Chapter 9 A Century of Change
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Transcript Chapter 9 A Century of Change
Chapter 9
A Century of Change
Lesson 1: Protecting Our Country
Ch. 9 Vocabulary
neutral
stock
depression
unemployment
erosion
inflation
discrimination
desegregate
civil rights
boycott
nonviolence
Lesson 1A: World War I
In August 1914, the “Great War” or World
War I began in Europe.
Britain, France, and Russia fought on the
same side and were known as the Allied
Powers.
They fought against the Central Powers
of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and
Turkey.
Germany began sinking United States
ships, so the U.S. joined the war on the side
of the Allied Powers in 1917.
The first American troops sent to Europe
during World War I came from Alabama.
They were known as the 42nd Division or
the Rainbow Division.
Steel production increased in Birmingham,
and steel workers in Mobile built warships.
World War I ended in 1918 with an Allied
victory.
Lesson 1A: The Roaring Twenties
The 1920s, or the Roaring Twenties,
was a time of economic prosperity for
many Americans.
People found jobs that paid well and
were spending their money.
They bought new items to make
housework easier such as a washing
machine and a vacuum cleaner.
In 1920, the Nineteenth Amendment was
passed by Congress which allowed women
to vote.
Many Alabama families would gather at
night to listen to their radios.
The stock market crashed in 1929.
This brought on the Great Depression.
Most Alabamians became unemployed,
lost their homes, and lost their life
savings.
Lesson 1B: The New Deal
In 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt
created programs under the New Deal
that helped put Alabamians to work and
helped Alabama’s economy to recover.
Lesson 1B: Another World War
In 1939, Germany, Japan, and Italy
began attacking other countries which led
to World War II.
The United States did not enter the war
until 1941 when Japan attacked the U.S.
naval base in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
The Tuskegee Airman formed the first unit
of African American pilots in the United
States military.
These airmen were the only air escort
group in the war not to lose a bomber
plane to the enemy.
Lesson 1B: Effects of the War
During World War II, people in Alabama
built ships for the war effort.
They also planted victory gardens and
rationed and recycled items.
Some items that were rationed were
meat, butter, sugar, and gasoline.
Lesson 2: Unfair Separation
For many years African Americans had faced
discrimination, or unfair treatment, and segregation,
or the separation of people by race.
African Americans in Alabama had to attend separate
public schools.
Alabama’s governor, George C. Wallace, was one of
the people who disagreed with desegregation and tried
to stop it.
In 1956, Autherine Lucy Foster became the first
African American to attend the University of Alabama,
but only for three days.
Lesson 2: Struggling for Equal Rights
In Montgomery, Rosa Parks stood up for her
rights when she refused to give up her seat on
a bus to a white person in 1955.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., a church minister
and civil rights worker, helped organize the
Montgomery Bus Boycott in protest.
On September 15, 1963, a bomb exploded at
the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in
Birmingham killing four young girls.
The Civil Rights Act of 1964 made
segregation illegal in all public places.
This march prompted lawmakers to pass
the Voting Rights Act.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. won the Nobel
Peace Prize in 1964 for his work in civil
rights.