The Roaring 20`s - Marion County Public Schools
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Pearl Harbor
December 7th, 1941
The Roaring 20’s
THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE UGLY
Demobilization and Adjustment to
Peace, 1920
Demobilization
The transition process during which a nation at war returns to a state of peace
After World War I, the federal government no longer needed a large amount of:
Guns
Bullets
Uniforms
Battleships
Demobilization and Adjustment to
Peace, 1920
Returning from War
Soldiers returned from home looking for jobs
African Americans, women, and others who had filled in for the soldiers were suddenly
no longer needed
Spanish Flu
Lasted from 1918-1919
Actually killed more Americans than the war itself
The Red Scare
Bolsheviks
A group of Russian communists
Pulled Russia our of WWI
Opposed private property, religious beliefs, and free enterprise
Americans refused to extend diplomatic recognition to the new Russian
government.
With the success of the Bolsheviks, Americans were afraid of a communist
revolution in the United States.
The “Palmer Raids”
J. Edgar Hoover, at this time a young lawyer
Supervised the arrest of Russian workers suspected of radical activity in 12 cities
More than 200 of them were deported
Hoover directed simultaneous raids in 30 cities, known as the “Palmer Raids”
About 6,000 suspects were arrested
Most of them were foreign-born residents from Russia and Germany
Sacco and Vanzetti
Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti (a shoemaker and a fish seller) were
arrested in 1920 for murders committed during a payroll truck robbery.
Reasons they were discriminated against:
They were anarchists
Immigrants
Showed disloyalty during the war by going to Mexico to escape the draft
Sacco and Vanzetti were convicted and sentenced to death and executed in
1927.
The Republican Presidents:
Warren Harding
Return to Normalcy
Emphasis on maintaining prosperity at home and a less ambitious foreign policy abroad.
Favored American businesses
Higher tariffs
Fordney- McCumber Act
Goods that were subject to custom duties (taxes on imports) paid an average duty of 38.5% of their value.
Other countries retaliated by raising their own tariffs on goods from the United States which caused made a horrible
impact on world trade.
Lower taxes
Believed that wealthy Americans were more likely to invest in the economy than other social classes were
Slashed taxes on the rich
Minimal government interference in business activities
The government did not overturn existing laws regulating business, they just simply did not enforce them.
The Republican Presidents:
Warren Harding
Restrictions on Immigration
In 1917, a literacy test was passed over President Wilson’s veto.
Required immigrants to read and write in their own language.
Emergency Quota Act of 1921
Limited the total number of immigrants who could enter the United States in any one year to 350,000
Fewer than half the number admitted in 1920
The Republican Presidents:
Warren Harding
Foreign Policy
Harding was a moderate internationalist
Tried to reduce the threat of war
Worked to promote American business overseas
The Washington Naval Conference
Proposed partial disarmament
US and Britain accepted equality in the number of battleships and Japan got a little fewer
that the United States, Great Britain, and Japan each stop building new battleships and even scrap some of those they already had
The ratio was 5:5:3
The Four-Power Treaty
Included the United States, Britain, Japan and France
They agreed to respect each other’s territories and rights in the Pacific Region and to submit to any “joint conference” of all four
powers.
The Republican Presidents:
Warren Harding
International Finance
During WWI, the US had lent $10 billion to allied nations, and the US expected them to pay it back with interest
The Allies argued against having to pay the US back because their soldiers paid in their lives when the US only paid with
their money in the beginning.
Harding extended Britain’s repayment period to 62 years and lowered the interest rate
German Money
Germany was unable to pay their reparations
The German government printed excessive amounts of paper money to make its reparation payments
This led to wild inflation, increasing the prices of goods in Germany
The Dawes Plan
Private American investors lent $200 million to Germany which Germany then used to pay its reparation payments.
The Dawes Plan
The Republican Presidents:
Warren Harding
International Finance
Harding actively promoted American economic expansion and investment in Europe, Latin America, and the
Middle East
Teapot Dome Scandal
The Secretary of the Interior arranged to have the oil-rich lands at Teapot Dome, Wyoming, previously reserved
for the navy, transferred to his own department
He then secretly leased them to businessmen in exchange for personal bribes
The Republican Presidents:
Calvin Coolidge
“Coolidge Prosperity”
Symbol of old-fashioned American values
“The business of America is business”
Called “Silent Cal” because he barely spoke in public.
Coolidge’s accomplishments
Reduced government expenditures and vetoed a bill to help farmers because he did not think the government
should regulate farm prices
Coolidge’s Downside
Did nothing to curb the frenzy of stock market speculation and the continuation of high tariffs and regressive
taxation
Led to overproduction and under-consumption
The Republican Presidents:
Calvin Coolidge
Further Restrictions on Immigration
The Immigration Act of 1924
The National Origins Act
Lowered the total number of immigrants per year to 150,000
The number of immigrants became based on the percent of people of that national origin compared to all Americans
Coolidge’s Foreign Policy
The Geneva Disarmament Conference 1927
Attempted to have success like Harding, but the participants refused to accept further limitations and nothing was achieved
The Kellogg- Briand Pact
15 nations signed the pact
Promised not to use war as an instrument of policy
The Republican Presidents:
Herbert Hoover
Herbert Hoover
Self-made millionaire and engineer
Optimistically announced that America was on the verge of ending poverty
Favored business cooperation to increase efficiency and avoid wasteful competition
Supported promoting voluntary cooperation among farmers with government funds
Rugged individualism
Hoover believed that if individuals are given an education and equal opportunities, the country will succeed
How the Boom of the Roaring 20’s
Altered the American Economy
Greater Efficiency in Manufacturing
Henry Ford
The Rise of Automobiles
The production of automobiles helped employ many other areas as well
Steel, glass, rubber, paved roads, bridges, garages, gas stations, etc.
The suburbs
Introduced electric conveyor belts on his assembly lines
Encourages people to move to the outskirts of town to live
The Expansion of Other New Industries
Electric household appliances
Use of petroleum and natural gas
Radio commercials and motion pictures
How the Boom of the Roaring 20’s
Altered the American Economy
New Marketing Practices in an Age of Consumerism
Advertising agencies specialized in developing slogans and advertisements to attract customers
Instalment Buying
Paying for things in instalments instead of all at once after a small down payment
Used this for goods like cars, refrigerators, and household appliances
Higher wages
Increased spending
Allowed for more leisure time
Spent more in entertainment
How the Boom of the Roaring 20’s
Altered the American Economy
Speculation in the Stock Market and in Real Estate
The federal government reduced taxes on the rich
The rich then reinvested their profits into the stock market
People assumed that stocks were a way to get rich quick
Buying on “margin”
Investing in real estate
How the Boom of the Roaring 20’s
Altered the American Economy
Prosperity of the 1920’s was Unevenly Distributed
Farmers
Advances in technology led to overproduction and a catastrophic drop in farm prices
Many farmers went bankrupt
Workers in the Railroad, Coal, and Textile Industries
Minority Groups
Limited job opportunities
Low pay
High levels of unemployment
Attempts to Preserve
Traditional Values
Prohibition
Temperance Movement
18th Amendment
A group of people who saw alcoholic beverages as the root cause of poverty, crime, and the breakdown of families and sin
Prohibited “the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors”
Volstead Act
Defined “intoxicating liquors to include both wine and beer
Permitted limited production of alcohol for medical or religious purposes
Difficult to enforce
“Bootleggers” brought beer and whiskey across from Canada
“Speakeasies” served liquor in cities
Criminal bosses like Al Capone in Chicago made a fortune from selling bootlegged liquor
Repealed by the 21st Amendment in 1933
Attempts to Preserve
Traditional Values
Fundamentalism and the Scopes Trial
Christian Fundamentalists
Believed that the bible- including the account of Creation- was to be taken literally
Opposed Darwin’s Theory of Evolution
John Butler
The American Civil Liberties Union
Passed a bill in the state legislature that prohibited the teaching of evolution in state-funded public schools
Formed in 1920 to protect freedom of speech and other civil liberties
John Scopes
Scopes was a high school teacher who chose to defy the Butler Act and taught the theory of evolution
Scopes was convicted, but his fine of $100 was cleared later on a technicality
New Values
Women
19th Amendment
Guaranteed women the right to vote
Increased employment opportunities
New household appliances gave middle class women more leisure time
Flappers
Fashionable young women who wore lipsticl, short hair, and straight simple dresses or pleated skirts that just reached
their knees
Known as “flappers” because they were like birds flapping their wings
Margaret Sanger
Developed the Birth Control League in 1921 which has since become Planned Parenthood
New Values
The “Lost Generation”
Responsible for weird fads
The Great Gatsby, F. Scott-Fitzgerald
Goldfish swallowing, marathon dancing, and flagpole sitting
Showed how the search for purely material success could lead to tragedy
Hollywood and New Popular Heroes
Hollywood became a mecca for the motion picture scene
More and more Americans were attracted to the movies as a form of entertainment
Some people believed that Hollywood had become a corrupting influence
The African-American Experience
and the Harlem Renaissance
Booker T. Washington vs. W.E.B. Du Bois
Booker T. Washington
Thought African-Americans should not try to rock the boat and stay out of the way of the white people
W.E.B. Du Bois
Thought that African-Americans should fight for social equality
Created the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
The Great Migration
A wartime shortage of workers led Northern manufacturers to employ African-American workers
Thousands of African Americans moved to the north over the next 20 years
Continuing Racism and Violence
Forced to move to a limited number of neighborhoods because landlords and homeowners elsewhere refused to rent
or sell to them
Lynching was still a major problem in the south
The African-American Experience
and the Harlem Renaissance
The Harlem Renaissance
The greatest concentration of African Americans was found in Harlem
African Americans of different occupations mixed together in Harlem where they lived side by side
There was a flourishing of black culture during this time
Writers and Artists
Enter the New Negro, Alain Locke
Langston Hughes
Home to Harlem, Claude McKay
Jazz
Aimed to capture “the spirit of the race” and inspire his people
Jazz roots come from old work songs, blues music from the south, and African American spirituals
Marcus Garvey
Established the Universal Negro Improvement Association
Believed that “black is beautiful” and disagreed with the NAACP
Other Minority Groups
Hispanic Americans
Landowners from Texas, Arizona, and California wanted to encourage immigration because they needed
cheap labor for development
The citizens disagreed because they felt as though the Hispanic immigrants were there to take their jobs
American Indians
The goal of federal policy towards American Indian tribes remained the same as under the Dawes Act
The American Indian Defense Association
Assimilate their members into “mainstream” society and turn them into small farmers
Created in 1921 to protect the rights of American Indians
Indian Citizenship Act 1924
Made all Indians into United States Citizens
Indians could vote in federal elections and became subject to federal income tax
Other Minority Groups
Asian Americans
Less than 1% of the population was Asian
Most lived on the West- especially California
Asian immigration was barred by the Immigration Acts of 19221 and 1924
Asiatic Exclusion League 1905
Aimed to end Asian immigration and to segregate Asian children in public schools
The Ku Klux Klan
The KKK has laid dormant since the 1870’s
Rebirth of the Klan in 1915 by William Simmons
Not only included traditional racism against African Americans, but also embraced the hatred of
Jews, Catholics, unions, immigrants, an all those advocating the rights of women
“One hundred percent Americanism”
Klan members supported the Democratic Party
Membership started to decline after 1930
The Roarin’ 20’s in Florida
Beginning of the “snow birds”
Rosewood
A rural African- American community in community southwest of Gainesville
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