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

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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 to return to a normal way of life. Many Americans felt threatened by the Russian Bolsheviks, who urged workers around the world to overthrow capitalism. Anarchists people who believe there should be no government also frightened Americans with bombings in several cities. These fears led to the Red Scare, a period when government officers arrested Communists and others with radical views. The government deported a few hundred of the aliens it arrested but quickly released many others for lack of evidence. Labor and Racial Strife The 1920s brought increased labor unrest and racial tensions, often marked by violence. Steelworkers demanding better wages and eight-hour workdays were accused of being red agitators, forcing an end to their strike. Massachusetts governor Calvin Coolidge called out the National Guard when Boston police officers went on strike for the right to form a union. Distrust of unions led to a sharp drop in union membership in the 1920s. Despite the decline of unions, dynamic African American A. Philip Randolph started the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters Union. African American leader Marcus Garvey opposed integration and supported a back-to-africa movement. Section 2: Desire for Normalcy Harding and Coolidge The Harding and Coolidge administrations favored business and wanted a smaller government. Warren G. Harding won the 1920 presidential election with his promise of a return to normalcy.

Harding gave government jobs to many of his political supporters, many of whom were unqualified or corrupt. Albert Fall, the secretary of the interior, secretly leased government oil reserves in Teapot Dome, Wyoming, to oil company owners. Teapot Dome became a symbol of the corruption in the Harding administration. In the summer of 1923, President Harding died and Vice President Calvin Coolidge was sworn in as President. Coolidge took a hands-off approach to government. He once said, If the federal government should go out of existence, the common run of the people would not detect the difference for a considerable length of time. Under Coolidge, the government cut spending, lowered income tax rates on wealthy Americans and corporations, and overturned laws regulating child labor and women s wages. Coolidge swept the 1924 presidential race with 54 percent of the popular vote. Foreign Policy Harding and Coolidge aimed to limit the role of the United States in foreign affairs. Many Americans supported the policy of isolationism that Harding and Coolidge favored for the nation in world affairs. The Harding and Coolidge administrations actively promoted peace. In 1922, the United States, Japan, Britain, France, and Italy agreed to limit the size of their navies. In 1928, the United States joined 14 other nations in signing a pact that called for outlawing war. Instead of intervening with troops in Mexico, Coolidge negotiated a peaceful settlement. Section 3: A booming Economy Growth in the 1920s The United States experienced amazing economic growth during the 1920s. After World War I, the American economy initially was in a recession but then began a steady growth that lasted most of the decade. In 1922 the gross national product of the United States was $70 billion.

By 1929, the gross national product rose to $100 billion. Employers hired experts to make work more efficient and increase productivity. Mass-production techniques also increased productivity and cut production costs. Employers took steps known as welfare capitalism to build better relationships with workers. More than 60% of American households had electricity, and many consumers purchased electric appliances through installment buying. The Automobile Age The automobile industry stimulated the economy and transformed the ways Americans traveled and lived. During the 1920s, the car became an important part of American life. Henry Ford was a pioneer in making affordable, dependable automobiles. The automobile had an effect on other industries. Roads and highways needed to be built. Gas stations, eateries, and shops were built along roads and highways. The steel, rubber, and glass industries grew. Some industries did not benefit from the economic boom. After the war, farmers had to compete with European agriculture again. Railroad workers suffered as trucks took business from railroads. Coal miners had a difficult time as electricity replaced coal as a power source. As more clothes were made out of synthetic fabrics, cotton producers suffered. Section 4: The Roaring Twenties Social and Cultural Change During the 1920s, social changes affected the role of women and led to new forms of entertainment and culture. The 1920s brought many changes for women. The Nineteenth Amendment guaranteed women in all states the right to vote. Women also ran for election to political offices.

More women took jobs outside the home. The symbol of a liberated woman was the flapper a carefree young woman with short bobbed hair, heavy makeup, and a short skirt. Mass media such as newspapers and radio spread cultural changes quickly to millions. Americans had more leisure time as a result of laborsaving devices or equipment. The motion picture industry offered great entertainment from silent movies to talkies. The radio brought news, concerts, sporting events, and comedies into homes and offered businesses an enormous audience for advertising their products. Jazz music captured the spirit of the era so well that the 1920s are often referred to as the Jazz Age. The rhythm and themes of jazz inspired the Harlem Renaissance in New York City. The African American experience was presented in novels, poems, and short stories. Other writers questioned American ideals and became expatriates. A Clash of Cultures During the 1920s, American society was divided by a clash between traditional and modern values. The temperance movement was rooted in religious objections to drinking alcohol and the belief that society would benefit if alcohol were unavailable. The movement reached its goal in 1919 with the ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which established Prohibition. A continuing demand for alcohol led to widespread lawbreaking, and prohibition was repealed in 1933 with the Twenty-First Amendment. The concerns of native-born Americans led to the upsurge of nativism the belief that nativeborn Americans are superior to foreigners. Congress passed laws responding to Nativist fears that foreigners would take their jobs by establishing a quota system. Another cultural clash in the 1920s involved the role of religion in society. In 1925, Tennessee passed a law making it illegal to teach evolution the scientific theory that humans evolved over vast periods of time.

The Election of 1928 A young high school teacher named John Scopes was convicted of breaking the law, but the Tennessee Supreme Court overturned Scopes s conviction. Prosperity, prohibition, and religion were the major themes of the 1928 election. Republican Herbert Hoover faced Democratic candidate Alfred E. Smith the first Roman Catholic nominee for president in the 1928 election. Hoover won the election due to the prosperity of the 1920s, for which the Republicans took credit, and the religious prejudice against Smith.