Top Banner
Chapter 12 Politics of the Roaring 20s
34
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Chapter 12Politics of the Roaring 20s

Page 2: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

The Roaring 20’s 1920-29

• Post War Issues– Economy – had to adjust from making guns to

making butter again• Cost of living had doubled

– Labor troubles• Jobs taken away from women and African

Americans – given back to returning GIs

Page 3: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Isolationism

• Did not want to get involved in another war like WWI – pulled away from world affairs– Feelings of nativism (prejudice against foreign

born people) increased

Page 4: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Communism• Russian revolution – Lenin’s Bolsheviks

overthrew tsar – established communist government in Russia

Page 5: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Red Scare

• Fear of Communism led to the Red Scare– Palmer Raids –

suspected communists were hunted down

• Rights were taken away• Not one single credible

threat was found

Page 6: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s
Page 7: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Sacco and Vanzetti

• Italian anarchists• Charged with robbery

and murder – convicted even though evidence was circumstantial

• Executed

Page 8: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Sacco and Vanzetti

• Symbolic example of discrimination against radical beliefs during the Red Scare

Page 9: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s
Page 10: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Great Migration

• African Americans moved north to look for better job opportunities

Page 11: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Ku Klux Klan

• Grows over Red Scare and anti-immigrant feelings

• By 1924, the Klan had 4.5 million members

Page 12: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s
Page 13: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s
Page 14: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

"It is like writing history with Lightning. And my only regret is that it is all

so terribly true." -- President Woodrow Wilson

Page 15: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

• "...the President was entirely unaware of the nature of the play before it was presented and at no time has expressed his approbation of it."--Letter from J. M. Tumulty, secretary to President Wilson, to the Boston branch of the NAACP, which protested against the film's blackface villains and heroic Ku Klux Klanners.

Page 16: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Congress Limits Immigration• nativist pressure led to decision to limit

immigration from southern and eastern Europe

• The Emergency Quota Act of 1921 – set up a quota system to control

and restrict immigration

Page 17: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s
Page 18: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s
Page 19: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Labor unrest

• Strikes were outlawed during WWI

• 1919 there were more than 3,000 strikes involving 4 million workers – low wages

Page 20: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Labor Unions

• Membership began dropping

• Accused of being communists

African Americans were excluded from many unions

Page 21: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Warren G. Harding Administration

– Kellogg-Briand Pact - renounced war as a means of national policy (signed by 15 nations, but difficult to enforce)

– Fordney McCumber Tariff – raised taxes on U.S. imports – made it hard for foreign countries to sell goods in U.S.

– Dawes Plan - solved problem of post-war debt - provided loans to Germany to pay France/Britain who then paid the U.S

Page 22: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s
Page 23: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Political Scandal– “Ohio gang” - Harding’s poker buddies

who he set up in cabinet

– Many in “gang” became corrupt through use of graft ( political favors)• Some were caught illegally selling

government supplies to private companies

Page 24: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

TEAPOT DOME SCANDAL • government set aside oil-rich public land in

Teapot, WY

• Secretary of Interior Albert Fall secretly leased the land to two oil companies

• Fall received $400,000 from the oil companies and a felony conviction from the courts

Page 25: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s
Page 26: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

THE BUSINESS OF AMERICA

• Calvin Coolidge - pro-business

• His famous quote: “The chief business of the American people is business . . .the man who builds a factory builds a temple – the man who works there worships there”

President Calvin Coolidge 1924-1928

Page 27: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Life in the 1920s

• Age of consumption

Page 28: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

Automobile• altered the American landscape and

society

• 80% of all registered motor vehicles in the world were in the U.S.

• Urban sprawl – people could live farther from work

Page 29: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

IMPACT OF THE AUTO

Among the many changes were:

• Paved roads, traffic lights• Motels, billboards• Home design• Gas stations, repair shops• Shopping centers • Freedom for rural families• Independence for women

and young people• Cities like Detroit, Flint,

Akron grew • By 1920 80% of world’s

vehicles in U.S.

Page 30: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

AIRLINE TRANSPORT BECOMES COMMON

• The airline industry began as a mail carrying service and quickly “took off”

• By 1927, Pan American Airways was making the transatlantic passenger flights

When commercial flights began, all flight attendants

were female and white

Page 31: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

AMERICAN STANDARD OF LIVING SOARS

• The years 1920-1929 were prosperous ones for the U.S.

• Americans owned 40% of the world’s wealth

• The average annual income rose 35% during the 1920s ($522 to $705)

• Discretionary income increased

Page 32: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

MODERN ADVERTISING EMERGES

• Ad agencies no longer sought to merely “inform” the public about their products

• They hired psychologists to study how best to appeal to Americans’ desire for youthfulness, beauty, health and wealth

• “Say it with Flowers” slogan actually doubled sales between 1912-1924

Page 33: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

A SUPERFICIAL PROSPERITY

• Many during the 1920s believed the prosperity would go on forever

• Wages, production, GNP, and the stock market all rose significantly

• But. . . .

Page 34: Chapter 12politicsoftheroaring20s

PROBLEMS ON THE HORIZON?• Businesses expanded recklessly• Iron & railroad industries faded• Farms nationwide suffered losses due to

overproduction• Too much was bought on credit

(installment plans) including stocks