Title: The%20Roaring%2020
1The Roaring 20s
2After World War I
- April 8, 1919 Wilson brings peace treaty to the
Senate - Senate voted against treaty because of
- League of Nations
- Wanted Monroe Doctrine Enforced
3After World War I
- Wilson went on a speech tour to win support for
the treaty - Suffered a stoke paralyzed half his body
- Ended presidency in seclusion
- July 2, 1921 Congress voted to end war with
Central Powers
4Presidents During 1920s
- Warren G. Harding
- Calvin Coolidge
- Herbert Hoover
5Warren G. Harding (1921-1923)
6The Harding Presidency
Foreign Policy Isolationism, avoid political
economic alliances with foreign
countries. Disarmament, a program in which
nations voluntarily give up their weapons.
7The Harding Presidency
Foreign Policy Quota (number limit) on
immigrants Refused to join the League of
Nations
8The Harding Presidency
Domestic Policy Normalcy - Hardings campaign
promised a return to pre- WWI peacefulness Red
Scare American fear of communism other
extreme ideas
9The Red Scare
- 1920 Russia becomes Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR) or Soviet Union - Govt owned land property
- Single Political Party
- No rights for citizens
- Spread Communism to the World
10Palmer Raids
- Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer
- Driven by fear of Communism
- And hopes of one day being president
- Held suspects
- without evidence
11IWW (Wobblies) Headquarters after a Palmer Raid
12Sacco and Vanzetti
- Suspected militant anarchists
- Convicted of murder
- Many felt they did not receive a fair trial
because of their political ideas and ethnicity.
13Bartolomeo Venzetti and Nicola Sacco
14Scandals of the Harding Administration
- Mostly related to the company his friends the
Ohio Gang friends he gave govt jobs too - Teapot Dome Scandal the most infamous
15The Teapot Dome Scandal
- Secretary of the Interior secretly gave drilling
rights to two private oil companies in return for
illegal payments. - Strain over scandals may have cause Hardings
Death - April 2, 1923 Harding Dies
16This 1924 cartoon shows the dimensions of the
Teapot Dome scandal
17Coolidge becomes president. Silent Cal
Calvin Coolidge 1923-1929
18Coolidges Presidency
- Continues Hardings programs policies
- Believed in Laissez-faire
- Re-elected in 1924
19Election of 1928
- Rep. Herbert Hoover
- Dem. Alfred Smith (Catholic)
- Hoover used Smiths religion
against him - Hoover Wins!
20Herbert Hoover
- When Hoover takes office the US economy seemed to
be doing well - Oct 29, 1929 Black Tuesday Stock Market Crashed
beginning the Great Depression
21African Americans
- Great Migration Blacks moved north to take
advantage of booming wartime industry - Black ghettoes began to form, i.e. Harlem
22(No Transcript)
23African Americans
- Harlem Renaissance African Am literary
awakening - Alain Locke The New Negro celebrated growing
African Am culture - Langston Hughes poet, writer, playwright who
wrote about being African Am in the 1920s
24The Jazz Age
- Jazz, a style of music that grew out of the
African Am music of the South, became highly
popular during the 1920s.
Jazz became so strongly linked to the culture
that the decade came to be known as the Jazz Age.
25African Americans
- Marcus Garvey (Jamaican) favored racial
segregation b/c of Black superiority - Garvey believed Blacks should return to Africa
- Gov't charged him with w/fraud found guilty
- Deported to Jamaica, but his organization
continued to exist
26Prohibition
- 18th Amendment took effect on January 16, 1920,
made the manufacture, sale, and transport of
liquor, beer, and wine illegal.
27- Many Americans turned to bootleggers - suppliers
of illegal alcohol.
Speakeasies illegal, underground
bars Bootleggers expanded their business into
other illegal areas
28Organized Crime
- The profit from selling illegal liquor helped
lead to the rise of organized crime. - As rival groups fought for control in cities,
gang wars murders became common.
29Homicide Rate dramatically rises, then peaks in
1933 the year prohibition ends!
30- One of the most notorious criminals of this time
was Al Scarface Capone, a gangster who rose to
the top of Chicagos organized crime network.
31Issues of Religion
- Fundamentalism supported traditional Christian
ideas and argued for a literal interpretation of
the Bible. - Worked to pass laws against teaching the theory
of evolution in public schools.
32- A science teacher named John T. Scopes agreed to
challenge such a law in Tennessee. His arrest
led to what was called the Scopes trial.
331920s Fads
- Motion Pictures promoted common values
created trends - 1st sound film 1927
341920s Fads
- Radio unified the nation, featured news,
sports, ads, soaps, other shows - Helped to unify the nation
- National Broadcasting Co. - 1st
national network
35(No Transcript)