the “roaring”twenties 1919-1929 chapter 13. a booming economy chapter 13 section 1

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The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13

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Page 1: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

The “Roaring”Twenties1919-1929

Chapter 13

Page 2: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

A Booming Economy

Chapter 13 section 1

Page 3: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Automobiles • At first cars were for rich people• 1908 Henry Ford introduced the Model T

– Cost $850• Ford opened a new plant into Detroit and began using the

assembly line to make cars– Before assembly line it took 12 hours to create a Model T– After assembly line it took 90 minutes to make a Model T– Ford’s Assembly Line, one car every 10 seconds

• 1930 ~ 30 million cars in US

• Prices began to fall for Model T’s– Down to $290 by 1927– 1927 56% of Americans owned a car

– http://www.nytimes.com/video/automobiles/collectibles/1194817121762/ford-s-model-t-at-100.html

Page 4: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

• Ford believed in keeping his workers happy– Paid his workers $5 a day

• More than double what others paid

– He reduced the workday from 9 hours to 8 hours and gave workers Saturday and Sunday off

• Hoped that workers would buy cars

Page 5: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

The Gasoline Age• Auto Industry employed 6

million by 1930– Supporting industries

millions more– Steel, glass, asphalt, rubber,

wood, insurance, road construction, motor hotels (motels)

– All this produced jobs, and wealth

• Gas/Oil became huge business– Hurt the RaildRoad industry

Page 6: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

• Cars gave freedom– A new youth movement began

• “a house of prostitution on wheels”

• Suburbs grew• People could live farther from their jobs

• Deaths increased– By 1951 one million dead from cars

Page 7: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

The Consumer Revolution

• New affordable goods became available to the public– Washing machines, vacuum

cleaners, radios, refrigerators • Advertising became big

business to sell all the goods– Magazine and newspaper ads– Played on people’s wants and

fears, not needs

– http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6mBpArf6oM

Page 8: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

• People began buying all this stuff on credit– Good and bad news, why?

Page 9: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

The Bull Market

• People began to heavily invest in the stock market during the 1920’s– Bull Market = market rising

• People began to buy stock on margin– Buying on credit– 10% down– People ignored dangers **Buying stock on margin means using leverage to maximize your gain when prices rise. Leverage is simply using borrowed money to increase your profit**

Page 10: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Cities, Suburbs, and Country• Cities populations rose during the

1920’s– People migrated out of rural areas to

cities– Immigrants went to cities

• Skyscrapers began to dominate cities– Electric elevators and steel allowed this

to happen

City 1910 1930

New York 4,766,883 6,930,446

Chicago 2,185,283 3,376,478

Los Angeles 319,198 1,238,048

Detroit 465,766 1,568,662

Page 11: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

• Suburbs grew as cars became more popular– Suburbs tended to draw the middle and upper

classes (For example: Coral Gables is a suburb of Miami)

– Cities started a slow decline towards poverty

• Farmers did not feel the benefits of the “roaring twenties”– Agriculture prices were dropping, thus farmers

were becoming more poor

Page 12: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

The Business of GovernmentThe Business of Government

Chapter 13 Section 2

Page 13: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

The Republican “Old Guard” Returns The Republican “Old Guard” Returns • 1921 Warren G. Harding inaugurated as President

– Promised a “return to normalcy”• What does that mean?

– Tried to appoint the “best minds” to his cabinet• Some good, some bad

• Andrew Mellon became Secretary of the Treasury– Under Secretary of Treasury Andrew Mellon, Gov’t spending and taxes were reduced from

1921-1926– 1921, $1 million income = $663,000 income tax– 1926, $1 million income = $200,000 income tax– Tax burden shifted from rich to middle class

• “Old Guard” Republicans returned and began to move away from Progressive Era– Big business/ laissez-faire government

• Anti-trust laws practically ignored during Harding's administration

Page 14: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

TariffsTariffs• 1922 Harding signed the Fordney-McCumber Tariff, raised tariffs up to

38.5%– Up from 27%

• High tariffs hurt Europe, who was trying to recover from WWI• Europe then raised their tariffs

– Bad for U.S.– All good for Germany! (Germany wasin a state of disarray…they needed a new leader,new hope…)

*Remember: A tariff is a tax on imports or exports (an international trade tariff)

I’ll get back to this later on the presentation

Page 15: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

The Stench of ScandalThe Stench of Scandal• Harding Administration had many scandals

– 1923 Director Charles R. Forbes stole ~$200 million from the Veterans Bureau – Teapot Dome Scandal

• 1921 naval oil reserves located at Teapot Dome, Wyoming• Albert B. Fall, Secretary of the Interior, convinced the Secretary of the Navy to transfer

these reserves to his control• Fall then leased these reserves to private companies, receiving bribes in the process• 1923 news about scandal leaked• 1929 Fall sentenced to 1 yr in prison

– Scandal shook public confidence in the government• 1923 President Harding died of pneumonia in San Fran while on a

speaking tour• His presidency is remembered as most corrupt since Grant

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r7p7C6nTNog

Page 16: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

““Silent Cal” CoolidgeSilent Cal” Coolidge• Calvin Coolidge (30th president)

was sworn in in the middle of the night– Very different than Harding

• Honest, moral, shy, quiet • “The man who builds a factory

builds a temple”• “The chief business of the

American people is business”• Believed in the status-quo (the

existing state of affairs, esp. regarding social or political issues)

Page 17: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

• Coolidge worked to lower taxes, pay the national debt, give businesses incentive, and cut government spending

• 6 straight years of huge economic growth under Coolidge

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IUkBE-OCHIU

Page 18: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Frustrated Farmers and MinoritiesFrustrated Farmers and Minorities• Farmers did great during WWI

– Hurt bad after war ended• Technology helped/hurt farmers

– Tractors allowed farmers to farm more land, with less hired help, faster– Increased farm products, thus dropping prices

– Farmers did not benefit from the booming economy– Blacks and other minorities also continued to suffer– Coolidge did not feel it was the governments role to try to create an ideal

society

Page 19: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

America Seeks Benefits with out BurdensAmerica Seeks Benefits with out Burdens

• 1921 US signed separate peace treaty with Central Powers (The treaty laid the foundations for a U.S.-German cooperation not under the strict supervision of the League of Nations)

• 1921-1922 Washington Naval Disarmament Conference– US, England, Japan agreed to slow naval construction– Hoped it would help avoid future wars

• 1928 Kellogg-Briand (bree AHN) Pact between US and France– 62 nations signed– Only defensive wars allowed– Not enforceable

• America unrealistic and isolationist in 1920’s

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jo87Q1Y48ws

Page 20: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

A Three-Way Race for the White House in 1924A Three-Way Race for the White House in 1924

• Republicans nominated Coolidge– “Keep Cool and Keep Coolidge”

• Democrats nominated John W. Davis• Progressives nominated Robert M. Follette• Coolidge won with 382 electoral

votes • John received 136 and Robert

received 13 electoral votes

Page 21: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Foreign-Policy Flounderings Foreign-Policy Flounderings

• War debt became a huge issue– America went from a debtor nation to a creditor nation

• The Allies owed USA $10 billion and US wanted to get paid

• England and France said the debts should be forgiven since they lost millions of men and US didn’t, and since all the money borrowed was spent on US goods– They also complained that the high US tariffs made it

impossible to make the money they needed to pay US back

Page 22: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Unraveling the Debt KnotUnraveling the Debt Knot• Allies debts to US forced them to seek high reparations from Germany

– Wanted to use reparations to pay US– German inflation got out of control

• 1924 Dawes Plan adopted– Rescheduled German reparations– Allowed US loans to Germany

• Europe was mad b/c we didn’t cancel debt• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKASMBsk1Kg

US loans to US loans to GermanyGermany

German German payments to payments to AlliesAllies

Allies pay war Allies pay war debt to USdebt to US

Page 23: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Briefly….

• …let’s see what Germany was doing during this whole time…(up until the 1930’s a few years before the start of WWII)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a2YEUhHFMHY

Page 24: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Social and Cultural Tensions

Chapter 13 section 3

Page 25: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Traditionalism vs. Modernism

• 1920 census revealed more Americans lived in cities than in rural area

• People in urban areas tended to believe in modernism– A more open mind to social change and scientific

discoveries • People in rural areas tended to be more

traditionalist– Traditional views on science, religion, and culture

Page 26: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Education

• Education made big strides in 1920’s– More prevalent in the North

• South didn’t have time for “book learning”

– More states made high school mandatory– 1920’s more than ¼ of Americans were

graduating high school

Page 27: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Monkey Business in Tennessee

• Many Americans were fundamentalists in the 1920’s• Bible is literal

• Major clash between Creation and Evolution in schools

• Three states outlawed teaching evolution – Tennessee, Mississippi, and Arkansas

Page 28: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

• Scopes Monkey Trial, 1925, Tennessee– High School biology teacher John Scopes put on trial for

teaching evolution – William Jennings Bryan a prosecutor – Clarence Darrow the defense attorney – Massive media attention – Scopes found guilty, fined $100

• The trail made Fundamentalists look silly as most other Christians were reconciling evolution and creation

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ofM99LFZhxo

Page 29: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Stemming the Foreign Flood• 1920-1921 800,000 immigrants came to US

– Most from South and Eastern Europe• Emergency Quota Act, 1921

– 3% of nationality could immigrate, based on nationality’s population in US in 1910

Page 30: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

• Immigration Act of 1924– Lowered to 2%– Stopped all Japanese immigration– Canadians and Latin Americans exempt

• Mexicans still faced discrimination • Immigration basically came to a stop in America

Page 31: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

KKK• KKK re-emerged in 1920’s

– Anti-anything not “American”• US born Protestant from Anglo-Saxon blood were Americans (W.A.S.P- White Anglo Saxon Protestant)

– Mid 1920’s 5 million members– What does this say about USA in the 1920’s?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gQJX8v0sC3Q (1:54)

Page 32: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

The Prohibition “The Noble Experiment”

• 18th Amendment in 1919• Volstead Act passed to enforce

the amendment• Not a popular law• Hard to enforce a law that the

majority of people don’t want to follow

• “Speakeasies” formed– Underground bars– Lots of hard liquor

• Bootleggers began making their own liquor– Some could kill you

Page 33: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

The Golden Age of Gangsterism• Prohibition gave birth to organized

crime– Chicago, 1920’s

• Al Capone– Alcohol distributor– War with rival gangs– Bribed police, juries, judges– St. Valentines Day Massacre, 1929

» 7 members of rival gang killed

• Gangsters moved into other businesses– Prostitution, gambling, drugs

• Merchants paid “protection” money• By 1930 $12-18 billion a year income

for Mob– Way more than the Federal Govt

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_CE4u6jI_rc

Page 34: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

A New Mass Culture

Chapter 13 Section 4

Page 35: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Leisure Time

• 1850 people worked 70 hours per week– 1910: 55 hours per week– 1930: 45 hours per weeks

Page 36: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Hollywood’s Filmland Fantasies• Silent films

• Charlie Chaplin• One of the first full length films was

D.W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation (1915)

• Hollywood became movie capital of the world

• Mickey Mouse- First appeared in 1928!• 1927 the first “talkie” came out

– The Jazz Singer starring Al Jolson• Movies became dominate form of

entertainment • 60 to 100 million people per week

• Movies helped create an American culture

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XefGvxVKrZk (chaplin)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PIaj7FNHnjQ (jazz singer) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H6c_WgxTsMo (mickey)

Page 37: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

The Radio Revolution• 1890, wireless telegraph• Once voice carrying radio was perfected radio became big

business– Programs, commercials, news

• Radio changed society– Politics, sports, music

• Phonographs allowed people to listen to songs at will

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q96gqa2Ds9w

Page 38: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Humans Develop Wings• Orville and Wilbur Wright

– Kitty Hawk, North Carolina– December 17, 1903– Flew for 12 seconds

• After WWI the air industry grew– Flying circuses– 1920 airmail began

• Charles A. Lindbergh, 1927, Spirit of St. Louis – First solo flight across Atlantic, NY to Paris

• Took 33 hours• Huge celebrity after flight and American hero

• Aviation industry took off– Passenger airlines

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WSvA9oz9LA4

Page 39: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

The Dynamic Decade • 1920’s was a time of great change in US• Women found more work• Margaret Sanger began fighting for contraceptives• Sex became less taboo

– Advertisers figured out sex sells• The “flapper” was born

• Sexually liberated women beholden to no one man– Women began to wear shorter skirts, bobbed their hair, and wore one piece bathing suits

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3svvCj4yhYc

Page 40: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Late 19th Century 1920s

Page 41: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

The Dances

- The Shimmy

- The Charleston

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IcemYjTdvZ8 (shimmy)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQSY-2VtBvg (charleston)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZJC21zzkwoE (charleston)

Page 42: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Cultural Liberation

• After WWI a new generation of writers appeared in US• Know as the “Lost

Generation”• Name was given by Gertrude

Stein• American poet living in Paris

• Lost faith in mankind after WWI

• F. Scott Fitzgerald– 1920 This Side of Paradise– 1925 The Great Gatsby

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XycaPM2a4CI

Page 43: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

• Ernest Hemingway– Part of the “Lost Generation”– WWI vet– 1926 The Sun Also Rises– 1929 A Farewell to Arms– 1961 killed himself

Page 44: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

The Harlem Renaissance

Chapter 13 Section 5

Page 45: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Moving on Up, to the East Side

• African-Americans migrated North during WWI– “Great Migration”

• Found work in major industrial cities– Detroit, Pittsburg

• ~200,000 moved to Harlem, NY– Became the epicenter for a flowering of African-

American culture

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RgcJyZA-rrE (cotton club)

Page 46: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

All that Jazz• Some call the 1920’s the “Jazz Age”• Jazz music was created by African Americans• Moved north during the Great Migration• Louis Armstrong, Bessie Smith, Duke Ellington

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gDrzKBF6gDU (louis)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JpVCqXRlXx4 (bessie)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDQpZT3GhDg (duke)

Page 47: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Marcus Garvey• Marcus Garvey

– Jamaican immigrant to Harlem in 1916– Preached Black pride and nationalism and started the “Back to

Africa” movement• Believed in the separation of the races

– Founded the United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA)• Mid 1920s it has 2.5 million members

– Arrested for mail fraud and deported to Jamaica– Inspiration for the Nation of Islam and the Black Power

movement in the 1960s

Page 48: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Literature

• The Harlem Renaissance was not just music, but also Literature– Poems, stories, books, journalists, essays

• Writers explored the pains and joys of being Black

Page 49: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

• Claude McKay

– “If We Must Die”• If we must die, let it not be like hogs

Hunted and penned in an inglorious spot,While round us bark the mad and hungry dogs,Making their mock at our accurséd lot.If we must die, O let us nobly die,So that our precious blood may not be shedIn vain; then even the monsters we defyShall be constrained to honor us though dead!O, kinsmen! we must meet the common foe!Though far outnumbered let us show us brave,And for their thousand blows deal one death-blow!What though before us lies the open grave?Like men we'll face the murderous, cowardly pack,Pressed to the wall, dying, but fighting back!

Page 50: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

THE NEGRO SPEAKS OF RIVERSBy Langston Hughes

I've known rivers: I've known rivers ancient as the world and older than the flow of human blood in human veins.

My soul has grown deep like the rivers. I bathed in the Euphrates when dawns were young. I built my

hut near the Congo and it lulled me to sleep. I looked upon the Nile and raised the pyramids above it. I

heard the singing of the Mississippi when Abe Lincoln went down to New Orleans, and I've seen its muddy bosom turn all golden in the sunset.

I've known rivers: Ancient, dusky rivers. My soul has grown deep like the rivers.

1922

Page 51: The “Roaring”Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 13. A Booming Economy Chapter 13 section 1

Legacy of the Harlem Renaissance

• It gave a voice to African American culture and changed the way Blacks and Whites viewed African American culture (yes..rap/hip hop was inspired by the Harlem Renaissance!)