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The Roaring 1920s

The Roaring 1920s. AKA time after World War I to 1930. End of World War I. Dates of World War I? Whose assassination “started” the war? What countries were involved? What treaty ends the war to end all wars? What countries make up this treaty? What country was told to pay reparations?

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The Roaring 1920s

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  1. The Roaring 1920s AKA time after World War I to 1930

  2. End of World War I • Dates of World War I? • Whose assassination “started” the war? • What countries were involved? • What treaty ends the war to end all wars? • What countries make up this treaty? • What country was told to pay reparations? • What country has to decrease their military?

  3. Like Edward Cullen, many soldiers caught inFLUenza in 1918 – it was an epidemic that swept across the world – 50 to 100 million died. Over 500 million were infected with inFLUenza. The inFLUenza epidemic lasted until 1920.

  4. The Red Scare

  5. Communism Started in the Soviet Union –previously known as Russia Lenin was a big push for Communism Communism is the principal that everyone should share equally in a society’s wealth. A system that has no economic classes and no private property. 1% of 1% were actually Communist

  6. Communism Fear = Palmer Raids

  7. Palmer was looking for: • Anarchists – radical people who sought the destruction of the government. • Deported about 6000 suspected Communists.

  8. America’s Capitalism • Companies encouraged workers to reject union and accept lower wages. • Companies gave fringe benefits to employees.

  9. Criminal Syndicalism Laws • Passed by many states during the Red Scare of 1919-1920, these outrageous laws outlawed the mere advocacy of violence to secure social change. Stump speakers for the International Workers of the World, or IWW, were special targets. • These were enacted because of the Russian Revolution. • Can invade peoples homes and jobs with out a search warrant and jail them for weeks without seeing a lawyer.

  10. Sacco and Vanzetti

  11. Klu Klux Klan

  12. What the KKK is Against Foreigners Pacifists Jewish Communists Catholics Internationalist Evolution Revolutionists Immigration restrictions Adultery Short skirts Gambling “demon rum” Bootlegging Blacks Birth Control Unions

  13. What the KKK is for • Keeping blacks “in THEIR place” • White – Anglo-Saxon • Protestant • “Native” Americans

  14. Ku Klux Klan • Organized in Georgia by William Simmons – not Forrest Gump's grandfather  • At its peak claimed over 5,000,000 members • Price to join KKK $10 a piece • It virtually collapses in the late 1920s because of being publicly exposed as corrupt and a money racket

  15. Tulsa Race Riot 1921

  16. Immigrants • 800,000 NEW immigrants – what’s different about these immigrants?

  17. Xenophobia • Emergency Quota Act 1921 – 3% quota (1910 pop) • Immigration Act 1924 – 2% quota and no Japanese and discriminated against southern and eastern Europeans (1890 pop) • National Origins Act 1924 – reduce immigration to the US from European countries to 150,000 • By 1931 more people left America than came here. • Quota system does not apply to Western Hemisphere. Canada allowed 1 million and Mexico half a million.

  18. Xenophobia continued • This “fear” caused many aliens, citizens of other countries living in the US, to be deported against their will to another country. • This “fear” also lead to nativism, distrust of foreigners. • Many immigrants lived in neighborhoods with their own churches, newspapers, and theaters – so they could keep their culture alive.

  19. Agriculture in the 1920s • During World War I, the federal government had subsidized and paid absurdly high prices for wheat and other grains in an effort to support the war. example $2 for a bushel of wheat by 1920 down to 67 cents • The federal government had encouraged farmers to buy more land, modernize their methods, and produce more food.

  20. Agriculture in the 1920s • In Europe farm production revives after the war. • Advancement like pesticides and fertilizers increased yield per acre • Because of this prices fall in the United States and farmers lose money – supply & demand • This leads to the farm crises in the 1920s because competition grew when European farmers returned to their fields. • Farmers were eventually paid NOT to produce

  21. Prohibition = 18th Amendment Volstead Act 1919

  22. Enforcement of prohibition

  23. THE OG

  24. Gang Activity By 1930, gangs in Chicago were making an ANNUAL profit between $12-18 BILLION

  25. Education IMPORTANT • Successful industries • People making more money (income) • Fewer families relying on children’s work • 4 million kids attended high school – home economics classes offered. • John Dewey is the “father of progressive education”

  26. Scopes Monkey Trail

  27. Trial of the Century

  28. Business

  29. Installment Buying • Paying for an item over time in small payments – consumer credit. • A dollar down a dollar “forever” • Electrical appliances made life easier for women – washing machines, vacuums, refrigerators

  30. Sports

  31. National Negro League

  32. Leisure Activities

  33. Independence, Employment, Urbanization, and Status Symbol Thanks Ford and Talyor

  34. Assembly Line A production system in which the item being built moves along a conveyor belt to various work stations and each member of the team helps construct the item. Producing a finished automobile about every 10 seconds.

  35. Impact of the Cars • More jobs 6 million – building highways, paving roads, gas stations, motels, shopping centers • Smaller lawns, houses with garages and driveways • Suburbs • Holland tunnel 1927 • Deaths – 1,000,000 by 1950

  36. Tin-Can Tourists

  37. Mini-Vacations

  38. Chain Stores

  39. Parade to pitch toy market

  40. Historic Flight

  41. Dear Sir!Have 50.000$ redy 25.000$ in20$ bills 15.000$ in 10$ bills and10.000$ in 5$ bills After 2–4 dayswe will inform you were to deliverthe mony.We warn you for makinganyding public or for notify the PoliceThe child is in gut care.Indication for all letters areSingnatureand three holes.

  42. Entertainment

  43. Radios • November 1920 KDKA first radio station - Announced Harding presidential victory • Automobile lured Americans away from home the radio brought them back – soap operas, comedies, news • Everyone could hear the same thing at the same time – united America together. • By 1929 40% of all Americans own a working radio

  44. The Great Train Robbery

  45. The Jazz Singer

  46. Steamboat Willie

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