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The Roaring 20

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Secretary of Commerce: Herbert Hoover, famous for his food raising efforts during WWI ' ... Many women bought ready-made clothing instead of making their own ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Roaring 20


1
The Roaring 20s
  • America After WWI

2
A Return to Normalcy
  • This became Warren G. Hardings campaign slogan
    when he accidentally messed up the word,
    Normality
  • Americans loved it and elected him

3
Fighting the Recession
  • After WWI, 2 million soldiers were looking for
    work
  • Factories were closing because they were no
    longer getting orders for wartime goods from
    European nations

4
Republicans Rule the 1920s
Warren G. Harding 1921-1923 (died in office)
  • HARD-COOL-HOOV
  • All the presidents of the 1920s were Republican
  • The names of the 3 presidents are Harding,
    Coolidge, and Hoover
  • Warren G. Harding died in office, probably due to
    shock

Calvin Coolidge 1923-1929
Herbert Hoover 1929-1933
5
President Hardings Corrupt Cabinet
  • Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon, a
    wealthy financier
  • Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover, famous for
    his food raising efforts during WWI
  • Ohio Gang Hardings old friends from Ohio who
    were corrupt and stole money from the government

6
Charles Forbes
  • One of Hardings old buddies
  • Head of the Veterans Bureau
  • Stole millions of dollars from the bureau
  • I can take care of my enemies all right, but
    myfriends, theyre the ones that keep me walking
    the floors at night! Hoover
  • Herbert Hoover was very hard-working and honest,
    but his friends were not
  • After a bunch of betrayals, Harding died of a
    heart attack in August, 1923

7
The Teapot Dome Scandal
  • Secretary of the Interior, Albert Fall accepted a
    bribe to lease government land to oil executives
  • One of these areas was called Teapot Dome in
    Wyoming
  • Fall was sent to prison

8
Vice President Calvin Coolidge Becomes President
  • Silent Cal spoke and spent little (Harding
    loved to throw parties and give long speeches)
  • He forced corrupt officials to resign
  • He was re-elected in 1924 with the slogan Keep
    Cool With Coolidge

9
From War Goods to Consumer Goods
  • Coolidge cut regulations on businesses
  • Americans incomes rose
  • People began to buy refrigerators, radios,
    vacuums, and other appliances
  • Businesses began to advertise their products

10
Coolidge Prosperity
  • The business of America is business. The man who
    builds a factory builds a temple. The man who
    works there worships there.
  • Calvin Coolidge
  • What does President Calvin Coolidge believe
    American Prosperity rests on?

11
Buying on Credit
  • Installment Buying Buying on Credit (Buy now,
    pay later)
  • Demands for goods jumped, but so did Americans
    debt
  • If we want anything, all we have to do is go and
    buy it on credit. So that leaves us without any
    economic problems whatsoever, except that perhaps
    some day to have to pay for them.
  • Comedian Will Rogers

12
Soaring Stock Market
  • By the late 1920s, more people were investing in
    the stock market
  • People became rich overnight
  • Bull Market Period of rapidly increasing stock
    prices
  • Prices of stocks rose more quickly than the value
    of the companies themselves

13
American Foreign Policy in the 1920s
  • Most all Americans (including Harding and
    Coolidge) wanted to remain isolationist
  • HOWEVER
  • 1. The U.S. still needed to protect economic
    interests in Mexico
  • 2. The U.S. gave 10 million in aid to Russia
    during a famine
  • 3. The U.S. still signed the Kellogg-Briand
    Pact with 61 other nations (which outlawed war)

14
Hopeful that, encouraged by their example, all
the other nations of the world will join in this
humane endeavor and by adhering to the present
Treaty as soon as it comes into force bring their
peoples within the scope of its beneficent
provisions, thus uniting the civilized nations of
the world in a common renunciation of war as an
instrument of their national policy -Section of
the Kellogg-Briand Pact http//www.yale.edu/lawweb
/avalon/imt/kbpact.htm
15
Women Gain the Right to Vote
  • 19th Amendment in 1920 gave women the right to
    vote
  • Carrie Chapman Catt set up the League of Women
    Voters
  • This group tried to educate voters and ensure the
    right of women to serve on juries

16
Ana Roque de Duprey
  • Fought for the right to vote for women in Puerto
    Rico
  • Puerto Rican women got the right to vote in 1929

17
Life Changes for Women
  • Women were told to go back home when the men came
    home to the factories after WWI
  • Many women stayed in the workforce as typists,
    cleaners, cooks, servants, seamstresses,
    teachers, secretaries, and store clerks
  • Many women bought ready-made clothing instead of
    making their own
  • Many women bought appliances to help them with
    housework after working a full day outside of the
    home

18
Impact of the Automobile
  • Car sales grew rapidly in the 1920s because Henry
    Fords assembly line made them so cheap
  • General Motors also became a popular seller of
    cars

19
Changing Lifestyles Due to the Automobile
  • Millions of jobs were created through factories,
    oil refineries, roads, highways, truck stops, gas
    stations, restaurants and tourist stops
  • Many Americans began to move to the suburbs to
    escape crowded conditions in cities

20
Mass Culture
  • Radio
  • Movies

(Above, lines outside a movie theatre) (Left,
family listening to the radio
21
The Jazz Age
  • Fashion Fads, flappers
  • Marathon Dancing

22
More Fads
  • Flagpole sitting Where young people would sit
    for hours and even days on top of a flagpole.
    (The record 21 days!)

23
The Dance Craze
  • The Charleston
  • Has a quick beat
  • Dancers kick out their feet
  • Popular dance for Flappers Women who wore short
    skirts (to the knees), bright red lipstick, hair
    cut short, smoked and drank in public, and drove
    fast cars

24
New Music
  • Jazz Born in New Orleans, created by African
    Americans, combination of West African rhythms,
    African American songs and spirituals, European
    harmonies
  • Listen to the song Heebie Jeebies- What
    different rhythms can you recognize?
  • Famous jazz musicians Louis Armstrong, Bessie
    Smith, Jelly Roll Morton

25
A New Generation of American Writers
  • Depressed about their awful experiences in World
    War I
  • Criticized Americans for being obsessed with
    money and fun
  • Many became expatriates (people who leave their
    own country to live in a foreign land) and moved
    to Europe

26
Ernest Hemingway
  • Wrote about experiences of Americans during WWI
    and in Europe
  • Wrote A Farewell to Arms, The Sun Also Rises, The
    Old Man in the Sea

27
F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • Wrote about wealthy young people who go to
    constant parties but cannot find happiness
  • He wrote The Great Gatsby
  • His characters had flappers, bootleggers, and
    movie makers

28
Sinclair Lewis
  • Grew up in a small town in Minnesota and moved to
    New York City
  • He wrote books about rural people from a city
    persons perspective (making them look stupid)
  • Wrote Main Street and Babbitt

29
The Harlem Renaissance
  • In the 1920s, many African American artists
    settled in Harlem, New York City
  • Black artists, musicians, and writers celebrated
    their African and American heritage

30
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31
Harlem Renaissance Poets
  • Claude McKay From Jamaica, wrote the poem, If
    We Must Die that condemned lynchings
  • Countee Cullen Taught high school in Harlem,
    wrote of the experiences of African Americans

32
Zora Neale Hurston
  • Write novels, short essays, short stories
  • Traveled throughout the South in a battered car
    collecting folk tales, songs, and prayers of
    black southerners
  • Published these in her book, Mules and Men

33
Langston Hughes
  • Most well-known of the Harlem Renaissance poets
  • Also wrote plays, short stories, and essays
  • First poem, The Negro Speaks of Rivers
  • Encouraged African Americans to be proud of their
    heritage
  • Protested racism and acts of violence against
    blacks

34
The night is beautiful, So the faces of my
people. The stars are beautiful, So the eyes of
my people. Beautiful also, is the sun. Beautiful
also, are the souls of my people. -Langston
Hughes, In My People
35
Heroes of the 1920s
  • Athletes
  • Bobby Jones Won nearly every golfing
    championship
  • Jack Dempsey Heavyweight boxing champion for 7
    years
  • Bill Tilden and Helen Willis Tennis champions
  • Gertrude Ederle 1st woman to swim the English
    Channel

36
Babe Ruth
  • Grew up in an orphanage
  • Often in trouble as a boy
  • Hit 60 homeruns in one season, and 714 overall
  • Called the Sultan of Swat

37
Charles Lindbergh
  • The greatest hero of the 1920s
  • The first person to fly an airplane across the
    Atlantic Ocean alone
  • Flew from New York to Paris
  • Called Lucky Lindy because he had to fly for 33
    ½ hours and didnt carry a parachute, a radio, or
    a map

38
The Noble Experiment
  • Prohibition
  • How did Prohibition help lead to organized
    Crime????

39
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