Politics and Prosperity ( )

Similar documents
Chapter 14--Mr. Bargen

The Americans (Survey)

POLITICS OF THE ROARING 20 S

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

The Americans: Reconstruction to the 21 st Century

America: Pathways to the Present: Cambridge Ed

POLITICS OF THE ROARING 20 S

SWBAT: Explain how the Presidents of the 1920s affected the United States

Warm-up for Video warm-up

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?

Chapter 13 The 1920s

Post-War America. Section 1

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

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

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

1920s: American Culture and Disillusionment

Return to Normalcy Study Guide

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

The Decade of Normalcy

Americans in 1920 lived in unsettling times. Emerging from the shadow of WWI and putting the back on track became significant issues in the race.

7-6: Modern Era of the 1920s

The Roaring Twenties: The Clash of Traditionalism and Modernism

Conflicted Legacies of World War I

IT S STORY TIME! UNIT 7 THE ROARING 20 s

I. Post-WWI U.S. Economy a. demobilization transition from wartime to peacetime production levels

The Roaring Twenties ( )

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

Economic Overview. Post-war recession Unemployment = 10% Trade cut in half Prices for products dropped 20%

The Western Democracies Stumble. Chapter 13 Section 2

Ch 19-1 Postwar Havoc

WWI: A National Emergency -Committee on Public Information headed by George Creel -Created propaganda media aimed to weaken the Central Powers

CLAIM REASON EVIDENCE

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

Postwar Havoc. Chapter 19 Section 1 From War to Peace Riddlebarger

Speakeasies & Hoovervilles. Pt. A The Twenties

Section 1: From Neutrality to War

CHAPTER 33 Politics of Boom and Bust,

The 1920s see three GOP presidents Warren Harding was elected in 1920

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

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

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

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

Crash and Depression ( )

-Latin America s major role in the global economy was as an exporter of commodities such as wheat, corn, beef, wool, copper, coffee, and oil.

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Western Democracies Between the Wars

VUS.10a: The Roaring 20s

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

Chapter 10. The Jazz Age - The 1920 s

Unit 6 Review Sheets Foreign Policies: Imperialism Isolationism (Spanish-American War Great Depression)

World War I: America s Home Front

Getting On With Business American History Chapter 11 Sacco and Vanzetti Convicted of Murder in a 1920 Robbery Found Guilty Because they Were

AMERICAN HISTORY SEMESTER FINAL STUDY GUIDE

Country Dead Wounded POW/MIA Total Mobilized Austria-Hungary 1,200,000 3,620,000 2,200,000 7,020,000 7,800,000 Belgium 13,716 44,686 34,659 93,061

The Roaring 20s Practice Questions. 1. After World War I, why did American farmers fail to share in the general economic growth of the United States?

Unit 5, Activity 1, Key Concepts Chart

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

Traditionalism and Modernism Clash

Chapter Introduction. Section 1: Causes of the Depression Section 2: Americans Face Hard Times Section 3: Hoover s Response Fails

Chapter 25: Transition to Modern America

THE 1920S ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL HISTORY

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?

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

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Causes of the Great Depression

Power Point Credit: Johnny Burkowski

Unit Seven - Prosperity & Depression

7-4: Modern Era of the 1920s

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

1. In 1914, combined to drag Europe into a world war. 1. Among the powers of Europe, nationalism caused a desire to.

The Roaring 20s: The Age of Excess

An era of prosperity, Republican power, and conflict

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

4.3 - CAUSES & HARDSHIPS OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION. Unit s and the Great Depression Section 3 Causes & Hardships of the GD

Overview: The World Community from

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

The Home Front. Chapter 7 Section 2 Pages

How did conditions in eastern Europe in the late 1800s lead to an increase in Jewish immigration?

Unit 3: New Challenges

Unit 2: Imperialism and Isolationism ( ) The War to End All Wars

Summary The Beginnings of Industrialization KEY IDEA The Industrial Revolution started in Great Britain and soon spread elsewhere.

Chapter 32: The Politics of Boom and Bust,

Hoover as President Ch 21-3

The Volstead Act outlawed the sale and manufacture of alcohol

INDUSTRY COMES OF AGE CHAPTER 24

UNIT III LECTURE NOTES U.S. HISTORY II (231) FRANCIS THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION

Socorro Independent School District US History MP2: 2 nd 9 Weeks

After World War I: The Rise of Communism

Immigration and the Peopling of the United States

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century)

1. The law that divided reservation land among individual Native Americans

Chapter 14 Introduction Section 4 The War s Impact. Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides.

SSWH 15 Presentation. Describe the impact of industrialization and urbanization.

THE GREAT DEPRESSION

Study Guide. Chapter 19, Section 3 (continued) 298 The American Vision. Name Date Class

America: Pathways to the Present. Chapter 8. Politics, Immigration, and Urban Life ( )

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

The U.S. Industrial Revolution Early 20th century. Mr. Raffel 20th Century American History

Create Your Cover Page on The Roaring Twenties Page1

America: Pathways to the Present. Chapter 6. The Expansion of American Industry ( )

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

Chapter Eight The Great Depression

Transcription:

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.

America: Pathways to the Present Chapter 14: Politics and Prosperity (1920 1929) Section 1: A Republican Decade Section 2: A Business Boom Section 3: The Economy in the Late 1920s Copyright 2003 by Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. All rights reserved.

A Republican Decade Chapter 14, Section 1 What events fueled the Red Scare of the early 1920s? What conflicts led to the major labor strikes of 1919? How did Republican leadership during the Harding and Coolidge presidencies shape the 1920s? What issues influenced the presidential election of 1928?

The Red Scare Chapter 14, Section 1 Issues of concern in the presidential election of 1920: Emerging from the shadow of World War I Putting the economy back on track Republican Warren G. Harding called for a return to normalcy. Many Americans hoped that Harding s normalcy would protect them from the spread of Russia s communism, an ideology openly hostile to capitalism and First Amendment freedoms. Some Americans were concerned that the European immigrants entering the United States were Communists or other radicals. Events at home and abroad brought about a Red Scare, an intense fear of communism and other radical ideas.

Red Scare Events Chapter 14, Section 1 Schenck v. U.S. Gitlow v. New York The Palmer Raids Sacco and Vanzetti Charles Schenck mailed letters urging men to avoid military service. Schenck was convicted of breaking the Espionage Act. In his appeals, Schenck said he was exercising his freedom of speech. The Supreme Court said that the government is justified in silencing free speech when there is a clear and present danger. Socialist Bernard Gitlow published calls for the violent overthrow of the government. He was convicted of criminal anarchy. The Supreme Court upheld his conviction, stating that he had urged people to engage in violent revolution. Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer ordered the arrest of thousands of suspected subversives (people trying to overthrow the government) without evidence. Many were innocent, yet more than 500 were deported. Two anarchists were accused of a robbery and murder. Many people believed that they were singled out because they were both radicals and immigrants. After a trial that many believed was unfair, the jury found them guilty and sentenced them to death.

Labor Strikes Chapter 14, Section 1

The Harding Presidency Chapter 14, Section 1 Foreign Policy Domestic Issues The Teapot Dome Scandal Harding and many Americans wanted a policy of isolationism, avoiding political or economic alliances with foreign countries. Harding called for international disarmament, a program in which nations voluntarily give up their weapons. He promoted the expansion of trade and acted to protect business at home. As Americans became more isolationist during the Red Scare, they also became more nativist. Nativism is a movement favoring nativeborn Americans over immigrants. In 1921, Congress passed a law restricting immigration. The law included a quota, or a numerical limit imposed on immigrants. In 1923, corruption scandals rocked Harding s administration. The worst was the Teapot Dome Scandal. Harding s Secretary of the Interior secretly gave drilling rights on government land to two private oil companies in return for illegal payments. There was no evidence that Harding was involved in the scandals. He died while still in office.

The Coolidge Presidency Chapter 14, Section 1 Coolidge assumed the presidency after Harding died. He summed up a major theme of the Republican decade: The chief business of the American people is business. Coolidge supported a laissez-faire approach to business. His economic policies helped fuel the economic boom of the 1920s. Coolidge wanted peace and stability without without getting the United States too deeply involved in other nations. Secretary of State Frank B. Kellogg worked with the French foreign minister to create the Kellogg-Briand Pact. Under this pact more than 60 nations agreed not to threaten each other with war. Unfortunately, there were no provisions for enforcement, and many of the countries that had signed the pact would be at war with each other by 1941.

A Republican Decade Assessment Chapter 14, Section 1 How did the Red Scare contribute to America s policy of isolationism in the 1920s? (A) It made Americans more nativist. (B) It caused a significant American military increase. (C) It helped Americans form stronger relationships with non-communist countries. (D) It decreased U.S. involvement in Latin America. What was the Kellogg-Briand Pact? (A) A treaty outlawing war (B) A treaty outlawing trade with Communist countries (C) A treaty supporting war against Communist countries (D) A treaty supporting international civil liberties Want to link to the Pathways Internet activity for this chapter? Click here!

A Republican Decade Assessment Chapter 14, Section 1 How did the Red Scare contribute to America s policy of isolationism in the 1920s? (A) It made Americans more nativist. (B) It caused a significant American military increase. (C) It helped Americans form stronger relationships with non-communist countries. (D) It decreased U.S. involvement in Latin America. What was the Kellogg-Briand Pact? (A) A treaty outlawing war (B) A treaty outlawing trade with Communist countries (C) A treaty supporting war against Communist countries (D) A treaty supporting international civil liberties Want to link to the Pathways Internet activity for this chapter? Click here!

A Business Boom Chapter 14, Section 2 What role do businesses and consumers play in a consumer economy? How were Henry Ford and the automobile important to the 1920s? In what ways did industrial growth affect the economy of the 1920s? Why did the economic boom bypass some people and benefit others?

A Consumer Economy Chapter 14, Section 2 The 1920s saw the development of a consumer economy, one that depends on a large amount of spending by consumers. Until the 1920s, middle-class Americans generally paid cash for everything. Manufacturers developed installment plans and clever advertising to encourage consumers to buy on credit. Many new electric appliances created a surge in demand for electricity. Between 1913 and 1927, the number of electric power customers quadrupled. By the 1920s, marketers developed a new approach to advertising. Advertisers used psychology to appeal to consumers emotions and insecurities to sell products. As consumption rose so did productivity. A measure of productivity is the Gross National Product (GNP). The GNP is the total value of goods and services a country produces annually. Productivity rose to meet consumer demand, but it also rose because the nation developed new resources, new management methods, and new technologies.

Ford and the Automobile Chapter 14, Section 2 In 1896, Henry Ford perfected his first version of a lightweight gas-powered car. He called it the quadricycle. The improved version was the Model T. Ford wanted to produce a large number of cars and sell them at prices ordinary people could afford. To sell less expensive cars, he adapted the assembly line for his factories. An assembly line is a process in which each worker does one specialized task in the construction of a final product. Ford s success came partly from vertical consolidation controlling the businesses that make up the phases of production. Ford was a complex businessman. His pay rate was very generous, but he used violence to fight unions.

Industrial Growth and Bypassed by the Boom Chapter 14, Section 2 Industrial Growth Automobile making became the nation s largest industry. Thousands of new businesses arose to serve automobile travel. Other non-automobile-related industries grew as well. Limited government regulation (laissez-faire policies) helped the value of businesses to soar. Rapid business expansion opened up opportunities for small companies. Bypassed by the Boom Some Americans struggled to survive during the 1920s. Many unskilled laborers remained poor, and their wages and working conditions did not improve with the boom. Agricultural industries had expanded to meet wartime needs but later failed to uncover new markets. Railroads suffered from shrinking demand, mismanagement, competition from trucking firms, and labor unions that fought against layoffs and wage cuts.

A Business Boom Assessment Chapter 14, Section 2 What was the new approach to advertising in the 1920s? (A) It informed the consumer about the quality of the product. (B) It showed the product s superiority over the competition. (C) It appealed to the emotions and insecurities of the consumer. (D) It helped the consumer to identify the manufacturer. In the United States which group suffered economically in the 1920s? (A) Unskilled laborers (B) Agricultural workers (C) Railroad companies (D) All of the above Want to link to the Pathways Internet activity for this chapter? Click here!

A Business Boom Assessment Chapter 14, Section 2 What was the new approach to advertising in the 1920s? (A) It informed the consumer about the quality of the product. (B) It showed the product s superiority over the competition. (C) It appealed to the emotions and insecurities of the consumer. (D) It helped the consumer to identify the manufacturer. In the United States which group suffered economically in the 1920s? (A) Unskilled laborers (B) Agricultural workers (C) Railroad companies (D) All of the above Want to link to the Pathways Internet activity for this chapter? Click here!

The Economy in the Late 1920s Chapter 14, Section 3 Why did the economy of the late 1920s appear healthy to most Americans? What danger signs were present in the economy of the late 1920s?

Economy Appears Healthy Chapter 14, Section 3 Herbert Hoover won the 1928 election, benefiting from the years of prosperity under previous Republican presidents. Americans had unusually high confidence in the economy in the 1920s. People made risky investments based on the popular notion that everyone ought to be rich. Many employers believed that they could prevent strikes and keep their productivity high with benefits that would meet and exceed the demands of workers. This approach to labor relations is called welfare capitalism. Under welfare capitalism employers raised wages, provided paid vacations, health plans, recreation programs, and English classes for recent immigrants. They even set up company unions to hear the concerns of their workers. As a result of welfare capitalism, organized labor lost members during the 1920s.

Economic Danger Signs Chapter 14, Section 3 Uneven Prosperity Personal Debt Playing the Stock Market Too Many Goods, Too Little Demand Trouble for Farmers and Workers The rich got richer Huge corporations rather than small business dominated industry. Many Americans believed that they could count on future income to cover debt. They bought on installment plans boasting easy terms. The rapid increase of stock prices encouraged: Speculation, the practice of making high-risk investments in hopes of getting a huge return, and Buying on margin, the practice of allowing investors to purchase a stock for only a fraction of its price and borrow the rest at high interest rates. Rising productivity had brought prosperity, but it also created a surplus of goods. Manufacturers had more product than consumers could buy. Farmers unable to pay their debts defaulted on bank loans, which caused rural banks to fail. Coolidge vetoed a farm relief bill. While companies grew wealthy, many factory workers remained poor, especially in distressed industries.

Personal Debt and Income Distribution in the 1920s Chapter 14, Section 3

The Economy in the Late 1920s Assessment Chapter 14, Section 3 Why did employers practice welfare capitalism? (A) To create false demand for goods (B) To prevent strikes and keep productivity high (C) To encourage stock market investment (D) To raise tariffs What is buying on margin? (A) Making high risk investments in hopes of getting a huge return (B) Causing a decrease in the price of a stock by spreading rumors about a company (C) Allowing certain investors to buy stock at a lower price (D) Allowing investors to purchase a stock for a fraction of its price and borrow the rest Want to link to the Pathways Internet activity for this chapter? Click here!

The Economy in the Late 1920s Assessment Chapter 14, Section 3 Why did employers practice welfare capitalism? (A) To create false demand for goods (B) To prevent strikes and keep productivity high (C) To encourage stock market investment (D) To raise tariffs What is buying on margin? (A) Making high risk investments in hopes of getting a huge return (B) Causing a decrease in the price of a stock by spreading rumors about a company (C) Allowing certain investors to buy stock at a lower price (D) Allowing investors to purchase a stock for a fraction of its price and borrow the rest Want to link to the Pathways Internet activity for this chapter? Click here!