Top Banner
The 1920’s The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
87

The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Dec 24, 2015

Download

Documents

Édith Thomas
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: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

The 1920’sThe 1920’s

The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Page 2: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

What is Happening Here?What is Happening Here?

Page 3: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

What Does This Movie Poster What Does This Movie Poster Suggest About the Era?Suggest About the Era?

Page 4: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

The 1920s Must Be….??The 1920s Must Be….??

Page 5: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Turbulent Decade or Jazz Age?Turbulent Decade or Jazz Age?

• Prohibition and Women’s Suffrage usher in the decade

• US becomes more modern• Movies, radio, the car, mass production• Harding, Coolidge and Hoover: Scandals• The Red Scare• US stays isolated from foreign affairs• More Americans lived in towns and cities then in

the countryside

Page 6: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Do we need so many laws??Do we need so many laws??

• Do laws help to prevent crime or do they assist in the creation of crime? Explain.

Page 7: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Prohibition and Women’s Prohibition and Women’s SuffrageSuffrage

PART I

Page 8: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Why Prohibition???Why Prohibition???

• Began in the progressive era, a time of reform in America

• Improve social conditions• Reduce crime & family instability• Increase economic efficiency• Purify politics• Alcohol reduced efficiency of soldiers.• Progressives, Baptists, Methodists, Protestants,

women’s temperance unions all pushed for prohibition

Page 9: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Trading Alcohol for Al Trading Alcohol for Al CaponeCapone

• Prohibition – alcohol is illegal• 18th Amendment 1/1919• Volstead Act 10/1919,

established Prohibition Bureau (Eliot Ness), set penalties

• Speakeasies, bootlegging, organized crime

• Medicinal uses• Enforcement issues• 21st Amendment 1933 –

repealed the 18th

Page 10: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 11: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 12: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 13: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 14: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 15: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

A Raid in Lake OntarioA Raid in Lake Ontario

Page 16: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 17: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Was this “noble experiment” a Was this “noble experiment” a success???success???

• Was prohibition a success? What did the Senate judiciary committee of 1926 feel about the progress of prohibition?

Page 18: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Women’s Suffrage Women’s Suffrage • Movement began during

colonial times• Women made great strides

toward equality during WWI

• 19th Amendment 8/26/20• "The right of citizens of

the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex."

• 1920 Women vote in election

Page 19: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 20: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 21: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

A Time of AmendmentsA Time of Amendments

Explain the purpose of each of the following three Constitutional Amendments: 18th, 19th & 21st. Which do you feel is the most important? Explain.

Page 22: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

THE USA AFTER WWITHE USA AFTER WWI

The Economy, The Red Scare, Immigration and Politics

Part III

Page 23: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

BOOM TIMESBOOM TIMES

“One hundred thousand people flocked into the showrooms of the Ford Company in Detroit; mounted police were called out to patrol the streets of Cleveland, in Kansas City so a great a mob stormed Convention Hall that the platforms had to be built to lift the new car high enough for everyone to see”

Page 24: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 25: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 26: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Post WWI IssuesPost WWI Issues

• Communist Russia– Will Communism infect the

minds of Americans?

• Postwar Economy– High unemployment

– Inflation

– Low wages

• Labor Unrest– Worker’s strikes crippled

production

Page 27: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Land of Opportunity? Land of Opportunity? • Red Scare

– Paranoia and exaggeration caused hysteria

• Bomb Scares – 36 mail bombs discovered• Bolshevism

– Communist Conspiracy, a call for a worldwide revolution of workers

– .5% of Americans

• Palmer Raids – raids in 33 cities. 4000 arrests and 560 deportations of “communists”

• Nativism – National Origins Act 1924– Limited immigration, European, 2% of the number of

people living in the US from that country (census 1890)

Page 28: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

The Red Scare Was….The Red Scare Was….

“A nation-wide anti-radical hysteria provoked by a mounting fear and anxiety that a Bolshevik revolution in America was imminent — a revolution that would destroy private property, Church, home, marriage, civility, and the American way of Life.”

- Historian L.B. Murray

Page 29: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

"These attacks will only increase the activities "These attacks will only increase the activities of our crime-detecting forces" of our crime-detecting forces"

Page 30: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

The Impact of National Origins The Impact of National Origins ActAct

Page 31: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Does he have a point?Does he have a point?

“Not for at least half a century, perhaps at no time in our history had there been such a wholesale violation of civil liberties”

- Historian William Leuchtenburg

Page 32: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 33: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 34: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 35: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Review QuestionReview Question

What was America so SCARED of after WWI and in the early 1920s? Why? Name two consequences of this fear?

Page 36: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

3 Strikes!!! – (3,600 in 1919)3 Strikes!!! – (3,600 in 1919)

• Seattle General –60,000 peaceful• Boston Police – 75% of officers

– “agents of Lenin”– “Bolshevik nightmare” – Strikers did not regain their jobs

• Steel Strike – Pennsylvania, 365,000, Black and Mexican replacement workers are brought in, strikers jailed beaten or shot!

• How did these strikes help “fuel” the Red Scare?

Page 37: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 38: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 39: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Sacco and VanzettiSacco and Vanzetti

Page 40: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Seriously?Seriously?

“This man Vanzetti, although he may not have actually committed the crime attributed to him, is nevertheless morally culpable [guilty], because he is an enemy of our existing institutions…..The defendants ideas are cognate [associated] with the crime”

-Judge Thayer

Page 41: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Returning to Normal and Returning to Normal and Keeping it CoolKeeping it Cool

Page 42: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

29 & 30 – Republican Presidents 29 & 30 – Republican Presidents • “A return to normalcy” – Harding 1920

– The Ohio Gang– Teapot Dome Scandal – Albert B. Fall

• “Keep it cool with Coolidge” 1924• “The business of government is business”-Silent

Cal– Prosperity and Thrift– Very popular after Harding’s corruption– “I do not choose to run for president in nineteen twenty

eight”

• Republican capitalism– High Tariffs – to stimulate domestic business– Trickle-down “a rising tide floats all boats”

Page 43: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 44: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 45: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Cars and ConsumerismCars and Consumerism

Part IV

Page 46: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Henry FordHenry Ford

• Assembly Line Production- cut production time in ½

• Model T• Output

– 1920-1.9 mill– 1930-5 mill

• Payment Plans – Workers

• Gave birth to 400,000 miles of new roads

• Road side businesses

Page 47: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 48: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 49: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 50: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Working on the Chain Gang?Working on the Chain Gang?

“The chain system [assembly line] you have is a slave driver! My God! Mr. Ford. My husband has come home and thrown himself down and won’t eat his supper – so done out! Can’t it be remedied?……..That $5 a day is a blessing one bigger than you know but oh they earn it”

- Wife of a Ford worker

Page 51: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Review QuestionReview Question

• Who said “The business of America is business”? How did he support this claim?

• The auto industry was one of America’s best during the decade of the 1920s, use statistics to support this statement. If you could hold one person responsible for this who would it be and why?

Page 52: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Creating ConsumersCreating Consumers• 1926 – 75% of cars on credit• Items that were “pleasing” to look at• Planned obsolescence – creating something that is

planned to go out of style• Chain-stores, A&P 14,000 by 1925 • Advertising – pre WWI = $500 million by 1929 $3

billion– Magazines, newspaper, billboards, radio– Targeted women– Slogans, jingles, celebrities

Page 53: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Marketing WisdomMarketing Wisdom“To keep America growing we must keep

America working, and to keep America working we must keep them wanting; wanting more than the bare necessities; wanting the luxuries and frills that make life so much more worthwhile, and installment selling makes it easier to keep Americans wanting”

- Car dealer

Page 54: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 55: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

HOMEWORKHOMEWORK15 POINTS15 POINTS

• DUE FRIDAY 10/1: FIND AN ADVERTISEMENT IN A RECENT MAGAZINE OR NEWSPAPER. CUT OUT THE AD.– EXPLAIN WHY IT IS AN EFFECTIVE AD– EXPLAIN WHY YOU CHOSE THAT AD– IS YOUR AD SIMILAR OR DIFFERENT

FROM THE ADS OF THE 1920’S? EXPLAIN

Page 56: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Women and African Women and African Americans in the 1920sAmericans in the 1920s

PART III

Page 57: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Women of the 1920’sWomen of the 1920’s

• Women were able to vote and serve on juries but they gained little influence

• Few women held positions in political parties or were elected to office

• Women had greater job opportunities but faced tremendous discrimination at work

• The social lives of women changed most

Page 58: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Flappers – The Exception or the Flappers – The Exception or the Rule??Rule??

• The “new woman” • “Stylish, adventurous, independent, career

minded”• No more corsets, short skirts instead• Bobbed or short hair style• Participated in sports and drove cars• Taxi drivers, teachers, stenographers, pilots etc. • Most women were still house wives (married &

older, a small percentage were flappers (young & single)

Page 59: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

FLAPPERSFLAPPERS

Page 60: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 61: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 62: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

W.E.B. Du BoisW.E.B. Du Bois

– We Return

– We return from fighting

– We return fighting

Page 63: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Historian David Levering Lewis Historian David Levering Lewis Wrote….Wrote….

“In the course of his long, turbulent career, W. E. B.

Du Bois attempted virtually every possible solution to the problem of twentieth-century racism”

Page 64: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Violence EruptsViolence Erupts

• By late 1919 25 Race Riots erupted

• “People [African Americans] were seen to flee from their burning home, some with babies in their arms”

• “The colored troops fought nobly [In WWI]. We have something to fight for now”

Page 65: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

The Great Black MigrationThe Great Black Migration

• General trend of Urbanization

• 1920s 800,000 Blacks moved North

Page 66: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

The Fight For Equality The Fight For Equality BeginsBegins

– NAACP- W E B Dubois (1909)• Formed the anti-lynching committee• The Crisis – newsletter which published accounts of

violence• Appealed to the well educated

– Marcus Garvey (UNIA) -“We shall now organize”• Aimed to unite all those of African descent worldwide,

lost hope of achieving equality in America• “Back to Africa”• Black owned businesses• Appealed to the working class• “He made black people proud, he taught them that black

is beautiful”

Page 67: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 68: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

White BacklashWhite Backlash• 1920 100,000 new members,

fueled by the red-scare

• Nativism – white Protestant American born, white supremacy

• The new KKK

– 1920-over 700 lynchings

– North & Mid-West

– Infiltrated all aspects of society

Page 69: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 70: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 71: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Review QuestionReview Question

**Yesterday we discussed the challenges that blacks faced “growing up in the 1920s”. What efforts were made in the quest for equal rights during this decade? How did some of “white America” respond to this?**

Page 72: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

““Growing up Black”Growing up Black”

What was Daisy Bates’ experience like growing up

black in the 1920s?

Page 73: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Jazz, Sports, Radio and Jazz, Sports, Radio and Religion Religion

Part IV

Page 74: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Harlem Renaissance Harlem Renaissance • Flourishing of artistic

development

• Glowing pride in black culture- “The New Negro”

• Langston Hughes

• Zora Neale Hurston

• Harlem Jazz– Savoy, Cotton Club

– Duke Ellington

– Count Basie

– Benny Goodman

– Louis Armstrong

Page 75: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

THE DUKETHE DUKE

Page 76: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

IF WE MUST DIE - IF WE MUST DIE - Claude McKayClaude McKay

“If we must die, let it not be like hogsHunted and penned in an inglorious spot,While round us bark the mad and hungry

dogs….What though before us lies an open grave?

Like men we’ll face the murderous, cowardly pack,

Pressed to the wall, dying, but fighting back!”

Page 77: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Langston HughesLangston Hughes

“We build our temples for tomorrow, strong as we know how, & we stand on the top of the mountain, free within ourselves”

Page 78: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

““The Lost The Lost Generation”Generation”

• Rise of a new generation of American Writers

• Reflected gloom of WWI and scorned “superficial” middle class

• Ernest Hemingway – A Farewell to Arms

• F. Scott Fitzgerald – This Side of Paradise & The Great Gatsby

Page 79: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

                                                   

                                                                

Page 80: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

1927 – 11927 – 1stst Talkie – The Jazz Talkie – The Jazz SingerSinger

CHARLIE CHAPLIN

AL JOLSON

Page 81: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Sports of the 1920sSports of the 1920s

BABE RUTH JIM THORPE

Page 82: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Charles Lindbergh – “Spirit of St. Charles Lindbergh – “Spirit of St. Louis”, non stop NY – Paris (1927)Louis”, non stop NY – Paris (1927)

Page 83: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Monkey BusinessMonkey Business• The Scopes Monkey Trial• 1925• John T Scopes (teacher)• Dayton, Tennessee• Teaches theory of evolution to his class• Tennessee state law outlawed the

teaching of anything but the Biblical creation story

• William Jennings Bryan – Prosecutor (fundamentalist)

• Clarence Darrow (ACLU) – defense attorney

Page 84: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

Science vs. ReligionScience vs. Religion

• Bryan represented many Americans who felt that evolution contradicted their religious beliefs

• Darrow “Today it’s the public school teachers, tomorrow the private, the next day the preacher and the lecturers, the magazines, the books, the newspapers”

• Scopes loses and is fined $100• Bryan who was called by Darrow as a witness

came to represent “narrow-minded” Americans

Page 85: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?

John T Scopes Darrow

Jennings Bryan

Page 86: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?
Page 87: The 1920’s The Roaring Jazz Age or the Turbulent Twenties?