Chapter Twenty-Three The Twenties, 1920 1929
Chapter Focus Questions How did the second Industrial Revolution transform the economy? What were the promise and limits of prosperity in the 1920s? What were the new mass media and the culture of consumption? How did the Republican Party dominate politics in the 1920s? What were the political and cultural oppositions to modern trends?
Hollywood In the 1920s, the movies were America s most popular form of the new mass culture. A huge, national audience regularly attended movies in grand, majestic theaters. The production center for this dream world was Hollywood, California. A frontier boomtown, dominated by the movie stars who lived opulent lives, Hollywood symbolized Americans dreams of freedom, material success, and the chance to remake one s very identity.
The Second Industrial Revolution The economy underwent a transformation during the 1920s as a second Industrial Revolution took hold. Technological innovations made it possible to increase industrial output without expanding the labor force. Driven by electricity and automated machinery, industry concentrated on producing consumer goods. A housing boom further drove the economy. Chart: Consumer Debt 1920 1931
The Modern Corporation A managerial revolution stressed scientific management and behavioral psychology. Successful corporations worked to: integrate production and distribution diversify products expand industrial research gain control of entire industries Increasingly, a class of salaried executives rather than stockholders made corporate policy.
FIGURE 23.1 Stock Market Prices, 1921 32 Common stock prices rose steeply during the 1920s. Although only about 4 million Americans owned stocks during the period, stock watching became something of a national sport.
FIGURE 23.2 Consumer Debt, 1920 31 The expansion of consumer borrowing was a key component of the era s prosperity. These figures do not include mortgages or money borrowed to purchase stocks. They reveal the great increase in installment buying for such consumer durable goods as automobiles and household appliances.
Welfare Capitalism To improve worker morale and reduce the challenge of unions, corporations employed welfare capitalism. To undercut unions, businesses promoted an open shop in which non-union workers received the same benefits as union workers. Union membership rapidly declined. The AFL showed no interest in organizing workers in the new industries. The courts also adopted a pro-business stance.
The Auto Age The car symbolized the rise of the consumer economy. By 1925, the assembly line at Henry Ford s Highland Park plant completed a car every 10 seconds. Ford paid his workers more than the going rate, reducing turnover while enabling them to be both producers and consumers of his Model T. The car cost $300 three month s wages. The auto industry spurred production of steel, rubber, glass, and petroleum. Road building triggered commercial development along highways, promoting new businesses and changed social habits.
Finished automobiles roll off the moving assembly line at the Ford Motor Company, Highland Park, Michigan, ca. 1920. During the 1920s, Henry Ford achieved the status of folk hero, as his name became synonymous with the techniques of mass production. Ford cultivated a public image of himself as the heroic genius of the auto industry, greatly exaggerating his personal achievements. SOURCE:Brown Brothers.
Until 1924, Henry Ford had disdained national advertising for his cars. But as General Motors gained a competitive edge by making yearly changes in style and technology, Ford was forced to pay more attention to advertising. This ad was directed at Mrs. Consumer, combining appeals to female independence and motherly duties.
Cities and Suburbs The automobile enabled people to move into suburbs. Cities also grew at a fast pace, not only horizontally, but also vertically as new buildings reshaped the skyline.
Exceptions: Agriculture, Ailing Industries Despite the boom in business, many workers and farmers suffered. Agricultural profits steadily declined and the gap between farm and non-farm income widened. Coolidge vetoed efforts to aid farmers, suffering from debts incurred during wartime expansion. Other sick industries included: coal mining which faced competition from oil and natural gas railroads which faced competition from cars and trucks New England textiles which faced competition from low-wage southern producers
Movie-Made America Mass communication media reshaped American culture in the 1920s. Movie ticket sales soared. Publicists whetted American appetites by creating an elegant image for movie stars. Attacked by conservative groups for sexual permissiveness, Hollywood studios came up with a plan of self-censorship by hiring Will Hayes as a morals czar.
Thomas Hart Benton s 1930 painting City Activities with Dance Hall depicts the excitement and pleasures associated with commercialized leisure in the Prohibition era, reflecting urban America s dominance in defining the nation s popular culture. SOURCE:Thomas Hart Benton,City Activities with Dance Hall from America Today,1930. Distemper and egg tempera on gessoed linen with oil glaze 92 x134 1/2 inches.collection, AXA Financial,Inc.,through its subsidiary, The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U.S. AXA Financial,Inc.
Radio Broadcasting Radio developed into the nation s first comprehensive mass entertainment medium. Large companies formed national networks that aired a variety of programs to homes across the country. Building on blackface minstrelsy, Amos n Andy was the first national radio hit show. Radio also helped to commercialize previously isolated forms of music and build a mass following for sports.
New Forms of Journalism The 1920s saw the growth of newspaper tabloids that emphasized crime, sex scandals, gossip columns, and sports. Their popularity forced advertisers to appeal directly to working class and immigrant readers. As in other businesses, journalism saw the trend towards consolidation. The Hearst chain controlled 14 percent of the nation s circulation.
Advertising Modernity Advertising became a thriving industry that promoted consumerism. Advertising agencies employed market research and psychology to stress consumer needs, desires, and anxieties rather than the qualities of the product. They celebrated consumption as a positive good.
This 1920 magazine advertisement touts the wonders of a new model vacuum cleaner. Much of the advertising boom in the post World War I years centered on the increasing number of consumer durable goods, such as household appliances, newly available to typical American families. SOURCE:The Granger Collection,New York (4E791.13).
The Phonograph and the Recording Industry Fueled in part by dance crazes, the recording industry transformed American mass and regional popular culture.
Sports and Celebrity Spectator sports reached unprecedented popularity as athletes took on a celebrity status. Babe Ruth s home run hitting and appetite for publicity helped restore baseball s tarnished image as it recovered from the 1919 Black Sox scandal. Attendance soared, prompting newspapers and radio stations to broaden their coverage. Although African Americans were excluded from major league baseball, the Negro National League (organized in 1920) provided new opportunities.
The Pittsburgh Crawfords, one of the most popular and successful baseball teams in the Negro National League, organized in 1920. Excluded from major league baseball by a whites only policy, black ballplayers played to enthusiastic crowds of African Americans from the 1920s through the 1940s. The Negro leagues declined after major league baseball finally integrated in 1947. SOURCE:1935 Pittsburgh Crawfords, champions Negro National League. National Baseball Hall of Fame Library, Cooperstown,N.Y.
A New Morality? For some people the 1920s saw a new morality symbolized by the flapper who danced to jazz, smoked cigarettes, drank bootleg liquor, and was sexually active. Writers had encouraged a greater degree of openness about sexuality. Advertisers and movie stars used sex to promote a mass culture. Surveys of sexual behavior showed that an increased number of women had sexual relations prior to marriage. The new morality was reflected in American popular culture.
This 1925 Judge cartoon, Sheik with Sheba, drawn by John Held Jr., offered one view of contemporary culture. The flashy new automobile, the hip flask with illegal liquor, the cigarettes, and the stylish new woman were all part of the Roaring Twenties image. SOURCE:The Granger Collection (4E746.21).
War Debts and Reparations The United States emerged from WWI as the strongest economic power and as the world s most important creditor. American officials insisted that former allies pay back the money they had borrowed during the war. In the 1920s, the United States helped Germany refinance their reparations debt and reduced their payments.
Keeping the Peace The United States: participated in naval disarmament conferences participated in arms reduction agreements joined the World Court The ultimate foreign policy goal, however, remained economic expansion. Business and government collaborated to expand United States investments and markets overseas, particularly in Latin America.
Prohibition Rural and small-town Americans were distressed by the growing power of urban culture. Many looked to prohibition as a way to restore public morality, but public demand for alcohol remained strong. As a result, illegal bootlegging proliferated. A battle occurred between wets and drys over the merits of the law. Bootlegging provided a great boost to organized crime, which became a permanent feature of American life.
Immigration Restriction Dating back to the late nineteenth century, the movement to restrict immigration of southern and eastern Europeans accelerated in the twenties. Back by recurring American beliefs in racial inferiority, and fueled by wartime patriotism, the Red Scare, and nativist sentiment, legislation passed that set quotas on annual immigration. Chart: Annual Immigration to the U.S. 1860 1930
FIGURE 23.3 Annual Immigration to United States, 1860 1930
The Ku Klux Klan The Ku Klux Klan was the most effective nativist organization. Hiram W. Evans transformed the Klan into a mass movement by using modern promotional techniques. The Klan attacked not only blacks but Catholics, Jews, and immigrants. The Klan claimed over 3 million members and was a powerful force in Democratic Party politics in the South and in several western and midwestern states. In 1925, the Klan began to fade, in part due to a sex scandal that discredited one of its leaders.
Women members of the Ku Klux Klan in New Castle, Indiana, August 1, 1923. The revived Klan was a powerful presence in scores of American communities during the early 1920s, especially among native-born white Protestants, who feared cultural and political change. In addition to preaching 100 percent Americanism, local Klan chapters also served a social function for members and their families. SOURCE:Ball State University Libraries,Archives &Special Collections,W.A.Swift Photo Collection.
Religious Fundamentalism Religious fundamentalism paralleled political nativism. Fundamentalists rejected the tenets of modern science, particularly evolution. Five states banned its teaching in public schools. William Jennings Bryan and Clarence Darrow squared off in a celebrated trial in Dayton, Tennessee over teaching evolution.
The 1925 Scopes trial attracted an enormous amount of media attention, as well as many anti-evolution crusaders. This group set up shop near the Dayton, Tennessee courthouse.
Harding and Coolidge Warren G. Harding surrounded himself with his Ohio cronies and ran an administration riddled with scandal. Led by Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon, his administration pursued policies that trimmed the budget and reduced the taxes paid by the wealthy. Harding s death in 1923 brought stern, but honest, Calvin Coolidge to office. Coolidge continued the businessgovernment partnership of Harding s term, reducing federal spending, cutting taxes, and blocking congressional initiatives.
Calvin Coolidge combined a spare, laconic political style with a flair for publicity. He frequently posed in the dress of a cowboy, farmer, or Indian chief. SOURCE:Calvin Coolidge in headdress and robes after joining Sioux Indians as Chief Leading Eagle,ca.1928.CORBIS.
Herbert Hoover Herbert Hoover was the most influential figure during the period, serving as secretary of commerce under Harding and Coolidge. He promoted business cooperation by creating trade associations and coordinating conferences to promote business efficiency and facilitated the growing concentration of corporate wealth.
Feminism in Transition Prosperity and progress were unevenly distributed. Once suffrage was gained, women s rights advocates faced a dilemma: should they press for protective legislation or push for legal and civil equality? The National American Woman Suffrage Association: reorganized itself as the League of Women Voters promoted women s involvement in politics and laws protecting women and children Alice Paul s National Woman s Party, opposed protective legislation and pushed for the Equal Rights Amendment. Women continued to enter white-collar professions, though men still dominated the high-paid occupations.
Mexican Immigration Restrictions on European immigration opened up opportunities to Mexicans. Job opportunities in agribusiness attracted Mexican immigrants and substantial, though segregated Mexican barrios grew up in several urban centers. Mexicans were frequently barred from highpaying jobs and were targets of racist campaigns. They established mutual aid societies to assist themselves and to fight for equality. Chart: Mexican Immigration to the U.S., 1920s
FIGURE 23.4 Mexican Immigration to the United States in the 1920s Many Mexican migrants avoided official border crossing stations so they would not have to pay visa fees. Thus these official figures probably underestimated the true size of the decade s Mexican migration. As the economy contracted with the onset of the Great Depression, immigration from Mexico dropped off sharply.
Mexican workers gathered outside a San Antonio labor bureau in 1924. These employment agencies contracted Mexicans to work for Texas farmers, railroads, and construction companies. Note the three Anglo men in front (wearing suits and ties), who probably owned and operated this agency. During the 1920s, San Antonio s Mexican population doubled from roughly 40,000 to over 80,000, making it the second largest colonia in El Norte after Los Angeles. SOURCE:Goldbeck Collection,Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center,University of Texas at Austin.Photo by Summerville (46ND).
The New Negro The 1920s was the era of the New Negro and the Harlem Renaissance. African Americans continued to migrate to northern urban communities. Harlem became a major African-American cultural center as a wide range of artists explored aspects of black life in new ways. New voices of black protest emerged in various quarters. Marcus Garvey emphasized black pride, black-owned businesses, and unity among all people of African descent. Most Harlem residents worked long hours at menial jobs for low pay.
The critic and photographer Carl Van Vechten took this portrait of Harlem Renaissance poet Langston Hughes in 1932. The print next to Hughes reflects the influence of African art, an important source of inspiration for Harlem Renaissance artists and writers. SOURCE:National Portrait Gallery,Smithsouian Institution/Art Resource,New York.
MAP 23.1 Black Population, 1920 Although the Great Migration had drawn hundreds of thousands of African Americans to the urban North, the Southern states of the former Confederacy still remained the center of the African American population in 1920.
Intellectuals and Alienation Gertrude Stein described intellectuals of the 1920s as a lost generation. Writers like Ernest Hemingway and John Dos Passos drew on their WWI experiences and expressed cynicism about society s goals and purposes. F. Scott Fitzgerald questioned the crass materialism of the opulent rich. H. L. Mencken and Sinclair Lewis mocked the values of small town America. Eugene O Neill s plays depicted the darker side of family life and explored racism. T.S. Eliot s The Waste Land used the metaphor of impotence to comment on the postwar world. A group of southern writers known as the Fugitives attacked industrialism.
The Election of 1928 The presidential election of 1928 was a race between urban, Catholic, wet, Al Smith versus small-town, Protestant, dry, Herbert Hoover. Smith s Catholicism was widely attacked. Both sides promised to support business, though Hoover could claim to have been the architect of the 1920s prosperity. Smith lost, but ran strongly in the cities, a harbinger of what lay ahead. Map: The Election of 1928
Clifford K. Berryman s 1928 political cartoon interpreted that year s presidential contest along sectional lines. It depicted the two major presidential contenders as each setting off to campaign in the regions where their support was weakest. For Democrat Al Smith, that meant the West, and for Republican Herbert Hoover, the East. SOURCE:Copyright,1928,Lost Angeles Times.Reprinted by permission.
MAP 23.2 The Election of 1928 Although Al Smith managed to carry the nation s twelve largest cities, Herbert Hoover s victory in 1928 was one of the largest popular and electoral landslides in the nation s history.