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The Twenties Chapter 11 Honors US History

Explore the economic expansion, rise of consumerism, and social tensions of the Roaring 20's. Learn about Republican power, the Jazz Age, Prohibition, and more.

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The Twenties Chapter 11 Honors US History

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  1. The TwentiesChapter11Honors US History

  2. The Roaring 20’s An era of prosperity, Republican power, and conflict

  3. Ageof Prosperity • Economic expansion • Mass Production • Assembly Line, Interchangeable Parts, and Division of Labor • Age of the Automobile • Ailing Agriculture…

  4. Consumerism • Rise of a Consumer Culture • Case Example: Detroit’s Automobile Industry • Henry Ford – Ford Motor Company • Assembly Line – allows more cars to be produced in the same amount of labor hours • Increases productivity • Makes cars more affordable

  5. Consumer Economy

  6. New Payment Plans • Installment Plans • Allows a consumer to get the product immediately and pay it off in “installments” over time. • Credit • Allows a consumer to get the product immediately and pay off the cost of it over time WITH INTEREST

  7. Credit Card Example • Credit Card with 5.9% APR • Susie buys a dress for $500 in March • Makes the minimum payment ($20) in March • $500-$20=$480 x .059 = $28.32+$480= $508.32 • Makes the minimum payment ($20) in April • $508.32-$20=$488.32 x .059 = $28.81+$488.32 = $517.13 • Makes the minimum payment ($20) in May • $517.13-$20=$497.13 x .059 = $29.33+$497.13 = $526.46

  8. an agri. depression in early 1920's contributed to this urban migration • U.S. farmers lost agri. markets in postwar Europe • at same time agri. efficiency increased so more food produced (more food = lower prices) and fewer labourers needed • so farming was no longer as prosperous, and bankers called in their loans (farms repossessed) • so American farmers enter the Depression in advance of the rest of society

  9. Black Americans in this period continued to live in poverty • sharecropping kept them in de facto slavery • 1915 - boll weevil wiped out the cotton crop • white landowners went bankrupt & forced blacks off their land

  10. Jazz Age Presidents All Republicans Harding Coolidge Hoover All believed in Laissez-Faire

  11. The Business of GovernmentHarding and Coolidge11.2

  12. Republican Power • President Harding • Elected 1920 • Legacy of Scandals • “Teapot Dome” • Died in office

  13. President Coolidge“The business of America is business.” • Fordney-McCumber Tariff • Smoot-Hawley Tariff (Hoover – signed it) • No help for farmers • Foreign Policy

  14. Outlawing/Preventing War • Washington Naval Conference • Limit Capital Ships-Battleships • Four Power Treaty-respect current holdings in pacific (U.S., Japan, England, France) • Five Power Treaty-Limit Capital ships- U.S. and Britain able to have the most. Japan did not like also outlawed use of poison gas. • Nine Power Treaty-Respect the Open Door Policy • Kellogg-Briand Pact- outlaw war 60 nations

  15. Billy Mitchell • Need for air power • Court Martial

  16. Dawes Plan

  17. SocialandCultural Tensions Honors US History 11.3

  18. Scopes “Monkey” Trial Evolution vs. Creationism Science vs. Religion Dayton, Tennessee Famous Lawyers John Scopes High School Biology teacher

  19. Nativism • Ku Klux Klan re-emerges as the nativist movement achieves power. • Immigration is restricted. • Sacco and Vanzetti Trial • Highlighted the power of nativism.

  20. The New Immigrants

  21. Qualities of the New Immigrants • More diversity in religion and ethnicity • Catholics, Jews, Orthodox Christians • Left Europe because of religious persecution and poverty • Lured by new jobs in America

  22. Immigrant Discrimination • Persecuted by Nativists • Argued that immigrants: • Increased poverty • Brought crime • Stole American jobs • Hated their different culture

  23. for immigrants – the point of origin had shifted to S & E Europe and new religions appeared: Jewish, Orthodox, Catholic • N. European immigrants of early 19c. feared this shift and felt it would undermine Protestant values • this fear was known as NATIVISM • many wanted Congress to restrict immigration, leading to a quota system that favoured n. areas of Europe • fear of immigrants (from SE Europe) led to a sentiment known as the Red Scare (fear of comm. post-Bolshevik Rev.) • basic comm. advocates a int'l revolution by the proletariat/workers - fears that this ideology could find its way into the U.S.

  24. The Ku Klux Klan Great increase In power Anti-black Anti-immigrant Anti-Semitic Anti-Catholic Anti-women’s suffrage 1915 Anti-bootleggers “It is like writing history with lightning. And my only regret is that it is all so terribly true” – Woodrow Wilson

  25. Prohibition 18th Amendment Volstead Act Gangsters untouchables Al Capone

  26. Reasons for Prohibition • Proposed by the Women’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) • Thought it would cure society’s problems (domestic abuse). • Thought it would increase industrial productivity, so factory owners favored it.

  27. Noble Experiment Gone Wrong • Drove drinking underground and added a rebellious aspect to it. • Alcohol became dangerous due to unregulated drinks.

  28. Gangs • Organized Crime and Bootlegging • Gave gangs a tremendous source of income which increased their strength.

  29. Bootleggers A Secret Tunnel for Booze “Bathtub Gin”

  30. Speakeasies and Blind Pigs

  31. Al Capone • Controlled the Italian Mafia of Chicago. • Extremely popular with the common people. • Brought down by Elliott Ness of the US Treasury Department (Untouchables). • Capone convicted of tax evasion even though he was responsible for hundreds of deaths.

  32. Enforcing the Volstead Act Al Capone and the Deputy Chief of the Chicago Police

  33. PROHIBITION - on manuf. and sale of alcohol • adopted in 1919 - 18th AMENDMENT • an outgrowth of the longtime temperance movement • in WWI, temperance became a patriotic theme - drunkenness caused low productivity & inefficiency, and alcohol needed to treat the wounded • Volstead Act-no consumption • a difficult law to enforce... organized crime, speakeasies, bootleggers were on the rise • Prohibition finally ended in 1933 w/ the 21st Amendment • forced organized crime to pursue other interests…

  34. A New Mass Culture Honors US 11.4

  35. Culture of the Roaring 20’s Radio KDKA Pittsburgh GE, Westinghouse,& RCA form NBC Silent Movies Charlie Chaplin “Talkies” The Jazz Singer Starring Al Jolson Mary Pickford “America’s Sweetheart”

  36. Rudolph Valentino

  37. Charlie Chaplin

  38. Mary Pickford

  39. Douglass Fairbanks

  40. Clark Gable

  41. Clara Bow

  42. The Jazz Singer

  43. Heroes of Sport

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