Title: Roaring Twenties
1Roaring Twenties
2American Life Changes
Boom or Bust The Roaring Twenties The
economic boom period of the 1920s had a
significant effect on the daily lives of many but
not all Americans.
3A New Popular Culture is Born
New technologies helped produce a new mass
culture in the 1920s.
4New Technology
5New Technology
-
- During the 1920s, the radio went from being
a little-known novelty to being standard
equipment in every American home.
6New Technologies
- The great popularity of movies in the 1920s gave
rise to a new kind of celebritythe movie star.
7Pilot Heroes of the Twenties
Charles Lindbergh
Amelia Earhart
8Effects of Urbanization
- Though the 1920s was a time of great economic
opportunities for many, farmers, sharecroppers,
and underpaid factory workers did not share in
the prosperity. - The 1920 census showed that for the first time
ever, more Americans lived in cities than in
rural. - New appliances and an increased reliance on
electricity to run them also changed the daily
lives of many Americans, particularly women - What are the new inventions and how did they
change everyday life?
9Prohibition
- 1919 The Eighteenth Amendment begins
Prohibition. - The amendment outlawed the manufacture, sale,
and transportation of alcoholic beverages. - Bootleg liquor and speakeasies gave rise to
crime. - The amendment was repealed in the early 1930s
10Prohibition
11The Harlem Renaissance
- The Main Idea
- Transformations in the African American community
contributed to a blossoming of black culture
centered in Harlem, New York. - What was Harlem, and how was it affected by the
Great Migration? - Who were the key figures of the Harlem
Renaissance?
12The Great Migration
- Beginning around 1910, Harlem, New York, became a
favorite destination for black Americans
migrating from the South. - Southern life was difficult for African
Americans, many of whom worked as sharecroppers
or in other low-paying jobs and often faced
racial violence. - Many African Americans looked to the North to
find freedom and economic opportunities, and
during World War I the demand for equipment and
supplies offered African Americans factory jobs
in the North. - African American newspapers spread the word of
opportunities in northern cities, and African
Americans streamed into cities such as Chicago
and Detroit. - This major relocation of African Americans is
known as the Great Migration.
13African Americans after World War I
- Push
- Jim Crow laws and lynchings as well as the
economic hardship of sharecropping. - Effects of the boll weevil
- Pull
- Job opportunities in the factories brought
African Americans to the cities of the North and
Midwest.
14Life in Harlem
- New York City was one of the northern cities many
African Americans moved to during the Great
Migration, and by the early 1920s, about 200,000
African Americans lived in the city. - Most of these people lived in a neighborhood
known as Harlem, which became the unofficial
capital of African American culture and activism
in the United States. - Writers, artists and musicians gathered together.
- Jazz music, which grew out of African American
tradition, became the rage.
This movement was known as the Harlem Renaissance.
15Harlem Performers and Musicians
16The Birth of Jazz
17Sports Heroes
- Radio helped inflame the public passion for
sports, and millions of Americans tuned in to
broadcasts of ballgames and prize fights
featuring their favorite athletes. -
Helen Wills Played powerful tennis, winning 31 major tournaments and two Olympic gold medals. Her nerves of steel earned her the nickname Little Miss Poker Face. Red Grange College football player who earned the nickname the Galloping Ghost for his speed. He turned professional after college, which was shocking at the time.
Babe Ruth Known as the Sultan of Swat, Ruth was legendary on the baseball field for his home runs. His legend lives on today in baseball circles and popular culture. Bobby Jones Jones won golfs first Grand Slam, meaning he won the games four major tournaments, and remains the only golfer to get a Grand Slam for matches in one calendar year.
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