Roaring 20 s. From Boom to Bust

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Roaring 20 s. From Boom to Bust"

Transcription

1 Roaring 20 s From Boom to Bust

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

3 1920's collectively known as the "Roaring 20's", or the "Jazz Age" in sum, a period of great change in American Society - modern America is born at this time for first time the census reflected an urban society - people had moved into cities to enjoy a higher standard of living

4 Age of Prosperity Economic expansion Mass Production Assembly Line Age of the Automobile Ailing Agriculture

5 Consumer Economy

6 Mass Media and Communications How do you find out what s going on in the world? ( News, fashion, music, etc..) The 1920s was in many respects the first decade of our modern era. Even as cultural issues divided Americans from different regions or economic levels, technology was beginning to break down other barriers.

7 Mass Media and Communications Radio: Broadcast jazz and Fireside Chats (along with phonograph, radio broke barriers) Movies: Provided escape from Depression-era realities Newspapers and magazines: Shaped cultural norms and sparked fads

8 The Radio 800 stations by 1929 = 10 million families How did the radio impact America?

9 Mass Consumption and the Boom Economy Improved technology Home Appliances that make life easier Radios People bought lots of consumer goods Installment buying Buying on credit = taking it home and paying for it later

10 Leisure Time The growth of cities changed leisure patterns. The average workweek changed from seven days 70 hours to five days 45 hours. Salaries and wages also were on the rise. Movies, radio, and phonographs allowed people to escape their problems and brought about a similar culture. The radio and movies reached all parts of the world.

11 Henry Ford Lowered cost by using mass production assembly line 1 worker = one task All parts interchangeable More than one made at a time Faster = Cheaper

12 Any customer can have a car painted any color that he wants so long as it is black

13 Wanted to build a car that his employees could afford Model T $290 in : 500,000 car 1930: 30 million cars!

14 The Impact of the Automobile Industry

15 Higher wages & more job opportunities Prosperity The 1920s was a period marked by: A return to isolationism Less government intervention. music, art, literature, sports flourish New consumer goods Prohibition- speakeasies, bootleggers Flappers A change in American values and way of life.

16 Early 20 s: Return to Normalcy Belief that America needed to return to a normal life after the war Normalcy=Pre-Progressivism: Political Corruption Anti-Immigration Laissez-faire Isolation Fundamentalism (Religious)

17 Republican Power President Harding Elected 1920 Legacy of Scandals Teapot Dome Died in office

18 Political Corruption President Harding s presidency is marked by scandal Teapot Dome Scandal: Government officials gave government land to oil company. Prohibition: Smuggling alcohol and speakeasies appear and government officials are bribed and corrupted. The age of Al Capone well known gangster

19 The Teapot Dome Scandal I have no trouble with my enemies But my damned friends they re the ones that keep me walking the floor nights!

20 Teapot Dome Secret leasing of federal oil reserves by the secretary of the interior, Albert Bacon Fall. Warren G. Harding transferred supervision of the naval oil-reserve lands from the navy to the Department of the Interior in All secretly granted to Harry F. Sinclair of the Mammoth Oil Company exclusive rights to the Teapot Dome (Wyoming) reserves (April 7, 1922). He granted similar rights to Edward L. Deheny of Pan American Petroleum Company for the Elk Hills and Buena Vista Hills reserves in California ( ).

21 Teapot Dome Continued Shortly after the signing of the Teapot Dome lease, Fall and members of his family had received from an unknown source more than $200,000 in Liberty bonds under circumstances indicating that the bonds came from a company organized by Sinclair. Prior to the execution of the Pan American contracts and leases, Doheny, at Fall s request, sent $100,000 in currency to Fall as a loan that had not been repaid.

22 Political Change The Teapot Dome Scandal bothered Harding so much that he ended up having a heart attack and dying. Calvin Coolidge succeeded Harding as President in 1923 and the U.S. started to prosper under his leadership.

23 President Coolidge The business of America is business. Fordney- McCumber Tariff Smoot-Hawley Tariff No help for farmers Foreign Policy

24 The Red Scare Revolution in Russia brought the Communists to power. Many Americans, frustrated by big business owners, joined the Communist Party. Thousands of strikes in 1919 and 1920 Bombs were sent to government and business leaders.

25 Anti-Immigration Cause: Red Scare Belief of the early 20 s that Communists would try to take over the U.S. A. Mitchell Palmer leader of Red Scare Open immigration: Rise of new Ku Klux Klan New Immigrants most affected by the Red Scare Return of Nativism KKK grows to over 5 million people

26 The Palmer Raids A. Mitchell Palmer, Attorney General, ordered raids to hunt down suspected Communists. Civil rights were ignored Agents searched without a search warrant. People were arrested and held without trial. Immigrants were deported

27

28 The KKK Rises Again The Ku Klux Klan rises to power again believed in 100% Americanism Targeted: Blacks Immigrants Jews Roman Catholics Wantagh, Babylon, LI Mineola, LI Washington, D.C.

29 KKK in Washington 1925

30 Effects of Anti-Immigration Court Case: Sacco & Vanzetti two radical Italian immigrants were arrested, convicted, and executed for murder.

31 Sacco and Vanzetti (1927) Anarchist Italian immigrants convicted of murder Not given fair trial Executed Cleared of charges in 1977

32 Effects of Anti-Immigration Immigration controls: Emergency Quota act (1921) & National Quota Act (1924) Limit the number of Immigrants from dangerous countries.

33 Laissez-faire Return the power of big business Government crackdown on labor unions -labor unions seen as communist supporters

34 Global Policies The United States hope to become isolationist again.

35 1920 Census >50% of all Small Towns v Big Cities Americans lived in Cities Farmers less Important

36 Fundamentalism Religious movement of the era that hoped to restore the morality of America Supporters: Rural areas

37 Scopes Monkey Trial Evolution vs. The Bible Science: City Bible: Rural Evolution is Darwin s Theory that man evolved over time from monkeys The Bible teaches creationism God created man and all the world

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

39 SCOPES TRIAL In March 1925, Tennessee passed the nation s first law that made it a crime to teach evolution Scopes was a biology teacher who dared to teach his students that man derived from lower species John Scopes arrested

40 Fundamentalism Scopes Monkey Trial a science teacher from Tennessee wanted to teach evolution but the school would not allow it and he sued ACLU American Civil Liberties Union backed the teacher William Jennings Bryan represented the creationist Clarence Darrow represented the evolutionist

41 Scopes Trial Fundamentalists believed the Bible was literally true and without error. They rejected Darwin s theory of evolution Evolution human beings had developed from lower forms of life over the course of millions of year The creationists won the trial, but because of the trial, the Fundamentalists fell out of favor

42 Scopes was found guilty and fined $100

43 Scopes Monkey Trial

44 Prohibition 18 th Amendment Volstead Act Gangsters Al Capone

45 Prohibition The 18 th amendment banned the production and sale of alcohol The Volstead Act enforcing Prohibition became the responsibility of the U.S. Treasury Department Granted federal and state governments the power to enforce Prohibition

46 PROHIBITION 18 th Amendment in 1920 illegal to make, sell or transport liquor Prohibition lasted from 1920 to 1933 when it was repealed by the 21 st Amendment

47 PROHIBITION - on manuf. and sale of alcohol adopted in th AMENDMENT an outgrowth of the longtime temperance movement in WWI, temperance became a patriotic mvmt. - drunkenness caused low productivity & inefficiency, and alcohol needed to treat the wounded a difficult law to enforce... organized crime, speakeasies, bootleggers were on the rise Al Capone virtually controlled Chicago in this period - capitalism at its zenith Prohibition finally ended in 1933 w/ the 21st Amendment forced organized crime to pursue other interests

48

49 Prohibition Speakeasies secret bars where you could buy alcohol Crime was glamorized and became big business. Some gangsters had enough money to corrupt local politicians. (organized crime) Al Capone one of the most successful and violent gangsters of the time Bonnie and Clyde, Baby Faced Nelson, John Dillinger all famous during this time period. The Twenty-first Amendment ended Prohibition

50 The Speakeasy

51 Al Capone Bootlegged whiskey from Canada. ran a network of 10,000 speakeasies made $60 million in bootlegging. He killed off the competition (literally) Rise of organized crime and the Mob Prohibition caused a RISE in crime and lawlessness, not a decrease. 21 st Amendment repeals Prohibition.

52 Why Prohibition Failed? 1500 agents were responsible for enforcing 1.Unpopular 2.Led to organized crime 3.Death due to poor quality alcohol 4.Under funded and hard to enforce

53 Al Capone

54 THE TWENTIES WOMAN After World War I, Americans were looking for a little fun in the 1920s Chicago 1926 Why were women able to become more independent after WWI?

55 1920's also brought about great changes for women th Amendment gave them the federal vote after 1920, social circumstances changed too as more women worked outside the home and more women went to college and clamoured to join the professions women didn't want to sacrifice wartime gains - amounted to a social revolt characterized by the FLAPPER/ "new woman" (bobbed hair, short dresses, smoked in public...)

56 19 th Amendment (1920)

57 NEW ROLES FOR WOMEN More women working Usually single or widowed women Many women entered the workplace as nurses, teachers, librarians, & secretaries Income to spend Technology made life easier Stoves, refrigerators, vacuum cleaners Margaret Sanger Birth control movement Family size decreases

58 Traditional Role of Women Flappers: A young woman with short skirts and rouged cheeks who had her hair cropped close in a style known as a bob. Women gained the right to vote with passage of the nineteenth amendment.

59 THE FLAPPER A Flapper was a young woman who embraced the new fashions and urban attitudes. Wanted independence Rebelled against traditional roles

60

61 The 20 s is The Jazz Age The Flappers make up cigarettes short skirts Writers F. Scott Fitzgerald Ernest Hemingway Musicians Louis Armstrong Duke Ellington

62 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

63 Cultural Innovations Talking picture The Jazz Singer was produced and the golden age of Hollywood began. Mass media radio, movies, newspapers, and magazines aimed at a broad audience did more than just entertain. They helped to broaden people s interests and fostered a sense of shared national experience

64 ENTERTAINMENT AND ARTS First sound movies: Jazz Singer (1927) First animated with sound: Steamboat Willie (1928) Walt Disney's animated Steamboat Willie marked the debut of Mickey Mouse. It was a seven minute long black and white cartoon. By 1930 millions of Americans went to the movies each week

65 African American Culture The Great Migration hundreds of thousands of African Americans move from the rural South to industrial cities in the North Harlem Renaissance African Americans created an environment that stimulated artistic development, racial pride, and a sense of community. Langston Hughes (writer), Louis Armstrong (trumpet player), Duke Ellington (bandleader)

66 Harlem Renaissance In the 1920s it was home to a literary and artistic revival known as the Harlem Renaissance

67 WHAT MADE THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE POSSIBLE? Migration of the Negro by Jacob Lawrence Between 1910 and 1920, the Great Migration saw hundreds of thousands of African Americans move north to big cities

68 Harlem Renaissance Writers Langston Hughes (Poet) Zora Neale Hurston (Writer) Famous Jazz Musicians Duke Ellington Louis Armstrong Bessie Smith Cotton Club: famous Jazz Club in Harlem Blacks usually denied admission

69 Black Nationalism Pan-Africanism: aimed to unite people of African descent worldwide Marcus Garvey Universal Negro Improvement Association Aims: African-American economic independence & a Black homeland in Africa

70 Celebrities Babe Ruth &Ty Cobb Charles Lindbergh The Spirit of St. Louis Jack Dempsey

71 Notables Charles Lindbergh first to fly across the Atlantic Babe Ruth may be the best known baseball player Henry Ford the assembly line, his most important invention, also developed the Model T ford. Welfare capitalism Companies allowed workers to buy stock, participate in profit sharing, and receive benefits such as medical care and pensions.

72 Notables Open shop a workplace where employees were not required to join a union. In 1920 Westinghouse Company broadcast one of the first public broadcast in history 1926 National Broadcasting Company (NBC) established a permanent network of stations to distribute daily programs Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) assembled a coast-to-coast network of stations

73 Slides Some of the slides used came from a internet site. Please be aware that I am using them for educational purposes and they may not be usable due to copyright laws.

An era of prosperity, Republican power, and conflict

An era of prosperity, Republican power, and conflict The Roaring 20 s An era of prosperity, Republican power, and conflict 1920's collectively known as the "Roaring 20's", or the "Jazz Age" in sum, a period of great change in American Society - modern America

More information

Post-War America. Section 1

Post-War America. Section 1 Twenties Unit 6 Post-War America Section 1 Outline Red Scare Details: Labor Relations: Details: Immigration Changes Limits: Assembly Line Who and What: Suburbs Details: Consumers Details: Economic Weaknesses

More information

ROARING TWENTIES Fear following World War I 1/15/16

ROARING TWENTIES Fear following World War I 1/15/16 1/15/16 U.S. History 1919-1929 ROARING TWENTIES REVIEWED! Watch the video American Pageant Chapter 31 & annotate the slides. Read pages 412-459 The Americans and add additional notes. Fear following World

More information

The Roaring Twenties: The Clash of Traditionalism and Modernism

The Roaring Twenties: The Clash of Traditionalism and Modernism The Roaring Twenties: The Clash of Traditionalism and Modernism The biggest concern of most Americans following WWI was staying out of future world conflicts This concept led to the rebirth of the following:

More information

Power Point Credit: Johnny Burkowski

Power Point Credit: Johnny Burkowski Power Point Credit: Johnny Burkowski Fundamental Questions Did the Roaring Twenties continue the Progressive Era reforms? Warren G. Harding (R) A Return to Normalcy James M. Cox (D) Eugene V. Debs (Socialist)

More information

An era of prosperity, Republican power,

An era of prosperity, Republican power, The Roaring 20 s An era of prosperity, Republican power, Republican Power President Harding Elected 1920 Legacy of corruption like the Teapot Dome bribery scandal and reduced taxes on businesses Died in

More information

Chapter 13 The 1920s

Chapter 13 The 1920s Chapter 13 The 1920s 1. Red Scare A nationwide fear that Communists might seize power in the Untied States. 2. Palmer Raids A. Mitchell Palmer, the Attorney General of the US organized a series of raids

More information

Mother s in the Kitchen Washing out the jugs; Sisters in the pantry Bottling up the suds; Fathers in the cellar Mixing up the hops; Johnny s on the

Mother s in the Kitchen Washing out the jugs; Sisters in the pantry Bottling up the suds; Fathers in the cellar Mixing up the hops; Johnny s on the Mother s in the Kitchen Washing out the jugs; Sisters in the pantry Bottling up the suds; Fathers in the cellar Mixing up the hops; Johnny s on the Front Porch Watching for the cops! Radio Radio stations

More information

An era of prosperity, Republican power,

An era of prosperity, Republican power, The Roaring 20 s An era of prosperity, Republican power, DBQ #1 President Calvin Coolidge 30 th President 1923-28 By the 1920s, the U.S. had become the leading industrial power in the world. This boom

More information

The Roaring Twenties ( )

The Roaring Twenties ( ) The Roaring Twenties (1918-1929) Post WWI, (return to isolation) Americans are ready to make money and enjoy themselves!!! Reasons for Prosperity in the 1920s.. 1. The Automobile 2. The Development of

More information

! "#$%&'!"()*%+,!-.%(/!01+!2#&3%.4!05+.(%+,! 2+&*%.4,!&.*!6#$&7)'&38!!!!! 9&:+;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! <'&,,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!

! #$%&'!()*%+,!-.%(/!01+!2#&3%.4!05+.(%+,! 2+&*%.4,!&.*!6#$&7)'&38!!!!! 9&:+;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! <'&,,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! ! "#$%&'!"()*%+,!-.%(/!01+!2#&3%.4!05+.(%+,! 2+&*%.4,!&.*!6#$&7)'&38!!!!! 9&:+;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!

More information

Unit 5, Activity 1, Key Concepts Chart

Unit 5, Activity 1, Key Concepts Chart Unit 5, Activity 1, Key Concepts Chart Key Concepts Chart (The Roaring Twenties) Key Concept +? - Explanation Extra Information Great Migration Harlem Renaissance Beginning in the early 20 th century,

More information

CLAIM REASON EVIDENCE

CLAIM REASON EVIDENCE Name #_ Parent Signature: MICRO-LESSON PACKET Roaring 20 s 8 th Social Studies DUE : Directions: Read the following summary of the next unit and answer the questions that follow: _ 1. From this reading,

More information

The 1920s was a decade of change

The 1920s was a decade of change The 1920s was a decade of change Americans experienced increased wealth, consumerism, leisure time, and new forms of entertainment led to a Jazz Age By 1920, more Americans lived in cities than in rural

More information

Chapter 10 Notes: The Jazz Age. Events after World War I made some Americans intolerant of immigrants and foreign ideas.

Chapter 10 Notes: The Jazz Age. Events after World War I made some Americans intolerant of immigrants and foreign ideas. Chapter 10 Notes: The Jazz Age Section 1: Time of Turmoil Fear of Radicalism Events after World War I made some Americans intolerant of immigrants and foreign ideas. As the 1920s began, Americans wanted

More information

Chapter 10. The Jazz Age - The 1920 s

Chapter 10. The Jazz Age - The 1920 s Chapter 10 The Jazz Age - The 1920 s Section 1 Politics Harding took over as President after WW1 (after Wilson) Was generally liked, he was easy going Lots of scandals and corruption however! Hired all

More information

12. League of Nations. 13. Neutrality Acts. 15. Booker T. Washington. 16. W.E.B. DuBois. 17. Great Migration. 18. Harlem Renaissance. 19.

12. League of Nations. 13. Neutrality Acts. 15. Booker T. Washington. 16. W.E.B. DuBois. 17. Great Migration. 18. Harlem Renaissance. 19. Roaring Twenties Vocabulary 1. Sacco and Vanzetti 12. League of Nations 2. Red Scare 1920s 3. Palmer Raids 4. Teapot Dome Scandal 5. Kellogg-Briand Pact 6. Dawes Plan 7. Demobilization 8. Disarmament 9.

More information

Traditionalism and Modernism Clash

Traditionalism and Modernism Clash The Jazz Age Traditionalism and Modernism Clash For the first time, census data reflected that more people lived in the cities than in rural areas. A tension developed between modernists and traditionalists

More information

7-4: THE MODERN ERA OF THE 1920s

7-4: THE MODERN ERA OF THE 1920s 7-4: THE MODERN ERA OF THE 1920s I. Republican Control A. Return to Normalcy i. Republicans, under President Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, and Herbert Hoover returned to power throughout the 1920s.

More information

Name Period Date. 8 th Social Studies What name best fits the 1920 s: Roaring 20 s, Jazz Age, Age of Wonderful Nonsense, Age of Intolerance?

Name Period Date. 8 th Social Studies What name best fits the 1920 s: Roaring 20 s, Jazz Age, Age of Wonderful Nonsense, Age of Intolerance? Name Period Date 8 th Social Studies What name best fits the 1920 s: Roaring 20 s, Jazz Age, Age of Wonderful Nonsense, Age of Intolerance? Background: The 1920s, a prosperous and optimistic time period,

More information

8. Florida land boom. 9. Clemency. 10. Normalcy. 11. Free-enterprise system- 12. Dow Jones Industrial Average- 13. Fiscal policy. 14.

8. Florida land boom. 9. Clemency. 10. Normalcy. 11. Free-enterprise system- 12. Dow Jones Industrial Average- 13. Fiscal policy. 14. Postwar Vocabulary 1. Sacco and Vanzetti 2. Red Scare 1920s 3. Palmer Raids 4. Recession 1920s 5. Teapot Dome Scandal 6. Kellogg-Briand Pact 7. Dawes Plan 8. Florida land boom 9. Clemency 10. Normalcy

More information

Name: Date: Period: VUS.10a: The Roaring 20s. Filled In. Notes VUS.10: The 20s and the 30s 1

Name: Date: Period: VUS.10a: The Roaring 20s. Filled In. Notes VUS.10: The 20s and the 30s 1 Name: Date: Period: VUS10a: The Roaring 20s Filled In Notes VUS10: The 20s and the 30s 1 Objectives about The Roaring 20s VUS10 The student will demonstrate knowledge of key domestic events of the 1920s

More information

OUTLINE 7-6: THE MODERN ERA OF THE 1920s

OUTLINE 7-6: THE MODERN ERA OF THE 1920s OUTLINE 7-6: THE MODERN ERA OF THE 1920s The United States continued its transition from a rural, agricultural economy to an urban, industrial economy led by large companies. Innovations in communications

More information

6. Foreign policy during the 1920 s and early 30s.

6. Foreign policy during the 1920 s and early 30s. 1. Themes: 1920 s has been referred to as Eat, drink & be merry, for tomorrow we die Return to normalcy US turned inward---isolationism Jazz Age first modern era in the U.S. change from a rural society

More information

Conflicted Legacies of World War I

Conflicted Legacies of World War I Name: America s History: Chapter 22 Video Guide Big Idea Questions What journalist in the South wrote about the horrors of lynching? Guided Notes Conflicted Legacies of World War I The Red Scare Great

More information

Note Taking Study Guide A BOOMING ECONOMY

Note Taking Study Guide A BOOMING ECONOMY SECTION 1 A BOOMING ECONOMY Focus Question: How did the booming economy of the 1920s lead to changes in American life? As you read, note specific examples that support the idea that the economy changed

More information

Unit #4: Roaring Twenties

Unit #4: Roaring Twenties Unit #4: Roaring Twenties Warren Harding Republicans and Laissez Faire rule the day! Quote #1: I can t hope to be the best President this country s ever had, but if I can, I d like to be the best loved.

More information

Traditionalism and Modernism Clash

Traditionalism and Modernism Clash The Jazz Age Traditionalism and Modernism Clash For the first time, census data reflected that more people lived in the cities than in rural areas. A tension developed between modernists and traditionalists

More information

Henretta Hinderaker Edwards Self. America s History. Eighth Edition. CHAPTER 22 Cultural Conflict, Bubble, and Burst,

Henretta Hinderaker Edwards Self. America s History. Eighth Edition. CHAPTER 22 Cultural Conflict, Bubble, and Burst, Henretta Hinderaker Edwards Self America s History Eighth Edition CHAPTER 22 Cultural Conflict, Bubble, and Burst, 1919-1932 Ch. 22: Cultural Conflict, Bubble, and Bust 1920-1932 The Big Question: What

More information

VUS.10a: The Roaring 20s

VUS.10a: The Roaring 20s Name: Date: Period: VUS10a: The Roaring 20s Notes VUS10: The 20s and the 30s 1 Objectives about The Roaring 20s VUS10 The student will demonstrate knowledge of key domestic events of the 1920s and 1930s

More information

Test Review: The Roaring 20s / The Jazz Age

Test Review: The Roaring 20s / The Jazz Age Name Class Pd Test Review: The Roaring 20s / The Jazz Age I. WHO TO KNOW William Jennings Bryan Calvin Coolidge KKK Glenn Curtiss Duke Ellington Charles Lindbergh Louis Armstrong Bessie Smith Fundamentalist

More information

+ Postwar Society. Demobilization. The Red Scare. Industry: convert to consumer goods. Impact of Bolshevik Revolution Palmer Raids

+ Postwar Society. Demobilization. The Red Scare. Industry: convert to consumer goods. Impact of Bolshevik Revolution Palmer Raids + Postwar Society Demobilization Industry: convert to consumer goods The Red Scare Impact of Bolshevik Revolution Palmer Raids Root out subversives + Postwar Society Labor Conflict Strikes of 1919 Race

More information

American industries boomed in the 1920s, changing many Americans way of life.

American industries boomed in the 1920s, changing many Americans way of life. Boom Times The Big Idea American industries boomed in the 1920s, changing many Americans way of life. Main Ideas President Harding promised a return to peace and prosperity. Calvin Coolidge supported a

More information

Jeopardy. People Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400

Jeopardy. People Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Jeopardy People Immigrants African Americans Business Misc. Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q

More information

during the 1920s? Write down one word to label or describe the 1920s

during the 1920s? Write down one word to label or describe the 1920s Aim: How did American life change Do Now: during the 1920s? Write down one word to label or describe the 1920s Friday 3/9 Vocabulary Quiz Cause/Effect, Cite, Compare/Contrast, Explain, Analyze. Roaring

More information

The United States During the Jazz Age

The United States During the Jazz Age + The United States During the Jazz Age + Themes of the Roaring Twenties Social Fundamentalism vs. Modernity Advent of Mass Culture Political Isolationism Limited Government Economic Consumerism Unrestricted

More information

7-6: Modern Era of the 1920s

7-6: Modern Era of the 1920s 7-6: Modern Era of the 1920s The United States continued its transition from a rural, agricultural economy to an urban, industrial economy led by large corporations. Innovations in communications and technology

More information

Review: fill these in to help you prepare for the first three quizzes.

Review: fill these in to help you prepare for the first three quizzes. Review: fill these in to help you prepare for the first three quizzes. Thursday s quiz: Warren G. Harding promised a return to after the upsets of 1919 and 1920 that included a, or an economic slump. Then

More information

The Roaring 20s: The Age of Excess

The Roaring 20s: The Age of Excess The Roaring 20s: The Age of Excess Politics in the 1920s: The Republican Era Warren G. Harding (1921-1923) Most remembered for the scandals Numerous affairs Too many close friends holding high positions

More information

Decade notable for obsessive interest in celebrities Sex becomes an all-consuming topic of interest in popular entertainment Eat, drink & be merry,

Decade notable for obsessive interest in celebrities Sex becomes an all-consuming topic of interest in popular entertainment Eat, drink & be merry, Decade notable for obsessive interest in celebrities Sex becomes an all-consuming topic of interest in popular entertainment Eat, drink & be merry, for tomorrow we die Return to normalcy US turned inward---isolationism

More information

SSUSH15 The student will analyze the origins and impact of U.S. involvement in World War I. d. Describe passage of the Eighteenth Amendment,

SSUSH15 The student will analyze the origins and impact of U.S. involvement in World War I. d. Describe passage of the Eighteenth Amendment, 1919-1929 SSUSH15 The student will analyze the origins and impact of U.S. involvement in World War I. d. Describe passage of the Eighteenth Amendment, establishing Prohibition, and the Nineteenth Amendment,

More information

Video Quiz. 1. What happened in Dayton, Tennessee in 1925? 2. What did Charles Lindbergh do in 1927? What was the name of his plane?

Video Quiz. 1. What happened in Dayton, Tennessee in 1925? 2. What did Charles Lindbergh do in 1927? What was the name of his plane? Video Quiz 1. What happened in Dayton, Tennessee in 1925? 2. What did Charles Lindbergh do in 1927? What was the name of his plane? 3. What was the Harlem Renaissance? 4. Where in NY did many of the city

More information

Speakeasies & Hoovervilles. Pt. A The Twenties

Speakeasies & Hoovervilles. Pt. A The Twenties Speakeasies & Hoovervilles Pt. A The Twenties Post-War Review 1. What did Harding mean by a Return to Normalcy? 2. How was nativism reflected in various government policies and social trends in the 20s?

More information

Chapter Summary. Section 1: A Booming Economy. Section 2: The Business of Government

Chapter Summary. Section 1: A Booming Economy. Section 2: The Business of Government Chapter Review 25 Section 1 Chapter Summary Section 1: A Booming Economy The mass production of automobiles changed the U.S. economy, creating new industries. Easier travel gave Americans a new sense of

More information

Name Period OBJECTIVE After World War I, why did most Americans distrust foreigners?

Name Period OBJECTIVE After World War I, why did most Americans distrust foreigners? Name Period OBJECTIVE 4.5 THE RED SCARE PALMER RAIDS 1. After World War I, why did most Americans distrust foreigners? 2. What factors led to the U.S. government s efforts to root out anarchists in the

More information

CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION

CONCEPTUAL UNIT QUESTION UNIT VI: The Boom to Bust Period This unit will address the following objectives: SOL USII.5 a) explaining how developments in transportation (including the use of the automobile), communication, and rural

More information

The Roaring 20s. Time Period: to. Name. Class

The Roaring 20s. Time Period: to. Name. Class The Roaring 20s Time Period: to Name Class 1. Anarchist person who is anti-gov t 1920s VOCABULARY 2. Bootlegger person who smuggled alcohol into the US during Prohibition 3. Fad an activity or fashion

More information

Chapter 25: Transition to Modern America

Chapter 25: Transition to Modern America Chapter 25: Transition to Modern America AP United States History Week of April 18, 2016 The Second Industrial Revolution During the technology-fueled industrial boom from 1922 to 1929, industrial output

More information

1920s Postholes Review Sheet 13-14

1920s Postholes Review Sheet 13-14 1920s Postholes Review Sheet 13-14 I. Political A. Fear: Communism and Immigration 1. Essential Question: Why was communism such a threat in 1920s America? 1. What president was assassinated in 1920? 2.

More information

STANDARDS. a. Explain how rising communism and socialism in the United States led to the Red Scare and immigrant restriction.

STANDARDS. a. Explain how rising communism and socialism in the United States led to the Red Scare and immigrant restriction. AFTER WORLD WAR I STANDARDS SSUSH15 The student will analyze the origins and impact of U.S. involvement in World War I. d. Describe passage of the Eighteenth Amendment, establishing Prohibition, and the

More information

American History. Chapter 22: The New Era

American History. Chapter 22: The New Era American History Chapter 22: The New Era Sources: American History: Connecting with the Past (Fifteenth Edition) Give Me Liberty!: An American History (Third Edition) American Pageant (Fourteenth Edition)

More information

7-4: Modern Era of the 1920s

7-4: Modern Era of the 1920s 7-4: Modern Era of the 1920s Capitalist Logic All people are motivated BY ECONOMIC SELF-INTEREST (Profit) Income can only be obtained by providing a product or service to society You can only benefit if

More information

Cultural Conflicts of the 1920s

Cultural Conflicts of the 1920s Cultural Conflicts of the 1920s Cultural conflicts present during the 1920s Conflicts in beliefs and values as a result of the rapid social changes of the 1920s The divides could be seen along the following

More information

Politics Consumer Changes Immigration Xenophobia Prohibition Scopes Monkey Trial Jazz & Flappers

Politics Consumer Changes Immigration Xenophobia Prohibition Scopes Monkey Trial Jazz & Flappers Politics Consumer Changes Immigration Xenophobia Prohibition Scopes Monkey Trial Jazz & Flappers The 1920 Election The 1920 Election Americans elect Warren G. Harding (R) Slogan: Return to Normalcy US

More information

THE CHANGING WAYS OF LIFE (13-1) I. Main Idea: Americans experienced cultural conflicts as customs and values changed in the 1920s.

THE CHANGING WAYS OF LIFE (13-1) I. Main Idea: Americans experienced cultural conflicts as customs and values changed in the 1920s. Ch 13 Class Notes NAME DATE PERIOD THE CHANGING WAYS OF LIFE (13-1) I. Main Idea: Americans experienced cultural conflicts as customs and values changed in the 1920s. II. III. IV. Rural and Urban Differences

More information

Create Your Cover Page on The Roaring Twenties Page1

Create Your Cover Page on The Roaring Twenties Page1 Create Your Cover Page on The Roaring Twenties Page1 SOL Standard USII. 6a Results of improved transportation brought about by affordable automobiles Greater mobility Creation of jobs Growth of transportation-related

More information

American Life in the Roaring Twenties Chapter 31

American Life in the Roaring Twenties Chapter 31 American Life in the Roaring Twenties 1919-1929 Chapter 31 Red Scare Bolshevik Revolution created a fear of communism in America Labor unions, political protestors, social reformers were accused of being

More information

2. To obtain liquor illegally,drinkers went underground to hidden nightclubs known as A. speakeasies. C. tenements. B. penthouses. D. tea rooms.

2. To obtain liquor illegally,drinkers went underground to hidden nightclubs known as A. speakeasies. C. tenements. B. penthouses. D. tea rooms. Name: Date: Choose the letter of the best answer. 1. It was difficult to enforce the laws governing prohibition for all of the following reasons except A. many people were determined to break C. many law

More information

Name Date MOD. United States History Section 11:3

Name Date MOD. United States History Section 11:3 Name Date MOD United States History Section 11:3 [Slide 1] Objectives Compare economic and cultural life in rural America to that in urban America. Discuss changes in U.S. immigration policy in the 1920s.

More information

Modern Times. Election of Results of Election. Republicans in Power. War Veterans. Regulations relaxed 3/12/2014. Republicans Warren Harding

Modern Times. Election of Results of Election. Republicans in Power. War Veterans. Regulations relaxed 3/12/2014. Republicans Warren Harding Election of 1920 Chapter 23 Modern Times Republicans Warren Harding promised normalcy Democrats James Cox / FDR referendum on League of Nations Socialists Eugene Debs Results of Election Harding easily

More information

1920s: American Culture and Disillusionment

1920s: American Culture and Disillusionment 1920s: American Culture and Disillusionment 1 Learning Objectives and Thematic Questions 1. Analyze the movement toward social conservatism and the cultural conflicts over the issues of race, religion,

More information

The Americans (Survey)

The Americans (Survey) The Americans (Survey) Chapter 20: TELESCOPING THE TIMES Politics of the Roaring Twenties CHAPTER OVERVIEW Americans lash out at those who are different while they enjoy prosperity and new conveniences

More information

The Decade of Normalcy

The Decade of Normalcy The Decade of Normalcy Name: Class: The decade that followed WWI differed considerably from the years that came before it. Voters turned to leaders who promised to turn the country away from European affairs

More information

Answer the following questions by reviewing main events, defining terms, and analyzing significance in the spaces provided.

Answer the following questions by reviewing main events, defining terms, and analyzing significance in the spaces provided. Name: Class Period: Due Date: / / Reading Assignment: Chapter 23 in AMSCO or other resource covering the 1920s. Directions: 1. Pre-Read: Read the prompts/questions within this guide before you read the

More information

THE ROARIN TWENTIES AND GREAT DEPRESSION STRUGGLES AND TRIUMPHS

THE ROARIN TWENTIES AND GREAT DEPRESSION STRUGGLES AND TRIUMPHS THE ROARIN TWENTIES AND GREAT DEPRESSION STRUGGLES AND TRIUMPHS THE ROARIN TWENTIES THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION The Russian Revolution, which occurred in 1917, was led by the Bolsheviks, who were led by Vladimir

More information

Chapter 30: The War to End War,

Chapter 30: The War to End War, APUSH CH 30+31 Lecture Name: Hour: Chapter 30: The War to End War, 1917-1918 I. The War to End All Wars A. The U.S. Moves Closer to War 1. In Early February, Germany launched unrestricted submarine warfare

More information

THE EARLY 20 TH CENTURY s-1930s

THE EARLY 20 TH CENTURY s-1930s THE EARLY 20 TH CENTURY 1920 s-1930s TRADITIONAL TO MODERN 20s represent a dramatic transition from traditional America into Modern America Traditional Ideals Vs. New Modern Ideals: Psychology- Sigmund

More information

Roaring 20's Practice Test

Roaring 20's Practice Test Roaring 20's Practice Test Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. What caused the sharp rise in unemployment after World War I? 1) Factories using

More information

AP U.S. History. The Twenties (1920s): An Overview

AP U.S. History. The Twenties (1920s): An Overview AP U.S. History The Twenties (1920s): An Overview Analyze the origins and outcomes of the intense cultural conflicts of the 1920s. In your response, focus on TWO of the following: Immigration, Prohibition,

More information

History Ch 20: From Business Culture to Great Depression: The Twenties, 1920, /03/2014

History Ch 20: From Business Culture to Great Depression: The Twenties, 1920, /03/2014 History Ch 20: From Business Culture to Great Depression: The Twenties, 1920, 1932 03/03/2014 The Business of America A Decade of Prosperity Economic growth Cooperation between business and government

More information

Unit 3: New Challenges

Unit 3: New Challenges Unit 3: New Challenges The Roaring 20s,, and Beginnings of a Second World War 1920-1941 Unit Overview: The 1920 s are often remembered for the upbeat, boisterous characteristics that earned the decade

More information

American History Unit 23: Roaring 20s and the Great Depression

American History Unit 23: Roaring 20s and the Great Depression American History Unit 23: Roaring 20s and the Great Depression Prohibition I. Prohibition A. In 1919, the United States adopted the 18th Amendment. 1. Prohibited the manufacturing or selling of alcoholic

More information

The Roaring Twenties,

The Roaring Twenties, 1 Name: Due Date: Class Period: Unit 7 exam score goal: AP exam score goal: Fight For It! The Roaring Twenties, 1919 1929 APUSH Review Guide for American Pageant chapters 32 & 33 / AMSCO chapter 23 Directions

More information

Post War Recession. The

Post War Recession. The STAAR Review 7 The Twenties America would enter a new age of prosperity with automobiles, telephones, and electricity making life better. American s began focusing on making more money and enjoying themselves.

More information

Business Doctrine. Return of old guard conservative Republicanism. Death of TR (1919) War Disillusionment

Business Doctrine. Return of old guard conservative Republicanism. Death of TR (1919) War Disillusionment Ch 23 The 1920 s EQ s What were the promises and limits of prosperity in the 1920s? How and why did the Republican Party dominate 1920s politics? How did the new mass media reshape American culture? Which

More information

Politics and Prosperity ( )

Politics and Prosperity ( ) America: Pathways to the Present Chapter 14 Politics and Prosperity (1920 1929) Copyright 2003 by Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. All rights reserved.

More information

Big Idea Questions Guided Notes Areas of Concern The New Curriculum. Key Concept 7.2, I

Big Idea Questions Guided Notes Areas of Concern The New Curriculum. Key Concept 7.2, I Name: Key Concept 7.2 Video Guide Big Idea Questions Guided Notes Areas of Concern The New Curriculum Key Concept 7.2 A revolution in communications and transportation technology helped to create a new

More information

Return to Normalcy- return to a simply, care free, and safe life Isolationism- US wants to stay out of international affairs Nativism

Return to Normalcy- return to a simply, care free, and safe life Isolationism- US wants to stay out of international affairs Nativism 1920 s- CH 31 P1 Objectives Analyze the rise of Xenophobic feelings in the US and how it was manifested in the rise of the KKK, Anti-Communist sentiment, and Anti- Immigrant feelings Trace the development

More information

Goal 9 Prosperity and Depression

Goal 9 Prosperity and Depression Goal 9 Prosperity and Depression The Roaring Life of the 1920 s Chapter 16 Objective 9.04: Describe challenges to traditional practices in religion, race, and gender. Changing ways of life Rural and Urban

More information

Return to Normalcy Study Guide

Return to Normalcy Study Guide 10 points Return to Normalcy Study Guide 1. Who was the person who was appointed as the director of the new anti-radical division of the justice department? 2. List the events included in the limiting

More information

Unit Seven - Prosperity & Depression

Unit Seven - Prosperity & Depression Unit Seven - Prosperity & Depression Study online at quizlet.com/_1fo80h 1. Agricultural Adjustment (AAA) 4. Calvin Coolidge 2. Bonus Army (FDR) 1933 and 1938, Helped farmers meet mortgages. Unconstitutional

More information

Warm-up for Video warm-up

Warm-up for Video warm-up Warm-up for 20-1 Video warm-up How do you react when you meet someone with very different views from your own? Do you engage them in dialogue? How might these people be treated? soldiers faced unemployment,

More information

AP/Dual Credit U.S. History Lagleder U5

AP/Dual Credit U.S. History Lagleder U5 Name: AP/Dual Credit U.S. History Lagleder U5 Unit 5 Key Terms: The Best of Times & the Worst of Times **The most important thing to know about these key terms is SO WHAT?? Why are these terms significant

More information

A Unique, Prosperous, and Discontented Time CHAPTER 21

A Unique, Prosperous, and Discontented Time CHAPTER 21 1 A Unique, Prosperous, and Discontented Time 1919-1929 CHAPTER 21 21.1 Learning Objectives 2 Explain how events at the end of World War 1 shaped the decade that followed. Fundamental Question To what

More information

Economic Growth. By Andrew Brown, Eliana Sanchez, and Larriance Fairley

Economic Growth. By Andrew Brown, Eliana Sanchez, and Larriance Fairley Economic Growth By Andrew Brown, Eliana Sanchez, and Larriance Fairley Advertisements Consumer Revolution is when a flood of new, affordable goods, become available to the public. Installment buying is

More information

End of the war November, Germany signs armistice ending conflict

End of the war November, Germany signs armistice ending conflict World War I Origins of WWI nationalism Germany and Italy imperialism competition over colonies militarism war is glorious and beneficial alliances Triple Alliance - Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy Triple

More information

JEOPARDY. Roaring 20 s / Great Depression

JEOPARDY. Roaring 20 s / Great Depression JEOPARDY Roaring 20 s / Great Depression Roaring 20 s 1920 s Politics Great Depression The New Deal Miscellaneous 100 pts 100 pts 100 pts 100 pts 100 pts 200 pts 200 pts 200 pts 200 pts 200 pts 300 pts

More information

A Clash of Values CHAPTER 8 SECTION 3 US HISTORY (EOC)

A Clash of Values CHAPTER 8 SECTION 3 US HISTORY (EOC) A Clash of Values CHAPTER 8 SECTION 3 US HISTORY (EOC) Essential Question: How did newfound prosperity change American life in the 1920s? Lesson Objectives: 1 2 3 Students will be able to explain how social

More information

Chapter 30: The War to End War,

Chapter 30: The War to End War, APUSH CH 30+31 Lecture Name: Hour: Chapter 30: The War to End War, 1917-1918 I. The War to End All Wars A. The U.S. Moves Closer to War 1. In Early February, Germany launched unrestricted submarine warfare

More information

Period 7 ( ) Timeline of Major Events Part 2: (Roaring 20s through WWII)

Period 7 ( ) Timeline of Major Events Part 2: (Roaring 20s through WWII) Name Date Period Period 7 (1890-1945) Timeline of Major Events Part 2: 1921-1945 (Roaring 20s through WWII) Key Concepts: The transformation of the United States from an agricultural to an increasingly

More information

Chapter 14--Mr. Bargen

Chapter 14--Mr. Bargen Name: Class: Date: Chapter 14--Mr. Bargen Matching Match each item with the correct statement below. You will not use all the items. a. speculation b. quota c. consumer economy d. buying on margin e. isolationism

More information

UNIT 2. The Twenties

UNIT 2. The Twenties UNIT 2 The Twenties ELECTION OF 1920 R Warren G. Harding/Calvin Coolidge Return to normalcy Huge majority of votes came from women D James Cox (Ohio)/FDR Easily defeated by Harding Socialist Eugene Debs

More information

POLITICS OF THE ROARING 20 S

POLITICS OF THE ROARING 20 S POLITICS OF THE ROARING 20 S Politics of the Roaring Twenties The United States seeks postwar normality and isolation. The standard of living soars amid labor unrest, immigration quotas, and the scandals

More information

The Americans: Reconstruction to the 21 st Century

The Americans: Reconstruction to the 21 st Century Politics of the Roaring Twenties The United States seeks postwar normality and isolation. The standard of living soars amid labor unrest, immigration quotas, and the scandals of the Harding administration.

More information

Changing Minority Roles & Religious Fundamentalism

Changing Minority Roles & Religious Fundamentalism Changing Minority Roles & Religious Fundamentalism Pseudo-science that taught that the unfit or inferior should not be allowed to have children, since they would pass on their undesirable genetic traits

More information

Ch 19-1 Postwar Havoc

Ch 19-1 Postwar Havoc Ch 19-1 Postwar Havoc The Main Idea Although the end of World War I brought peace, it did not ease the minds of many Americans, who found much to fear in postwar years. Content Statement 12/Learning Goal

More information

WARM UP. 1 Create an Red Scare (An3-Communist) poster using the informa3on gathered in class and online.

WARM UP. 1 Create an Red Scare (An3-Communist) poster using the informa3on gathered in class and online. WARM UP 1 Create an Red Scare (An3-Communist) poster using the informa3on gathered in class and online. 2 Try to persuade the American people into being afraid of Communism similar to the events that followed

More information

POLITICS OF THE ROARING 20 S

POLITICS OF THE ROARING 20 S POLITICS OF THE ROARING 20 S SECTION 1: AMERICAN POSTWAR ISSUES The American public was exhausted from World War I Public debate over the League of Nations had divided America An economic downturn meant

More information

Rosenleaf s Notes - 1

Rosenleaf s Notes - 1 Rosenleaf - 1920s Notes - 1 THE 1920 S Prosperity, good times, come on buddy-- have another drink, buy some stock on margin... It s ok... Everybody s doin it! History is BUNK! The Jazz Age will last FOREVER!...

More information

From The Roaring 20s to the Great Depression

From The Roaring 20s to the Great Depression From The Roaring 20s to the Great Depression The Roaring 20 s After the devastation of WWI, the 1920 s were seen as a time of relief, peace, and discovery in America America was in an age of unprecedented

More information