Title: 10th American History
110th American History
2Vocabulary for the Word Wall
- Culture
- The word culture, from the Latin colo, -ere, with
its root meaning "to cultivate", generally refers
to patterns of human activity and the symbolic
structures that give such activity significance. - "set of distinctive spiritual, material,
intellectual and emotional features of society or
a social group, and that it encompasses, in
addition to art and literature, lifestyles, ways
of living together, value systems, traditions and
beliefs". - A common way of understanding culture sees it as
consisting of three elements - values - ideas about what in life seems important
- norms - expectations of how people will behave in
different situations - Artifacts - things, or material culture
3Native Americans History
- Conflicts with Native Americans
- Government policies- removal, treaties, siezing
of land and reservations. - Indian wars and massacres
- Ghost Dance
- End of Resistance and reservation life.
4Mining, Ranching and Farming on the Great Plains
- Mining Communities- business, vigilante justice
and boomtowns - Ranching- open range, Long Horn cattle, Sheep
ranching, Cattle drives and trails, barbed wire. - Farming
- Homestead Act- 160 acres, 21 years old, 5 years.
- Oklahoma Land Rush
- Settlers- While, African Americans, Europeans,
and Chinese. - Living on the plains- Weather, sod houses, new
machinery, and Turners Frontier Thesis.
5American Workforce History
- 2nd Industrial Revolution
- Rise of Big Business
- Entrepreneurs, capitalism, laissez-faire, Social
Darwinism - Corporations, Trusts and Monopolies
- Tycoons- Rockefeller, Carnegie, Vanderbilt and
Pullman for example. Captains of Industry or
Robber Barons. - Mass marketing
- Workers organize
- Sherman Anti-Trust Act
- Knights of Labor 1st Unions
- Strikes and violence- Railroad, Haymarket,
Homestead, Pullman, etc. - AFL
6Immigration History 1800-1910
- New Immigrants
- Old Immigrants- 1800-1880- Northern and Western
Europe - New Immigrants- 1880-1910- Southern and Eastern
Europe as well as Japanese and Chinese. - Why did they come?- Economic, Political and
Religious. - Ellis Island and Angel Island.
- Prejudice against immigrants
7Urban American Life
- Different Classes- Wealthy, middle class and
working class. - Tenements and Settlement Houses
8Political Scandal and Reform
- City Government- Scandal and Reform
- Political Machines and Machine Bosses
- Tammany Hall in New York- Boss Tweed
- Credit Mobilier Scandal and President Grant
- President Arthur and Civil Service Reform
9Farmers Reform Movement
- Late 1800s crop prices falling, farm debt
rising, costs rising a need for farmers to
organize. - Order of the Patrons of Husbandry- National
Grange - 1887- Interstate Commerce Act.
- Populist Party- coalition of farmers, labor
leaders and reformers. - Silver v. Gold issue
10Segregation and Discrimination
- Jim Crow Laws and Lynching
- Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) separate but equal.
- Booker T. Washington
- W.E.B. Du Bois and the N.A.A.C.P.
- Other groups who face discrimination-
- 1) Hispanic Americans
- 2) Asian Americans
- 3) Native Americans
11Progressivism
- Reforming Society
- Progressives- reform movement
- Muckrakers
- Housing reforms
- Civil rights
- Workplace
- National Child Labor
- Limiting womens workday
- Minimum Wage laws.
- Courts and Labor Laws-
- 1905 - Lochner v. New York- supreme court did
not allow 10 hour workday for bakers - 1908 - Muller v. Oregon- Supreme Court upheld
law guaranting 10 hour workday for women. - Bunting v. Oregon- 10 hour workday for men in
mills and factories. - The Triangle Shirtwaist fire
- Unions- Industrial Workers of the World-
unskilled - Reforming Government
- City government- Commision system,
Council-Manager system. - State Government- Electoral reforms, commissions
on railroads, utilities, transportation, civil
service and taxation - 17th Amendment- direct election of Senators.
12Opportunities for Women
- Education
- Employment
- Childrens Health and Welfare
- Prohibition
- WCTU- Womens Christian Temperance Union.
- Carrie Nation
- 18th Amendment
- 18th Amendment- Prohibition
- Civil Rights- campaigning against poverty,
segregation, lynchings and Jim Crowe Laws - Womens Suffrage and Anti-Suffrage arguments
13Reform- Late 1800s and early 1900s
- Childrens health and welfare
- Prohibition
- Civil Rights and black women
- Womens Suffrage
- Trust Busting and regulating big business
- Consumer Protection
- Environmental conservation
- 19th Amendment- 1920
- Civil Rights under Roosevelt, Taft and Wilson-
Brownsville Incident.
14Imperialism
- Cultural superiority over the under-developed
(backward) nations. - Social Darwinism- brothers keeper, social
responsibility to civilize the less developed. - Desire to bring Christianity, western style
culture and democracy to other (backward) peoples.
15T.R. Roosevelts Square Deal
- Coal Strike of 1902 and TR threatens to send in
the troops - Each person to get a square deal no more, no
less. - Limiting power of trusts, promote public health
and safety and improve working conditions. - Trust Busting and Regulating the Railroads.
- Protecting Consumers- Muckrakers, Meat Inspection
Act, and Pure Food and Drug Act. - Environmental Conservation
16Presidents Taft and Wilson
- William H. Taft
- Created Dept. of Labor
- 16th Amendment- Income Tax
- Wilson- New Freedom
- Tariff, Banking, and Anti-Trust Reform
- Women Gain the right to vote- 19th Amendment
17Imperialism
- Hawaii
- Sugar interests- Sanford B. Dole
- Bayonet constitution
- King Kalakaua and Queen Liliuokalani
- Annexation
- Spanish-American War
- Yellow Journalism
- Jingoism
- Philippines, annexation and rebellion
- Roosevelt and Rough Riders
- Anti-Imperialists
- Spanish-American War
18Homefront in World War I
- Mobilizing the Economy
- Regulating Industry
- Regulating Food
- Regulating Fuel
- Supplying the troops
- Mobilizing Workers
- National War Labor Board
- Womens war efforts
- African American movement and employment
- Influenza Epidemic (Pandemic)
- Winning American support
- Committee on Public Information
- Propaganda
- Anti-German Feeling and American Patriotism
- Limiting Antiwar Speech
- Schenck v. United States (1919)- Supreme court
limits freedom of speech.
19Post War Havoc
- 1918-1919 Pandemic- world wide influenza
epidemic- killed 10 times more Americans than did
WWI. - 1st Red Scare- rise of Bolsheviks, communism,
fear, bombs, Palmer raids and deportation. - Labor Problems- Workers unhappy after WWI, Unions
lost members and political power, and there were
major strikes.
20Limiting Immigration
- Competition for jobs after WWI, and the Red scare
caused anti-immigration feelings. - Nativists- mostly Protestant Christians and Labor
leaders targeted new immigrants and asked for
immigration restrictions. - Immigration control- National Origins Act,
Nativism, KKK revival (native white supremacy) - Sacco and Vanzetti- Italian immigrants,
anarchists, tried for murder or political ideas?
21New Economic Era- 1920s
- Henry Ford- revolutionizes industry
- Assembly line
- Effect on Industry
- competition helped the automobile industry grow.
- Other industries learned- assembly line,
productivity went up. - Welfare Capitalism- companies provide benefits to
employees to promote worker satisfaction and
loyalty. - Effect on Society
- Demand is up for all types of products.
- Boom in midwestern cities
- Cities grew and so did suburbs- transportation
- Tourist industry grew.
22New Economic Era- 1920s
- New Consumer-
- New Products for the home
- Electricity
- Radio connected the world
- Public transportation, and passenger airlines.
- Advertising created a deman
- New ways of paying- credit and installment
buying. - Weakness of Economy
- Many American suffered during the 20s
- Farmers- demand was low, competition from Europe
high, farm failures, debt, tariff, and nature-
weather and insects. - The Nation desires to return to Normalcy
23American Life Changes- 1920s
- New Roles for Women
- Opportunities
- New Family Roles
- The Flapper
- Effects of Urbanization
- Conflicts over Values
- Fundamentalism
- Scopes Trial- Teaching of Evolution and Creation
Science- Bryan and Darrow - Prohibition- 18th Amendment
- Organized crime- like Al Capone
- Bootleggers
- Speakeasies
- Harlem Renaissance
- African Americans during and after WWI
- W.E.B. Du Bois and Marcus Garvey
- Renaissance of art in Harlem- writer, poets,
artists, musicians and performers.
24A New Popular Culture is born- 1920s
- Mass Entertainment
- Radio
- Movies
- Era of Heroes
- Film Stars- Charlie Chaplin, Rudolph Valentino,
Clara Bow, Mary Pickford, and Douglas Fairbanks. - Charles A. Lindbergh- transatlantic flight.
- Amelia Earhart- 1st women across the Atlantic,
was lost trying to fly around the world. - Sports Heroes- Ruth, Grange, Wills, Jones, etc.
- Arts of the 1920s- F. Scott Fitzgerald, Sinclair
Lewis, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Hemmingway,
George Gershwin (music)
25The Great Depression- 1930s
- Farm Failures
- Unemployment
- Hoovervilles and Hoboes
- Dust Bowl and plight of the farmers- Okies and
other migrants. - Cooperatives
- Bonus Army and march on Washington
26FDR and the New Deal
- Fireside Chats and Eleanor Roosevelt
- The First Hundred Days- relief, recovery and
reform - Alphabet Soup legislation
- Critics of New Deal- Sen. Huey P. Long, Father
Charles Coughlin, Dr. Francis Townsend and the
American Liberty League- conservatives who felt
the New Deal was too expensive and went too far. - The Supreme Court also opposed some of the New
Deal- AAA, NRA were unconstitutional.
27FDR and the Second New Deal
- Second 100 Days- Congress passed laws extending
on banking, taxes, relief programs. - Emergency Relief- WPA
- Social Security
- Reviving Organized Labor- AFL and CIO and sit
down strikes. - Rural Electricity
28Life During the New Deal
- New Roles for Women- Sec. of Labor and other
Administration roles. Women still discriminated. - African Americans in the New Deal- Black
Cabinet. - Dorothea Lange and others- writeres and
photographers telling the story of the
depression. - Movies of the 1930s (.25)- grand musicals,
comedy, Walt Disney, King Kong, Wizard of Oz and
Gone with the Wind. - Radio of the 1930s- Music, sports, religion and
other forms of entertainment.- Lone Ranger,
Fibber McGee and Molly, War of the Worlds, and
Swing music. Babe Ruth, Joe DiMaggio, Lou
Gehrig, Babe Didrikson Zaharias, and Joe Louis. - Impacts of the New Deal
- Relief, Recovery and Reform
- Bigger government and more programs and agencies-
shift from laissez-faire. - Fair Labor Standards Act 1938- .25 minimum wage,
44 hour workweek, and time and ½, and age 14 to
work outside school
29Mobilizing for World War II
- Finding Soldiers- Draft
- Women and the Armed forces- WAVES, WACS, WASPS,
WAAC, SPARS. - Women in industry 6.5 million workers- Rosie the
Riveter doing a mans job. - Labor- National War Labor Board
- African Americans in the military and the
workforce. - Hispanic Americans- Bracero Program- temporary
work visa in U.S.
30The Homefront during World War II
- Conserving Food and other goods
- Rationing- Office of Price Administration
- Victory Garden
- Scrap drives and limits on manu
- War Production Board- get products and supplies
to the military- Scrap drives and limits on
manufacturers - Buying War bonds and stamps- 185 billion.
- Increasing Income tax rates and revenues went up.
- Winning support for the war
- Office of War Information- propaganda
- Hollywood- movies and entertainment
- Barnette ruling- Americans cant be forced to
salute the flag. - Japanese Internment- Executive Order 9066
31Life in America after World War II
- 12 million men and women return to civilian life.
- 1944- Servicemens Readjustment Act- G.I. Bill-
College, loans, jobs, etc. - Labor Unions- want increased wages, Strikes went
up. Taft-Hartly Act. - Racial Minorities- Truman wanted to expand their
opportunities.
32The Second Red Scare
- Fear of Communism- Soviet Atomic weapons, and
Communist China - H.U.A.C- Hollywood 10 and Alger Hiss
- Trumans Loyalty Checks
- Smith Act
- McCarran Act
- Spy Cases- Hiss, Fuchs, and the Rosenbergs
- Senator Joseph McCarthy
33The Cold War
- Eisenhower
- End Korea and finish the peace talks.
- Dulles and Brinksmanship- threats strong enough
to bring about results. - Dulles and Massive Retaliation- pledge to use
overwhelming force to settle a serious conflict. - American Civil Defense
- Bomb shelters and Nuclear fallout
- FCDA- Civil Defense, duck and cover, air raid
sirens, and tests.
34The Television Age
- Television changes American Life
- TV and politics
- Television advertising
- Programming
- Concerns
- Technological developments of 50s- transistors,
computers, and vaccines. - Cultural Change in 50s
- Boomtimes- Baby boomers, new machines for homes,
automobiles, and affluent society. - New Communities- Levitowns and Sunbelt
- New Highways- Interstate Highway system- America
on the move. - Rebellion in the movies- James Dean, Marlon
Brando and Elvis.
35Great Society - LBJ
- War on Poverty
- VISTA
- Job Corps
- Reducing Taxes
- Medicare and Medicaid
- Highway Beautification Act
- Supreme Court Decisions and criminal rights.
(Miranda Rights)
36The Civil Rights Movement
- Prior to 1954
- Plessy v. Ferguson
- NAACP
- Depression- blacks last hired and first fired.
- 1940s- no discrimination in defense plants, CORE
founded, desgregation of Armed forces and Jackie
Robinson. - Several court cases and some sucesses
37The Civil Rights Movement
- After 1954
- Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas
- Little Rock 9
- Montgomery Bus Boycott and Rosa Parks.
- Martin Luther King Jr., SCLC and non-violence.
- Sit-ins and Freedom Rides and SNCC
- Federal Intervention
- Integrating Higher Education- James Meredith and
University of Mississippi Governor Wallace
blocking students at the University of Alabama. - Albany and Birmingham
- Civil Rights Act of 1964
- March on Washington Aug. 28, 1963- Kings I have
dream speech - Assasination of Medgar Evers- Mississippi NAACP
- Voting rights- Registering voters, 24th
Amendment, Freedom Summer, three civil rights
workers killed in Mississippi. March from Selma
to Montgomery. Voting Rights Act of 1965 - Black Power, Black Panthers, Black Muslims and
Malcolm X, Assassination of Martin Luther King - Civil Rights Act of 1968
38The Anti-War Movement
- The Draft
- The Medias Impact
- Hawks and Doves
- Movement- students, civil rights workers,
doctors, homemakers, retirees and teachers.
College campuses- anti-war rallies and debates. A
small number at first. - SDS- Students for a Democratic Society
- Protest- Signs, demonstrations, burned draft
cards and American Flags. - Democratic national convention of 1968- violence
and the assassination of RFK. - Campus protests- violence, ROTC, Kent State,
college shutdowns. - 1969 Washington protest 1971 Vietnam Veterans
Against the War in Washington. - Weathermen
- My Lai Massacre
- Pentagon Papers.
391963-1975- Time of Social Change
- Revival of the womens movement- experiences at
work, home, - Betty Freidan and The Feminine Mystique- raising
consciousness. - NOW and Feminism
- ERA and Phyllis Schlafly
- Roe-v. Wade
401963-1975- Time of Social Change
- Native Americans-
- Living conditions
- Termination
- Indian Movement
- Occupying Alcatraz
- AIM- Occupying Bureau of Indian Affairs and
Wounded Knee. - Red Power- control over their own natural
resources, education, protect their rights and
improve their standards of living.
411963-1975- Time of Social Change
- Latinos fight for rights
- Poverty, unemployment, low paying unskilled jobs.
- Struggle for Social justice
- Cesar Chavez and the National Farm Workers
Association- Grape Boycott - Chicanos- Mexican Americans
- Alianza
- Crusade for Justice
- MAYO
- La Raza Unida Party- united people
- Brown Berets
- Boricua Movement- ethnic pride for Puerto Ricans
- Cuban Americans
42Culture and Counterculture
- 1960s Counterculture, hippies, turning on the
establishment. - Student Activism- college campuses, free speech
movement. - Life in the counterculture- live simple and do
your own thing. - Haight-Ashbury in San Francisco
- Rural Communes to drop out
- Hippie culture- religion, drugs, freedom,
clothing, hair, and flower children. - Summer of Love- 1967 in San Francisco.
- Decline- no means of support, lack of rules cause
conflicts, and attracted sinister characters
(Charles Manson) - Mainstream reaction- objected to disrespectful,
uncivilized, and threatening. Society
unraveling- All in the Family. - Legacy- Attitudes, Art (Pop Art), Film, and music
(Bob Dylan and Woodstock)
431980s America in low spirits
- Lack of confidence in government
- Watergate
- Soviet Invasion of Afghanstan
- Iran Hostage Crisis
- Energy crisis and long gas lines.
- A growing conservative movement opposed to
liberal social and racial policies, abortion
rights, forced busing, welfare and affirmative
action. - The New Right- under President Reagan.
- Wanted to reverse some liberal policies- they
endorsed school prayer, lower taxes,
deregulation, small govt, strong military and
teaching of the Bible.
44Changes and Challenges in American Society
- Milestones for Women
- More women voting in 1980s- mostly democratic
- Sandra Day OConnor- 1st woman supreme court
justice. - Geraldine Ferraro- 1st woman Vice-President
candidate. - Changes in Immigration Laws- increased limits and
legal status. Tough on Employers. - Courts and Social Issues- School searches, equal
access on school grounds to student religious
groups, abortion rights and removal of life
support. - AIDS- (HIV)
- No Child Left Behind- 2001
- Sept. 11, 2001 and Homeland Security
45Americas Changing Face- 2000- Today
- Population of tomorrow
- Regional Changes- South and western growth.
- Graying Population- Baby Boomers 2946-1964
- Technology
- Computers and Internet
- Agriculture and genetic engineering
- Exploration- space
- Health and Health Care
- Energy and the Environment
- Natural Disasters and FEMA