirts. • They began going out on dates instead of having men come to their homes with their parents or a chaperone supervising. • These new women were called “flappers.” • Some of the behavior that people found unacceptable: premarital sex, using birth control, listening to jazz music, drinking, smoking, etc.

  12. Blacks in the 1920s • From about 1910 to 1930, blacks in the south began moving to cities in the Midwest and North. • Jim Crow laws, violence, and lynching were “push” factors for blacks – meaning they were reasons why blacks LEFT the south. • Meanwhile, cultural change and jobs were “pull” factors for blacks – meaning reasons they CAME to the north. • This was called “The Great Migration.” • A black middle class developed in the cities as blacks were able to hold steady jobs.

  13. 1900

  14. Blacks in the 1920s • As the black middle class grew, blacks began taking pride in their history and culture. • A movement of writers, artists, and musicians in New York City during the 1920s drew attention to black culture. • This movement was called the Harlem Renaissance. • Two of the major writers of this movement were James Weldon Johnson and Langston Hughes. • This movement helped draw attention to the fact that blacks were still second class citizens.

  15. The Red Scare • When the Russian Revolution took place during WWI, many Americans were happy about it. The czar was replaced by a Republic. • But, when communism was instituted in Russia, many people in America were in fear. • Communism is when the government owns all property and tries to create a society in which there are no classes, meaning everyone has the same amount of property. • Many in the U.S. were scared that a communist revolution would occur here. • This led to a period known as “The Red Scare.”

  16. The Red Scare • The United States Attorney General, A. Mitchell Palmer, took advantage of the Red Scare. • He authorized the Palmer Raids. Police arrested jailed 4,000 people who were believed to be Communists. Many of them were actually just immigrants who were innocent. • More than 500 people were deported back to their home countries. • Palmer predicted that there would be attacks in the U.S. by anarchists and Communists. This never happened, and people stopped taking him seriously.

  17. Anti-Immigration • During the 1920s, xenophobia was widespread. Xenophobia is hatred of outsiders or immigrants. • Many who believed in Social Darwinism thought that the U.S. should not allow so many immigrants to freely enter. • So, during the 1920s, immigration quotas were passed. Quotas are limitations on the amount of immigrants who could enter the country from certain areas. • For most countries, the quota was set at 2% of the amount of people in that country. • Example: only 2% of Italians could come to the U.S. each year. • The quotas were aimed at preventing immigration from three areas: Eastern Europe, Southern Europe, and Asia.

  18. The (2nd) Ku Klux Klan • During the 1920s, the KKK made a resurgence. • In order to attract new members, the KKK started targeting other groups besides blacks. • They targeted Jews, Catholics, and immigrants. The Red Scare helped to fuel the growth of the KKK. • During the 1920s, the KKK grew to become a national organization. People in small towns and cities across America joined the KKK, even in the Midwest and North. • The KKK saw themselves as helping to improve and shape the morals of society. • They targeted bootleggers and gamblers, burning crosses in their yards and beating or lynching them in public.

  19. The (2nd) Ku Klux Klan • The KKK during the 1920s was different than the one after the Civil War. During the 1920s, the KKK was more organized and targeted more groups. • Also, in 1915, the movie “Birth of a Nation” intensified racism against blacks. It was a recruiting tool for the KKK. • The movie portrayed blacks as being sexually aggressive towards white women.

  20. Gainesville, FL

  21. http://www2.wspa.com/news/2012/feb/02/7/judge-rules-church-rightfully-owns-redneck-shop-ar-2977478/http://www2.wspa.com/news/2012/feb/02/7/judge-rules-church-rightfully-owns-redneck-shop-ar-2977478/ • http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/13/us/in-laurens-sc-the-redneck-shop-and-its-neighbor.html?pagewanted=all

  22. Prohibition • Since the 1830s, many groups supported temperance, which means the reduction of the use of alcohol. • Most of the supporters of the temperance movement were women. • During WWI, the support for prohibiting alcohol grew stronger. • This was due to the fact that there were grain shortages because of the war. Also, there was anti-German sentiment – and German immigrants were some of the biggest grain farmers. • Finally, during WWI, the 18th Amendment was passed. • The 18th Amendment made selling alcohol illegal.

  23. Prohibition • It did not, however, make the consumption of alcohol illegal. • Soon, illegal sources of alcohol were being established all over the country. • These secret bars were called “speakeasies.” • Bootlegging became a huge business. Gangs took control of the selling alcohol. • The government did not have the power to stop these gangs from selling alcohol. • It was impossible to enforce the Prohibition law. So, in 1933, the 21st Amendment was passed. This amendment ended Prohibition and made alcohol legal again.

  24. The Great Depression

More Related