usa in the 1920’s
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USA in the 1920’s. Ms Leslie History 12. Things to consider about America’s ‘personality’. American revolution was a rejection of European ideas, culture and monarchy America was Anti-European in it’s attitude towards government structure - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
USA in the 1920’s
Ms LeslieHistory 12
Things to consider about America’s ‘personality’American revolution was a
rejection of European ideas, culture and monarchy
America was Anti-European in it’s attitude towards government structure
They invented the Republic system to ensure no level over government has more power then the other
Because of their past, Americans have an attitude of Moral superiority in relation to European affairs
They believed America was a chance to create the world over again - a Utopia
America’s empire was bigger than Europe’s and had taken territory from the British, Russians, Spanish, the Mexicans and Aboriginals
Yet at the same time wagged their finger at imperialism
After WWIAmerican Business had done well in the
war.Europe continued to buy American goodsFordney-McCumber Act, 1922,
Created high tariffs on imported goods to encourage local spending. Taxes were cut so the public would have more money to spend,
Laissez-faire attitude towards marker adopted – no government involvement with business
Changing climatePrivatization of
telephone, telegraph, cable lines, railways
Soldiers returning home
1920 – coal strikesWoodrow Wilson
becomes ill after Paris Peace Conference. Is replaced by Warren Harding in 1921.
Harding focuses on America
Republicans in power 1920-32Return to policy of isolationismLead the USA through the
Roaring 20’s and into the Dirty Thirties
Warren Harding 1920-24Not an informed presidentRewarded his friends with
govern’t positionsDied in office in Vancouver, BC
Calvin Coolidge - 1924-28Harding’s VPStraight-edged New EnglanderNarrow-minded in that he felt
success in business the only important thing in life
Had nothing to do but bask in the glory of the roaring 1920’s
Herbert Hoover - 1928-32A wealthy mining engineerOrganized relief for war torn
EuropeHad no idea how to deal with the
depression - refused to let the government intervene
DepressionWorld in a
depression immediately after the war
Harding cuts government spending
Business allowed to work with out regulation
ImmigrationTraditionally a nation of diversityStarting to get paranoid about ‘open
door’ policyFeared wage competition from foreigners1917 – minimum literacy rate for
immigrants and no more Asians1920 – Republican party wants a
stronger policy against ‘undesirables’ as they thought immigrants could not assimilate fast enough
Immigration con’t1921 – immigration at 357,000 a
year1924 reduced to 150,000 a yearRacial percentage of immigrants
to be on par with current population
Japanese immigration banned completely
Africans, Jews and Catholics also discriminated against
Ku-Klux Klan Membership increasing 1920-25 there are 5
million members (total US population ~ 100 million)
Mostly in the East and Mid-west where 75% of all African-Americans lived
Believed Jews, Blacks, Catholics, socialists and non-English speakers did not belong in America
KKK Feared their way of
life being lost Would dress up in
their white sheets and terrorize with beatings, tar and feathering, and lynching
Harding ran on a campaign that said he was ‘the Finest pioneer blood, Anglo-Saxon, German, Scotch-Irish and Dutch’ so the government didn’t do much
KKKThe ‘Jim Crow’ laws in the
South were passed preventing blacks from using the same busses, hotels and schools as whites.
Many were barred from voting or participating in the judicial system.
Despite the rampant discrimination, First-Nations were granted full citizenship in 1924 and then forgotten about on reserves.
Prohibition of AlcoholWomen’s
Christian Temperance Union was able to get the USA to go dry from 1920-1933
Enforced in the Constitution in the Eighteenth Amendment in 1919 in the Volstead Act.
This amendment was to curb drunkenness and absenteeism from factories and improve society.
All the ban did was create a new generation of gangsters to illegally supply booze through the means of bootlegging.
Corrupt mayors, like Chicago’s Big Bill’ Thompson allowed the likes of Al Capone and John Torrio to operate openly.
Al Capone made as much at $100 million a year and had many judges, police and politicians on his payroll.
He wasn’t stopped until he was arrested for Not paying his taxes.
Harding himself continued to serve whiskey to White House guests.
Harding died of a heart attack in 1923 and was replaced by Calvin Coolidge (1923-29).
More ProhibitionCoolidge did little to enforce
prohibition eitherBy 1928 there were 30,000 ‘speak
easies’ in New York alone, twice as many as before prohibition.
Speak Easies were secret places for drinking, gambling and prostitution
Bootlegging made enormous profits that were invested into other criminal activities such as gambling and prostitution.
Prohibition was not dropped until 1933.
ProsperityLots of growth for industryRoad infrastructure increasedMore people owned cars,
telephones and radios
Mass Production Revolution1. Assembly line - made things
less expensive2. Buying in installments
(payment plans)3. Increase of cars + increase in
petroleum4. Decline of the railroad5. Massive growth of cities
cars1925 – Henry Ford’s
factories are making a new car every 10 seconds.
Means more steels, rubber and glass needed
America had 5/6 of world’s cars
More road trips = more hotels or restaurants
The suburbs are born
11 million new homes built in 1924
Houses electrified
Vacuums and washing machines!!
Changing Role of Women19th amendment gave women the
right to vote.WWI let them work outside the home,
they did not want to go back in10 million women gainfully employed
by 1928Driving markets – Cotton industry took
a hit when fashion changed to sleeker skirts
Stopped wearing corsets – wale bone no longer needed.
1920 1905
General moodAmericans were generally better
off then ever before. Education was also increased
with literacy rates rising. Jazz clubs were prolific as well as
orchestras. There was little radical activity
and workers were happy.
The down sideAgriculture remained week Although machinery allowed farmers
to over-produce there was no one to sell the surplus too as the world’s nations were producing enough of their own food.
As a result food prices fell and farmers could no longer make enough money to pay their mortgages and the banks took their land.
Bad for industryOver production meant the goods
had less value with no one to buy them.
Workers began to get laid off. Tariffs remained high and
businesses unregulated. Prices were inflated as a result.
Although business profits increased by 72%, wages only increased by 8%.
purchasing on credit became a way of life.
New PresidentCoolidge
decided not to run for election in 1928 and was replaced by Herbert Hoover (1928-32).
Hoover like other Americans believed the economy was unstoppable.
MarketsCompany stock and shares could
be bought on the ‘margin’, meaning the buyer pays a small down payment and takes a loan out for the rest.
Stocks and shares were sold by ‘brokers’ who got their money from bank loans.
The brokers’ livelihood depended on finding buyers for their shares.
Buying on the Margin in the 1920’sYou only needed a 10% down
paymentYou would hope that the stock’s
value would increase so you can sell it for a profit to pay the rest of your loan
This led to ‘over speculation’ and a major cause of Black Tuesday
This is a system everyone bought into.
About a million people bought in to these shares.
As shares rose in value a few began to sell of their shares to make a profit.
Beginning of the endBy 1927 the world economy had
slowed down and less people were consuming.
Housing starts were down, automobile sales were down and food sales were down.
People started to sell their stocks and shares.
The CrashThis created a panic in Oct 1929
and everyone started to sell off their shares as soon as possible.
On ‘Black Tuesday’ (October 29th) 13 million shares were ‘dumped’.
The value for shares plummeted.Hundred of thousands of people
were now indebt as their shares were bought with credit and they sold for less then they were bought for.
Brokers and businessmen jumped out of their office windows on wall street.
Banks went bankrupt as they couldn’t collect on their loans.
And many lost their life savings.
World goes in to a Great Depression
More on that later