Title: Bell Ringer
1Bell Ringer
- Give a list of the Progressive era reforms and
explain which one was the most significant. - If you dont know them, look them up! You MUST
know this list of reforms!
2The Twenties
3PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- Harding won the presidency in 1920 due to his
call to return to normalcy - The postwar economy underwent drastic changes
- Increase in efficiency of production
- Climb in real wages
- Decline in the average workers hourly week
- Boom in consumer goods industry
- This economic boom changed how Americans
organized business, earned their living, and
enjoyed their leisure time - It also led to the worst economic depression
America has ever seen
4PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- America underwent a second industrial revolution
- Electricity replaced steam as the main source of
power (30 of factories in 1914 vs. 70 in 1929) - The new machines could be operated by unskilled
or semiskilled workers - The average worker produced 3/4ths by 1929 than
they had in 1919 - New consumer goods of the time included
- Radios, washers, telephones, automobiles
- Canning, chemicals, synthetics, plastics also
became a part of everyday life
5PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- The construction industry also saw a boom
- Residential housing in the suburban areas became
desirable due to the auto - Credit expanded to allow for such development
- National mortgage debt jumped from 8B in 1919 to
27B in 1929 - Corporations underwent change in the 1920s
- Prior to the 20s people like Rockefeller and
Carnegie maintained both corporate control
(ownership) and business leadership (management)
of their businesses - The new business model would be demonstrated by
Alfred P. Sloan (GM) and Owen D. Young (Radio
Corporation of America)
6PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- The new business model had salaried executives,
plant managers, and engineers who made decisions
but did not have a controlling interest in the
company they worked for (didnt own 51 of the
stock) - They stressed scientific management and
behavioral psychology to make the workplace more
productive, stable, and profitable - Companies such as Du Pont had specialized in
things like gunpowder before 1920 but moved into
consumer goods such as fabrics, paints, and dyes - GE and Westinghouse moved into radios, washers,
and refridgerators
7PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- By 1929 200 companies controlled half of the
corporate wealth - The top 100 companies controlled 50 of the
revenues made per year - Oligopolies were common
- Four companies packed 3/4ths of the countries
meat - National grocery chain stores, clothing shops,
and pharmacies began squeezing out local business - The Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company (the
AP) had 15,000 stores across the country
8PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- To combat government favoritism toward labor
unions, corporations created a system known as
welfare capitalism - Incentives offered under welfare capitalism
included insurance policies, stock purchase
programs, improved work conditions, and sports
and recreation programs - This system did not solve seasonal unemployment,
low wages, long hours, and unhealthy factory
conditions - The corporations used the American Plan, which
involved creating open shops - Open shop meant that non-union employees received
the same benefits as union members
9PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- In company union systems, corporations created
company unions - These unions were used as substitutes for
collective bargaining, and were largely symbolic
and created for appearances sake - These strategies led to a sharp decline in union
membership - Other things that caused a decline in union power
were the timid leadership of William Green over
the AFL, the government moved back to a
pro-business stance, and the Supreme Court was
unsympathetic toward labor
10PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- The automobile changed the American way of life
more than any other development or invention - Henry Fords revolutionary new assembly system
made it possible to produce a car every 10
seconds by 1925 (it took 13 hours in 1913) - Ford doubled the average industrial worker wage
to 5/hr for an 8-hour day - Note this was more pay for less hours
- He did this for two reasons he knew that his
producers were consumers, and it reduced his high
turnover rate - By making the cars more affordable, millions more
would drive the 300 Model T car that he produced
11PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- By 1927, Ford had produced 15,000,000 Model Ts
- By this time, General Motors had become a stiff
competitor - GM developed a new marketing strategy by dividing
the company into separate divisions that each
targeted a particular audience - Cadillac Wealthy
- Chevrolet Working and middle class
- GM also developed market research and sale
forecasting, which has since become a model for
large American corporations
12PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- The auto industry helped steel, rubber, glass,
and petroleum markets - It stimulated spending for roads, and is credited
for the boom in suburban communities - It led to the development of showrooms, repair
shops, gas stations, motels, billboard
advertising, and roadside diners - It is credited with the rapid development of
California and Florida - Autos changed the experience of American people
by allowing them to travel to far-off places,
visit other cities for shopping or to see family - It changed the way young people dated
13PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- Cities grew a significant amount by 1930
- Cities promised business opportunities, good
jobs, cultural opportunities, and personal
freedom - Most people moving into cities were black or
immigrant - Cities grew horizontally and vertically
- Skyscrapers began to appear, including the Empire
State Building - Completed 1931, tallest in the world at 102
stories
14Cities grow up and out
New York City, 2006 Above Cityscape from 80th
floor of the Empire state building Right Skyline
pictures from Statue of Liberty and ferry
15Quiz
- For the following question provide ONE of the
body paragraphs you would use in writing this
essay - How did TWO of the following help shape American
national culture in the 1920s? - Advertising
- Entertainment
- Mass Production
16PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- The automobile allowed the suburbs to have lower
residential density, as well as workplaces and
shopping centers outside of the interior of the
city - Despite advancements in industrial workers lives
and urban living, parts of the country lagged
behind in prosperity - One-third of American workers in the 1920s were
employed in agriculture - Due to record high prices of crops during World
War I and a massive surplus left over from the
war, prices began to drop in 1920 - Prices also declined on property, wiping out
billions in capital investment
17PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- Due to expanded debt coupled with lower prices
for crops, farmers were in need of bailout (which
was unsuccessful) - Wheat was one of the few exceptions to this trend
- While a handful of agricultural products were at
least breaking even, the income gap between
farmers and non-farmers increased (223 870)
18PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- The main relief act, passed by Congress but
vetoed by President Coolidge (McNary-Haugen Bill)
proposed that the government purchase the
farmers surplus and then sell it on world
markets or when domestic prices rose - Farmers would not see any government relief until
the New Deal programs of the 1930s
19PostWar Prosperity and its Price
- Coal, railroad, and textile industries lost
significance as oil, cars, and cost-cutting
measures rose in prominence - Areas such as Appalachia became significantly
poorer than more urban areas of the country
20The new mass culture
- The rise of mass media (communication to a large
audience) led to a standard of habit, dress,
language, and social behavior - The Roaring 20s was so named because of the
explosion of image and sound machinery - While most people had limited access to this
up-and-coming way of life, those who did found
the new definition of the good life - Initially, Americans saw movies in nickelodeons
at a rate of about 7,000,000 daily admissions - As the movie industry shifted to Hollywood, large
studios such as Paramount, Fox, MGM, and Warner
Brothers dominated the business
21The new mass culture
- These studios were founded by European immigrants
who came to America and started in menial jobs - With the invention of talkies (the first being
The Jazz Singer in 1927), Hollywood came to rely
heavily on Wall Street for funding - Just like today, Hollywood emphasized liberal
social themes and used celebrity fanaticism to
teach people, particularly the youth, how to
live their lives - As Hollywood became more permissive in its
themes, people began to push for censorship - Studio moguls brought in Will Hayes to develop
their own form of censorship to avoid
governmental involvement
22The new mass culture
- Radio was launched by Harry P. Davis
- The first thing aired on public radio was the
1920 election results - After that KDKA offered regular nightly
broadcasts heard by a few hundred people - By 1923 600K radios had been sold and programs
included music, talks by college professors,
church services, as well as news and weather - Radio provided a link to a larger national
community - Soon, advertisers began footing the bill for
radio broadcasting - Amos n Andy was the nations first hit show
23The new mass culture
- A new form of journalism emerged called tabloids
- Know for scandalous, racy headlines about public
figures - Most often bought by poor, uneducated people
- Was criticized for being in bad taste and vulgar
- Advertising emerged as a profession
- Many techniques were used to persuade consumers
to buy certain products
24A Classic Icon in Advertising
25The new mass culture
- Sports grew increasingly popular in the 1920s
- Athletes were ideally rich, famous, glamorous,
and a rebel (Babe Ruth and A-Rod have similar
traits) - Ruth is the most well known name in baseball,
Americas national pastime - When a reporter commented on Ruths 80,000
salary being more than Pres. Hoovers Ruth
replied Well, I had a better year than he did. - College football also saw a growth in popularity
- Focus on Ivy league teams decreased while schools
like Notre Dame gained in importance
26National Pastimes
27The new mass culture
- Celebrities became the model of achievement in
the new age - The new morality of more liberal behaviors
began to emerge in common culture - The flapper is one of the most iconic images of
new morality, but were flappers new? - Nothey were just new to the middle-class white
people - Black ghettos, bohemian enclaves, and
working-class dance halls had seen these rebels
long before they became mainstream - The new morality promoted sex as a positive,
health impulse, that if repressed would result in
psychological issues
28The flapper image
- Flappers were known for
- Sexual experimentation
- Jazz dancers
- Heavy makeup
- Cigarette smoking
- Bobbed hair
- Short/revealing skirts
29The State, the economy, and business
- The 1920s ushered in a era of confident
Republicans controlling the White House - Warren Harding
- Calvin Coolidge
- Herbert Hoover
- The Republicans boosted the government-business
partnership as the reason for economic prosperity - Harding did little active campaigning during his
election due to fear of being discovered - He was somewhat shallow and intellectually weak
30The State, the economy, and business
- Upon taking office, Harding surrounded himself
with the Ohio gang (his friends) - By 1923, he caught wind of scandals produced by
his cronies - He commented, This is a hell of a job! I have
no trouble with my enemiesBut my damned
friendstheyre the ones that keep me walking the
floor nights. - Scandal one Attorney General Harry Daugherty
took bribes - Scandal two Teapot Dome scandalInterior Sec.
Albert Fall pocketed money in exchange for
secretly leasing oil reserves to two private
investors - He was the first cabinet member to be imprisoned
31The State, the economy, and business
- Harding administration wasnt all bad
- Andrew Mellon, who served as Sec. of the Treasury
under all three Republicans lead America through
its prosperous period - Mellons economic plan included tax cuts for the
wealthy, corporations, and on inheritance - He also sought to cut spending
- Under his plan, Americas economy grew
significantly - Harding died in office (heart attack, 1923)
- Silent Cal Coolidge was different from Harding
- He wanted as little government as possible, he
only spent 4 hours per day at the office - Believed people like Mellon were best suited to
be making the money decisions - The business of America, is business.
32The State, the economy, and business
- After Coolidges second term, Herbert Hoover got
a crack at the White House - His ideology is summed up in
- Reactionaries and radicals would assume that all
reform and human advance must come through
government. They have forgotten that progress
must come from the steady lift of the individual
and that the measure of national idealism and
progress is the quality of idealism in the
individual. - Hoover sought to create an associative state
between the government and businesses
33The State, the economy, and business
- The Bureau of Standards developed standardized
engineering and consumer goods - The Commerce Dept. spoke about the significance
of cooperation between government and business - The Antitrust Division of the Justice Dept.
relaxed their responsibilities due to the
partnership - By the end of the 1920s much of the wealth was
consolidated/owned by only a few companies
34The State, the economy, and business
- America emerged from WWI as the strongest
economic power in the world - By 1929 America had an 8B (yes, billion) surplus
- Clinton had a public deficit of
5,727,776,738,304.64 - The current public deficit is 6,434,552,796,939.8
7 (an additional 4T in intergovernmental debt
also exists now) - Debts undertaken by Britain and France from the
US during WWI would not be reclaimed - The US brokered a deal to cut the amount of debt
they owed - The Europeans viewed Americans as loan sharks and
insistence on repaying at least some of the money
fueled anti-American campaigns
35The State, the economy, and business
- Germany felt the reparations under the Treaty of
Versailles was too much and unfair - Hoover and Charles Dawes created a plan (the
Dawes Plan) to stretch out Germanys payments,
reduced the overall debt, and finance the debt
through American banks - This in turn helped Britain and France better pay
back their debts to the US - Military restraint was negotiated in the
Five-Power Treaty - US, Britain, France, Japan, Italy, and China
agreed to reduce navies and build less ships,
etc. - Italy and Japan bailed leading to the demise of
the treaty
36The State, the economy, and business
- Despite not joining the League of Nations, the US
played a role in world affairs - In 1928 the Kellogg-Briand Pact was signed
denouncing war - Many peace loving groups celebrated its passing
- Critics claimed it had no power, and therefore
was essentially meaningless - The pact proved meaningless within weeks
- The US Congress approved 250 M for new
battleships
37The State, the economy, and business
- Sec. of State Charles Hughes sought to establish
a Pax Americana meaning have a relationship of
respect with other nations based on economic, not
military or political power - Capitalism would have to play an outstanding role
in this - Economic threats against European and Asian
governments kept them in line with US
capitalistic prosperity - In Latin America, military presence was required
to maintain a level of democracy that would
encourage fair trade with the US - This intervention is why our relations with Latin
American countries is still rocky today
38Resistance to Modernity
- Prohibition
- 18th Amendment took effect on Jan. 1, 1920
- It was a noble experiment
- The Volstead Act of 1919 was passed to establish
a federal Prohibition Bureau to enforce it - Illegal stills and breweries, smuggling, and
speakeasies were common (bribes to overlook
were often accepted) - Organized crime grew due to the profitableness of
illegal alcohol - Al Capone saw himself as a businessman
- The 21st Amendment passed in 1933
39Quiz
- Was the governmental assistance to farmers
effective at stabilizing the agricultural
industry? - How did the auto industry change American lives?
- What was welfare capitalism?
- What were some of the inventions of the Second
Industrial Revolution? - Did urban populations increase or decrease during
the 1920s?
40Quiz
- What characteristics were flappers known for?
- What new form of journalism was introduced in the
1920s? - Who were the three Republicans of the 1920s?
- What did bootlegging lead to during prohibition?
- What was the Scopes Trial?