Chapter 25: Transition to Modern America

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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 doubled, GNP grew 40%, and national per-capita income increased by 30% The auto industry became the largest in the US in the 1920s Auto changed pattern of city life: suburbs developed Also led to development in industries supporting autos, such as filling stations Problem: although Americans had an appetite for cars, how many would they actually buy, year over year? Electrical industry also grew quickly, as well as film, radio, television Vaudeville (inexpensive variety show) often featured white actors in blackface, perpetuating racial stereotypes of blacks Huge emphasis on advertising and marketing Economic weaknesses were present, however: overspeculation and mismanagement in railroads, postwar cutbacks hurt farmers Urban workers did not share in affluence of decade; organized labour could not advance workers interests Unequal distribution of wealth; much in income gains went into the stock market

City Life in the Jazz Age In the 1920 census, urban population passed rural population, and the city became the focal point of American life. The biggest sign of this new urbanization was the skyscraper Institution of the family began to break down Worked worked and voted, but had low-paying jobs Alice Paul s National Women s Party tried but failed to get the Equal Rights Amendment passed Women rebelled against Victorian restraints Rejection of traditional values: the flapper, drinking, smoking, increase in divorce rate Also, prolonged adolescence further strained the family The Roaring Twenties: prohibition, sports, and sex, and emergence of American heroes Charles Lindbergh first person to fly solo across the Atlantic Amelia Earhart pioneering female aviator George Herman Babe Ruth iconic baseball superstar Jack Dempsey world championship boxer

City Life, Part II: The Prohibition Era Although the Eighteenth Amendment banned the manufacture, sale, and distribution of alcohol, there was widespread defiance of the law Result of rural effort by Anti-Saloon League, urban progressive concern over drunkenness Drinking remained fashionable among wealthy The Prohibition sharpened the urban-rural divide Era led to emergence of bootleggers and speakeasies Complexity and profit potential of supplying liquor led to organized crime Increase in crime rate in cities Al Capone (pictured) J. Edgar Hoover, Eliot Ness

The Flowering of the Arts While the rise to prominence of films, radio broadcasting, and mergers and consolidations within the newspaper industry contributed to a distinct national culture, the greatest cultural advance of the decade was in literature Literature, especially the Lost Generation, reflected a sense of disillusionment with American life T. S. Eliot, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, H. L. Mencken Harlem emerged as an African-American cultural centre the Harlem Renaissance African Americans migrating northward brought a form of jazz music known as the blues Literature: Zora Neale Hurston Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937), Langston Hughes Generally, all writers assailed the conformity and materialism of the contemporary scene Isn t it ironic that the writers saw cracks in the America of the 1920s, but the economists and businessmen didn t?

The Rural Counterattack As the United States was industrializing and its population shifting to urban areas, social tensions heightened. Much of this counterattack came from rural America, and was further fueled by aggressive nationalism following the First World War In the city, rural Americans saw all of the evils of modern life Saloons, whorehouses, ghettos, communist cells, alcoholism, free love Red scare (1919) reflected the fear of Marxism and the Russian Revolution Attorney General Mitchell A. Palmer launched Palmer raids against foreign-born radicals Execution of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti (1927) capped decade of bigotry and intolerance Schenck v. U.S. (no free speech if clear and present danger), Gitlow v. New York (upheld criminal anarchy conviction) Reemergence of the KKK, 1915 Fueled by postwar fears, Klan also targeted Italians, Russians, Jews, Catholics Gained control of legislatures, appealed to poor and ignorant Violence began to erode support for Klan nationwide Is there a parallel between the Klan of the 1920s and general xenophobia and intolerance as a result of Islamic terrorism in the world today?

The Rural Counterattack, Part II: Immigration The most successful outlets of the rural counterattack of the 1920s were immigration restrictions and traditional religious beliefs Immigration in the late 1800s led to an effort to restrict further European immigration 1917: Congress passed literacy test; war also resulted in decline in immigration 1921: Congress passed emergency immigration act 1924: National Origins Quota Act, which survived until 1960s Limited European immigration to 150,000 per year Thanks to technology, large corporations did not need immigrants as much Growing need for unskilled labour led to Mexican immigration Fundamentalist challenge: rural Americans, alienated from city life, held onto traditional religious beliefs Scopes trial (1925) pitted Tennessee law against teaching evolution against ACLU

Politics of the 1920s: The Republican Decade Political the 1920s was a decade of Republican leadership. Beneath the surface, the embattled Democratic Party began building an electoral coalition that would eventually remain in force until the 1980s Warren Harding won the 1920 election not heroism but healing, not nostrums but normalcy Sought return to traditional Republican policies Congress passed emergency tariff increase in 1921 Treasury Secretary Mellon pushed for lower corporate, personal income taxes Government collected less tax revenue; wealthy received the biggest relief Farm problem was overproduction; tariffs did not address this Teapot Dome scandal (posthumously) ruined Harding s reputation Oil promoters bribed Interior Secretary for leases on naval oil reserves

Politics of the 1920s, Part II: The Democrats The pace of industrialization and urbanization split the Democrats into two factions: traditional rural/western KKK, Prohibition, fundamentalism vs. new Democrats, who tended to be immigrants, Catholic, Jewish, and predominantly urban Height of Democratic split was 1924 Convention featured competing rural and urban factions Nominated John W. Davis, who lost by a huge margin to Calvin Coolidge However, Democrats began to gain against GOP majority in Congress 1926: also made House and Senate gains 1928 election: Democrats nominated Irish-German Catholic Al Smith, from New York City Republicans nominated Protestant, old-stock Herbert Hoover, who won support of old-line Democrats Although Hoover won, Smith won majorities in twelve largest cities Much like how writers saw cracks in the America of the 1920s, the Democratic inroads into Republican dominance in the 1920s foreshadowed their electoral success in the 1930s and 1940s