Title: The Jazz Age and the KKK
1The Jazz Age and the KKK
2Klan Resurgence Timeline of Klan History
- founded during Reconstruction, collapsed in
1870s - revived in 1915 (in part because of the movie
Birth of a Nation) - resurgence of popularity in the 1920s, but
collapsed again by the 1930s - again reappears in the 1950s
3Klan Resurgence Poster for the Film The Birth
of a Nation by W.G. Griffith (1915)
4Klan Resurgence NAACP Protest the Screening of
The Birth of a Nation, 1947
5Klan Resurgence Key Scenes in The Birth of a
Nation
- intertitles drawn from A History of the American
People (1902) by then-president Woodrow Wilson - black legislators lolling in their chairs in the
South Carolina legislature in the early 1870s - white children don white sheets and scare black
children nearby, inspiring Klan outfits - Klansmen dump the body of the character Gus, an
African American, who they had killed for causing
a young white woman, Flora, to jump off a cliff
6Klan in the 1920s Washington, D.C. Parade
7Klan in the 1920s Social Movements Supported by
the Klan
- prohibition
- anti-immigrant sentiments
- anti-radicalism
- religious fundamentalism
- morality and family values
8Klan in the 1920s Different Historical
Explanations of the Klan
- racist and nativist movement
- populist movement
- reform movement
- reactionary movement
9Immigration Restriction Ku Klux Klan Marching
in DC
10Immigration Restriction Cartoon on the Literacy
Test
11Immigration Restriction Cartoon on the Quota
Act of 1921
12Immigration Act of 1924 (The Johnson-Reed Act)
- Based ceilings on the number of immigrants from
any particular nation on 2 percent of each
nationality recorded in the 1890 census - Was directed against immigrants from Southern
and Eastern Europe who arrived in large numbers
after 1890 - Barred all immigrants ineligible for citizenship
on racial grounds, including all south and east
Asians (including Indians, Japanese, and Chinese)
13Immigration Act of 1924 Annual Immigration
Quotas
- Germany - 51,227
- Great Britain - 34,007
- Ireland - 28,567
- Italy - 3,845
- Hungary - 473
- Greece - 100
- Egypt - 100
14Immigration Act of 1924 Map of Europe, Literary
Digest, 1924
15Immigration Restriction U.S. v Bhagat Singh
Thind, 1923
16Prosperity Who Prospered in the 1920s?
- 1200 mergers caused the disappearance of over
600 independent enterprises - top 0.1 of U.S. families in 1929 had combined
income as large as bottom 42 - i. e. approx 24,000 families had combined income
as large as 11.5 million poor and lower-class
families - per capita income in the U.S. rose 9 between
1920-1929 - per capita income for the top 24,000 families
rose 75 - 80 of families had no savings
- farmers did not prosper - 1/4 of all employment
- less than 10 invested in the stock market
17Prosperity Bruce Barton, author of The Man
Nobody Knows, here with Hollywood producer
Cecil B. DeMille, 1920s
18Prosperity Welfare Capitalism Shoe Companys
Billboard Ad, 1923
19Prosperity Comic Strip on Workers Owning
Shares, 1929
20Automobile Automobile Sales and Registration
21Automobile Ford Model T, 1920s
22Automobile Ford Model T French Ad, 1924
23Automobile General Motors Ad, 1925
24Automobile Cadillac Ad, 1925
25Automobile Ford Assembly Line, Model A, 1928
26Automobile Ford Model A Ad, 1929
27Automobile Song about Ford Model A, 1928
28Automobile Chevrolet Ad, 1931
29Automobile Paige-Jewett Car Ad, 1929
30Great Migration Social Patterns
- from rural areas to cities
- from the South to the North
- Appalachian whites
- Puerto Ricans
- African Americans
31Great Migration Motives
- immigration slows down because of WW I
- more work because of WW I
- more jobs for groups previously left out--women,
rural migrants, racial minorities - racial segregation and violence in the South
- sharecropping
- natural disasters such as floods and boll weevil
infestations - conscious choice on the part of migrants (many
did not leave)
32Great Migration Railroad Routes
33Great Migration Painting by Jacob Lawrence, 1940
34Great Migration Painting by Jacob Lawrence, 1940
35Harlem Renaissance Marcus Garveys Supporters
Parade in Harlem
36Harlem Renaissance NAACP Anti-Lynching Ad in
the New York Times
37Harlem Renaissance Zora Neale Hurston Photo by
Carl Van Vechten
38Harlem Renaissance The Crisis Ad for Black Swan
Records, 1923
39Harlem Renaissance The Crisis Cover, 1929
40Leon Bix Beiderbecke, Sorry, 1928
41Louis Armstrong, Weather Bird, 1928
42New Woman Magazine illustrations Gibson
Girls by Charles Gibson--a beauty standard of
the 1900s--and a flapper by John Held, Jr. from
the 1920s
43New Woman Suffragists picketing the White
House, January 1917
44New Woman Department Stores and Consumer Culture
45New Woman Working-class women at the turn of
the century
46New Woman John Held, Jr. Flappers have no
manners or brains
47New Woman John Held, Jr. Its all right,
Santa-- you can come in. My parents still
believe in you.
48New Woman John Held, Jr., dustjackets for F.
Scott Fitzgerald novels
49New Woman Film Actress Louise Brooks and a
comic strip she inspired
50New Woman Actress Clara Bow, the ultimate
flapper in It (1927) and Dangerous Curves (1929)
51Fundamentalism Timeline
- Word coined at around 1910
- Denotes religious groups that take the Bible
literally - Popular and active in the 1920s
- Then the movement retreats from politics until
1980s, in part because of the Scopes Trial
52Fundamentalism Church Membership
53Fundamentalism Actor Lionel Barrymore and
Modern Christ
54Scopes Trial Cartoon on Evolution
55Scopes Trial W. J. Bryans Cartoon against
Modernity, 1924
56Scopes Trial Cartoon comparing Bolsheviks and
Scientists, 1925
57Scopes Trial Bryan and Darrow
58Scopes Trial Bryan as Don Quixote
59Scopes Trial Darrow as a Street Player
60Scopes Trial Monkeys Vote on Evolution