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The 1920s part II

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Election in 1920 led to Republican candidate Warren Harding's winning on a ... Until mid 1920s, people usually just paid cash for everything ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The 1920s part II


1
The 1920s part II
  • Economics and politics

2
Post WW I
  • WW I left huge scars on America in political
    terms
  • America refused to sign Treaty of Versailles
  • Wanted to isolate themselves from Europe
  • Revolution in Russia results in Lenin and
    communism taking over in 1918
  • Whats communism?

3
Red scare
  • Americans feared spread of communism
  • Red Scare fear of radicals trying to take over
    the US
  • Seattle played a big role in this in 1919
  • 35,000 shipyard workers strike
  • Press claims the communists were taking over
    Seattle
  • Mayor threatens to call out National Guard
  • Threat works, strike ends

4
Two big court cases
  • Schenk v US
  • Schenk had urged soldiers to not enlist in army
    and desert if they were in the army
  • Supreme Court declares it OK to silence free
    speech if there is a clear and present danger
    to the nation
  • Gitlow v New York
  • New York had convicted Gitlow of promoting
    revolution
  • Supreme Court upheld this limitation of free
    speech, and also said the Bill of Rights applied
    to state issues, not just federal issues

5
Sacco and Vanzetti
  • Most controversial legal case in US history (at
    least until post 9-11 Guantanamo)
  • A guy shot and killed a shopkeeper in
    Massachusetts in 1920
  • Police arrest two Italian immigrants, Sacco and
    Vanzetti
  • Coincidentally, S and V were socialists
  • Evidence may have been planted on them
  • Found guilty, and despite several appeals, put to
    death in electric chair in 1927

6
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7
Urge to be normal again
  • Red Scare really frightened Americans
  • People wanted things to be like they used to be
  • Election in 1920 led to Republican candidate
    Warren Hardings winning on a platform of
    returning America to normalcy
  • Shift to Republican presidents lasts until 1932.

8
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9
Republican rule
  • Republicans controlled Congress
  • Three Republicans elected President
  • Harding, Coolidge and Hoover
  • Harding appoints former president Taft as Supreme
    Court Justice
  • First time that has ever happened
  • Foreign affairs basically, stay away from them
  • Isolationism is born

10
Isolationism in 1920s
  • US is now a huge economic power
  • Started imposing tariffs on imported goods from
    Europe
  • This made it impossible for Britain and France to
    pay their war debt
  • Also impossible for Germany to pay reparations
  • US rolls back tariff, and starts to help Germany
    get back on its feet
  • Britain and France furious at this, but US
    recognized if Germany wasnt helped, another war
    could start

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12
Domestic issues
  • Reflecting isolationism, Americans start to
    embrace nativism, or favoring people and ideas
    that are born in America
  • Immigration nearly stopped from Eastern and
    Southern Europe as well as Asia
  • National Quota Act established
  • For each country, total immigrants for one year
    could not exceed 2 of that nationalitys
    presence in the US in 1890
  • This favored Irish, British and Scandinavians,
    discriminated against Italians, Russians, Poles
  • No Asians, period
  • Yes, it is openly racist and not changed until
    1964

13
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14
End of Harding
  • One big scandal Teapot Dome
  • Secretary of the Interior gave oil drilling
    rights on Federal land to private companies in
    exchange for 300,000 in gifts and loans
  • Stress from this caused Harding to have a heart
    attack
  • Died in office in 1923

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16
Calvin Coolidge
  • Hardings VP Coolidge becomes president
  • Very quiet, unsmiling, reserved
  • Finishes Hardings term, runs and gets elected in
    1924
  • Keep Cool with Coolidge was his campaign slogan
  • The chief business of America was business,
    according to Coolidge

17
The Business President
  • Coolidge rolled back many taxes, cut public aid
    for many
  • Refused to help flood victims in Mississippi
  • Refused to tighten bank credit on people taking
    out loans to gamble in the stock market
  • Let everything work itself out
  • We will see how it worked itself out in 1929

18
Hoover
  • Coolidge decides not to run for re-election in
    1928
  • Hoover famous for charity work he did after WW I
    in Europe
  • Ran against Democrat Alfred Smith (NY governor)
  • Smith was Roman Catholic
  • First time a Catholic ran for president
  • Hoover supports Prohibition
  • Women voting in biggest numbers ever support
    Hoover over this issue
  • Hoover carries the rural Protestant population,
    Smith the urban and Catholic population
  • People figured the good times of the 20s would
    continue

19
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20
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21
Business boom
  • Lots of money floating around
  • Average wages rose 27 between 1914 and 1926
  • Increase in spending leads to bigger profits for
    business, which leads to higher wages, which
    leads to more spending
  • Result huge buying spree in the 1920s

22
Spending spree
  • Higher wages
  • Clever advertising
  • New products
  • Lower costs to make them
  • Credit available

23
Credit
  • Until mid 1920s, people usually just paid cash
    for everything
  • Borrowing money to buy things was considered
    immoral and irresponsible
  • New products often cost a lot of money
  • Installment plans invented just pay a certain
    amount every month, plus interest
  • By 1929, Americans used credit for everything
  • 60 of all cars sold on credit
  • Up to 90 of many household appliances as well

24
New products
  • Electricity was a huge boon for household
    appliance industry
  • Number of people with electricity in their homes
    went from 16 to 63 in the 1920s
  • General Electric (GE) becomes one of the worlds
    largest companies
  • From 1919 to 1929 sales went from 1bln to 2.5bln

25
Advertising
  • Before 1920 ads simply stated features of a
    product
  • Shift to how the product can enhance your life
  • A woman is only as old as her complexion
  • Air Mail is socially correct
  • Twice the cleaning, twice the leisure
  • In addition to catchy phrases, advertisers felt
    they were educating people

26
  • Advertising activity

27
Economy gets shaky
  • Hoover presidency in late 1920s
  • 1925 total value of stock market was 27bln
  • In 1928 alone stocks increased by 11bln
  • By October 1929, total value 87bln
  • Everybody wanted to get rich quick
  • Writers promoted the idea that it is Americans
    duty to get rich

28
Danger signs
  • Mostly the rich got richer poor people didnt
    get significantly wealthier
  • 1929 200 companies controlled half of American
    business
  • 24,000 families (.01 of pop) controlled 34 of
    the nations savings
  • 71 earned less than 2,500 per year (poverty
    level)

29
Gambling
  • Personal debt due to excessive credit soars
  • Debt rises from 47bln in 1920 to 72bln in 1929
  • People cant pay their bills
  • Gambling money in the stock market seems to be a
    way out speculation
  • Buying on margin buy stock for a fraction of its
    cost, sell it when it gains value
  • Q whats the risk with that?
  • Lots of people, including Democratic politicians
    fear its all going to blow up

30
Things fall apart
  • October 1929 people start selling stock that had
    become overvalued
  • Ripple effect caused others to dump stock
  • Bankers pooled together to buy up stock,
    keeping the market afloat
  • Doesnt work, prices continue to drop as more
    people sell their stock
  • Black Tuesday (10/29/1929) 16.4 million shares
    sold (normal day was 4 million)
  • By November 13th, 30 bln wiped out of the stock
    market

31
Why did this hurt the little people?
  • Risky loans hurt banks high-risk business
    couldnt pay back cash to banks
  • Consumer borrowing credit got over-extended
  • Bank runs people panicked and took cash out of
    accounts (no trust in banks)
  • Bank failures banks simply closed no cash to
    pay off loans
  • Savings destroyed by 1933, 9 million savings
    accounts wiped out

32
Why did this hurt so much?
  • Cuts in production business couldnt borrow
    more money to make more goods
  • Rise in unemployment business laid off workers
    since no goods were being made
  • More cuts in production no employees, nobody in
    factories
  • Vicious circle.
  • Economy contracts depression
  • This depression lasts from 1929 to 1941
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