Title: Essential Question:
1- Essential Question
- How did the changes of the Roaring 20s clash
with traditional American values? - Warm-Up Question
- What part of the 1920s weve talked about so far
might cause CONFLICT??
2Life in the 1920s
- The 1920s were an era of change
- Increased wealth, consumerism, leisure time,
new forms of entertainment led to a Jazz Age - By 1920, more Americans lived in cities than in
rural areas - Rural Americans reacted to these changes by
attacking behaviors they viewed as un-American
3Prohibition
4Prohibition
- In 1920, the 18th Amendment went into effect
Prohibition began - Supported by rural Protestants who believed
drinking led to crime, abuse, job accidents - 26 states had already outlawed alcohol before
1920 - The Volstead Act made the sale, manufacture
transportation of alcohol illegal
5Prohibition A Noble Experiment
6The U.S. Treasury Dept was in charge of enforcing
the Volstead Act
7As a result of prohibition, alcohol
consumption declined
8Prohibition
- But, many urban Americans resisted prohibition
- Most immigrants considered drinking part of
socializing - Wealthy urban Americans wanted to enjoy
themselves - Bootleggers made illegal alcohol rum runners
smuggled foreign alcohol into the country - Secret saloons (speakeasies) were created to sell
booze
9Rum Runners smuggled booze from Canada, the
Caribbean, Europe
10Bootleggers moonshiners made illegal booze
Why are they called bootleggers?
11Speakeasies were secret saloons or nightclubs
12Prohibition
- Prohibition had some negative effects on America
in the 1920s - Smuggling bootlegging increased crime
lawlessness - Organized crime grew took control of the
illegal alcohol trade - Mob bosses paid off politicians, judges, police
departments - The federal govt could not enforce prohibition
effectively
13Organized crime grew in American cities,
especially in Chicago where Al Capones gang was
dominant
To control the liquor trade, mobsters resorted to
bloody gang killings The most notorious was the
St. Valentines Day Massacre in 1929
Gangster Al Capone made 60 million per year in
bootlegging became a notorious icon
14Prohibition
- By the end of the 1920s, only 19 of Americans
supported prohibition - The strongest defenders of prohibition were rural
Americans - But, most Americans believed prohibition caused
more problems than it solved - In 1933, the 21st Amendment ended prohibition
15The Rise of Prohibition (4.31)
Optional Prohibition Film Clips
Prohibition Corruption (3.05)
Al Capone (4.33)
16Intolerance
17Intolerance in the 1920s
- In the 1920s, America experienced a new wave of
nativism - 800,000 Southern Eastern European immigrants
arrived each year in the early 1920s - Rural folks associated immigrants with
anti-American cultures non-Protestant
religions supporters of anarchy or socialism
18The Red Scare
- In 1917, Lenin led the Bolsheviks in the Russian
Revolution created the 1st communist govt - During WWI 1920s, Americans feared a similar
revolution in the U.S. - Eugene Debs formed an American Socialist Party
ran for president - Unskilled workers were unhappy with low wages
went on strike
19Red Scare in America
20Sacco Vanzetti
- During the Red Scare, suspected immigrants were
under attack - In 1920, two Italian immigrants named Sacco
Vanzetti were arrested charged with murder - Sacco Vanzetti were anarchists (believed in no
govt) but claimed to be innocent of the crime - With only circumstantial evidence, they were
found guilty executed
21Sacco Vanzetti
22Immigration Restrictions
- In 1921 1924, the govt passed new laws
restricting immigration - These laws created quotas that placed a maximum
number on how many immigrants could enter the
United States - The laws discriminated against Southern Eastern
European immigrants Asian immigrants
23(No Transcript)
24National Origins Act the Sacco/Vanzetti Trial
Video (2.19)
25The Ku Klux Klan
- The 1920s saw an increase in membership in the Ku
Klux Klan - The KKK promoted traditional values 100
Americanism - Used violence fear to attack African Americans,
immigrants, Catholics, Jews, unions, socialists - By 1924, the KKK had 4.5 million members
elected politicians to power in several states
26The 1st KKK disbanded when Reconstruction ended
in the 1870s, but the 2nd KKK formed in 1915 to
protect rural, Christian values
27The KKK supported Protestant, white American
values, including prohibition
The KKK was anti-Catholic anti-immigrant (many
new immigrants were Catholic)
28D.W. Griffiths The Birth of a Nation (1915) was
one of the most controversial films in movie
history. Set during after the Civil War, the
film glorifies white supremacy the KKK
29At its height in the 1920s, the KKK had 4.5
million members nationwide
30Religion
31Religious Fundamentalism
- In the 1920s, rural Americans found comfort in
religious fundamentalism (a literal
interpretation of the Bible) - Disliked the immigrants, flappers, socialists
they saw in cities - Evangelists used the radio to broadcast Christian
messages - Rejected many modern scientific theories Towns
in the South West outlawed teaching evolution
32Religious Fundamentalism
- In 1925, teacher John Scopes was arrested in
Dayton, TN for teaching evolution in his biology
class
33The Scopes Monkey Trial was a national
sensation
ACLU attorney Clarence Darrow defended Scopes
Represented urban America, science modernity
Scopes was found guilty fined 100, but
evolutionists believed they won because Darrow
got Bryan to admit that the world might not have
been made in six 24 hour days
Former presidential candidate William Jennings
Bryan served as prosecutor Represented
fundamentalism rural America
34Scopes Monkey Trial Video (stop at 200)
35Conclusions
- America in the 1920s experienced a decade of
change - Wealth, consumerism, credit, cars, radios,
advertising - Pro-business govt attitude isolationist
foreign policy - New freedoms for women African Americans
- Attempts by tradition-minded rural folks to
protect against the rapid changes of America
36- In the United States, the decade of the 1920s
was characterized by - 1. a willingness to encourage immigration to the
United States - 2. increased consumer borrowing and spending
- 3. the active involvement of the United States in
European affairs - 4. major reforms in national labor legislation
37- The 1920s are sometimes called the "Roaring
Twenties" because - A. foreign trade prospered after World War I
- B. the United States assumed a leadership role in
world affairs - C. political reforms made government more
democratic - D. widespread social and economic change occurred
- Which events best support the image of the 1920s
as a decade of nativist sentiment? - the passage of the National Origins Act and the
rise of the Ku Klux Klan - the Scopes trial and the passage of womens
suffrage - the Washington Naval Conference and the
Kellogg-Briand Pact - the growth of the auto industry and the Teapot
Dome Affair - After World War I, which factor was the major
cause of the migration of many African Americans
to the North? - the start of the Harlem Renaissance
- increased job opportunities in Northern cities
- laws passed in Northern States to end racial
discrimination - Federal Government job-training programs
38Closure ActivityThe Urban vs. Rural Debate
- In the chart below your notes
- Write a sentence that describes the changes of
the 1920s from the perspective of an urban
rural American - On each side, include 3 images for each side that
represent these different perspectives
39The 1920s