1 / 31

A Republican Decade

A Republican Decade. Warren G Harding. Republican Elected in 1920 Looked like a President Promised a “Return to Normalcy” Won in a landslide. Return to Normalcy. Normalcy appealed to Americans The world seemed anything but normal Revolution in Russia Strikes and bombings at home

suki
Télécharger la présentation

A Republican Decade

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. A Republican Decade

  2. Warren G Harding • Republican • Elected in 1920 • Looked like a President • Promised a “Return to Normalcy” • Won in a landslide

  3. Return to Normalcy • Normalcy appealed to Americans • The world seemed anything but normal • Revolution in Russia • Strikes and bombings at home • People feared that political violence was a threat to the U.S.

  4. Russian Revolution • Czar Nicholas II lost power in 1917 • WWI destroyed his rule • The new provisional government pledged to stay in the war…even though the people wanted out • Some turned to a more radical form of government

  5. Russian Revolution • Vladimir Lenin and his Bolsheviks take power from the provisional government in 1917 • Pulled Russia out of WWI • Govmt. then takes control of all farms, industries, lands, and transportation

  6. Russian Revolution • Civil War breaks out in Russia • Reds (Bulsheviks) v. Whites • Reds win • The new nation created is named the Soviet Union (Or USSR) • Adopted ideology of Communism

  7. Communism • Government owns all land and property • 1 political party • Needs of the country more important than the needs of the individual • Lenin sought to spread communism throughout the world • After Lenin came Josef Stalin whose brutal policies spread communism and killed tens of millions

  8. American Fears • Americans feared the spread of Communism • Feared immigrants coming to the U.S. may be communists and other radicals (like anarchists) • Communism begins to spread in Europe (Part of Germany, Hungary)

  9. American Fears • Thousands go on strike in Seattle • Bombs being sent in the mail to government officials • Media took advantage of the situation and spread panic • Created a Red Scare-fear of communism and other radical ideas • Americans wanted communists jailed and deported

  10. The Palmer Raids • A. Mitchell Palmer-Attorney General of the U.S. • Had bomb mailed to his home • Became convinced that radicals were conspiring to overthrow the government • Began a campaign to hunt down radicals

  11. The Palmer Raids • Conducted raids and arrests against suspected subversives • Targeted Communists, socialists, and anarchists • Arrested thousands, sometimes without evidence • Many of them eventually deported

  12. The Palmer Raids • Palmer said there would be a general strike and widespread bombings on May 1, 1920 • Newspapers predicted a major crisis • Never happened • Palmer lost influence and credibility

  13. Sacco and Vanzetti • 2 men robbed and killed 2 men working at a shoe factory in 1920 • Police arrest 2 Italian Immigrants for the crime • Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti • Both men were anarchists

  14. Sacco and Venzetti • Both men were carrying guns • Sacco’s gun matched the one used at the crime • Many suspected that they were only arrested because they were immigrants and their political beliefs

  15. Sacco and Vanzetti • Both men found guilty • Trial may have been unfair • Evidence circumstantial • Judge used racial slurs • Both executed • Note: modern technology proved they committed the crime…so don’t feel too bad

  16. Labor Strikes • Thousands of labor strikes in 1919 • Boston police went on strike • President Wilson called this a crime against civilization • Other notable strike in steel industry and coal mines

  17. Motivation for Labor Strikes • Higher cost of living • Labor hoped to build on gains won during the war • Shorter hours • High wages • More workers than jobs

  18. Strikes Decline • Most Americans opposed strikes • Saw them as un-American and prone to violence • Distrusted labor unions and the immigrants they represented • Lack of support from the Government • Economic boom brought higher wages

  19. Republican Leadership • Red Scare had consequences • People believed Republicans could restore stability better than the Democrats • Republicans dominated all 3 branches of government throughout the 20s

  20. The Harding Presidency • Made some good cabinet appointments • Herbert Hoover- Secretary of Commerce • Charles Evan Hughes-Secretary of State • Andrew Mellon-Secretary of the Treasury

  21. The Harding Presidency • Also showed some poor judgment • Gave jobs to a bunch of his friends-The Ohio Gang • Inexperienced • Incompetent • Dishonest

  22. Foreign Policy • Isolationist- avoid economic and political alliances with foreign countries • Opposed League of Nations • Wanted to establish global peace and stability • Called for disarmament

  23. Foreign Policy • Promoted expansion of trade • Passed FordneyMcCumber Tariff to protect American business at home • Scaled back British and French debts so they could better pay them • The Tariff made it very difficult for European nations to sell products to the U.S., raise money, and pay off their debt

  24. Foreign Policy • Wanted to help German economy recover • Approved Dawes Plan • Set a payment schedule • Reorganized German national bank • Approved a loan to Germany

  25. Domestic Issues • U.S. became more Nativist after WWI • Why • Patriotism- believed foreigners could never be loyal to the U.S. • Religion- Protestants, Catholics, and Jews could not see eye to eye • Urban conditions- urban problems blamed on immigrants • Jobs-immigrants were taking them • RedScare

  26. Domestic Policy • 1921 law passed to restrict immigration • Placed a quota on immigrants representing certain ethnic groups or nations

  27. Teapot Dome Scandal • Harding not involved…but his people were • Albert B. Fall (Secretary of the Interior) secretly gave oil drilling rights on government property to 2 private oil companies • Fall received $300,000 in illegal payments and gifts in return

  28. Silent Cal • Harding dies in August 1923 • Calvin Coolidge becomes President • Believer in business • “The business of the American people is business.”

  29. Laissez faire • Did not want government to interfere with business • Lowered taxes • Did not even support government relief for disaster victims • Coolidge was criticized for this, but the economy boomed under Coolidge

  30. Kellogg-Briand Pact • 15 nations pledged not to use the threat of force in their dealings with other nations • 60 nations eventually joined the pact • Basically made war illegal • Unrealistic and unenforceable

  31. 1928 Election • Coolidge decides not to run • Herbert Hoover (R) wins the Presidency.

More Related