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The Roaring 20

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Title: Civil Rights Era Author: Media Center Last modified by: Gail Harris Created Date: 3/20/2003 2:27:18 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Roaring 20


1
The Roaring 20s
  • An era of prosperity,
  • Republican power,
  • and conflict

2
  • The 1920s was an era of
  • extreme economic growth,
  • an explosion of new products like the automobile.
  • big social changes
  • the changing role of women and
  • the emergence of popular culture and advertising.
  • political conservatism
  • a string of Republican presidents
  • the Red Scare that demonized all liberals and
    radicals

3
  • The 1920's was known as the "Roaring 20's", or
    the "Jazz Age.
  • A period of great change in American Society -
    modern America is born at this time

4
Age of Prosperity
  • Economic expansion
  • Mass Production
  • Assembly Line
  • Age of the Automobile
  • Ailing Agriculture

5
Henry Ford
  • Model T Automobile
  • Assembly Line
  • Mass Production

6
Henry Ford, mass production, the automobile
  • In the 1920s came the emergence of the automobile
    as a true replacement for the horse, not just a
    play thing for the wealthy.
  • This was made possible by an industrial process
    called mass production.
  • Process was popularized by Henry Ford during the
    manufacture of his Ford Model T
  • The Model T was designed to be produced in great
    volume on assembly lines so the cost of each car
    would be low enough for common people to afford.

7
  • Black and Poor White Americans in this period
    continued to live in poverty
  • sharecropping kept them in de facto slavery
  • 1915 - boll weevil wiped out the cotton crop
  • white landowners went bankrupt forced
    sharecroppers off their land

8
  • Blacks moved north to take advantage of booming
    wartime industry ( Great Migration)
  • - Black ghettoes began to form, i.e. Harlem
  • within these ghettoes a distinct Black culture
    flourished

9
Langston Hughes
  • An African American poet, playwright, and
    novelist.
  • His ideas about African Americans greatly
    influenced the Harlem Renaissance.
  • The Harlem Renaissance was the name given to the
    cultural, social, and artistic explosion that
    took place in Harlem between the end of World War
    I and the middle of the 1930s.
  • Not Without Laughter and The Dream Keeper are
    two of his more well-known pieces of literature.

10
Consumer Economy
11
Culture of the Roaring 20s
Radio KDKA Pittsburgh GE, Westinghouse, RCA
form NBC
Silent Movies Charlie Chaplin Talkies The Jazz
Singer Starring Al Jolson Mary
Pickford Americas Sweetheart
12
Radio and Movies
  • People were now able to escape from everyday
    life.
  • Radio programs and movies offered Americans hope
    for a better life and a new way to spend time
    with friends and family.

13
Celebrities
Babe Ruth Ty Cobb
Charles Lindbergh The Spirit of St. Louis
Jack Dempsey
14
The 20s is The Jazz Age
The Flappers make up cigarettes short skirts
Musicians Louis Armstrong Duke Ellington Irving
Berlin
Writers F. Scott Fitzgerald Ernest Hemingway
15
  • Louis Armstrong, sometimes called ?Satchmo,
    became known while playing with the Creole Jazz
    Band and later became one of the biggest stars of
    jazz music because of his sense of rhythm and his
    improvisational skills
  • He improvised by playing the music that was in
    his head instead of following notes on a page.
    This type of playing laid the foundation for a
    new form of jazz.

16
Louis Armstrong
  • What a Wonderful World
  • Hello Dolly
  • Mack the Knife

17
Irving Berlin
  • Irving Berlin created many famous songs for
    Broadway musicals.
  • Berlin also wrote patriotic music his most
    famous song was "God Bless America.
  • " He composed all of the music for seventeen
    movies and twenty-one Broadway musicals.
  • Tin Pan Alley-Flatiron District NYC

18
Irving Berlin
  • God Bless America
  • Blue Skies
  • Puttin on the Ritz
  • There's No Business Like Show Business
  • White Christmas

19
Carrie Chapman Catt
  • A notable leader of the women's suffrage movement
    in the early 1900s
  • She and others won women's right to vote by
    holding meetings, protests, and speaking before
    government leaders.
  • Catt held the position of president for National
    American Woman Suffrage Association in 1900-1904
    and 1915-1920.

20
Alice Paul
  • Organized suffragist parades for the sake of
    women's rights.
  • She was a bold woman who was imprisoned three
    times for her protests and led hunger strikes in
    prison.
  • In 1916, Paul formed the National Women's Party,
    which fought hard for a constitutional amendment
    that would extend suffrage to women.
  • In 1920, the 19th Amendment was passed, giving
    women the right to vote.

21
  • more women worked outside the home
  • more women went to college and clamoured to join
    the professions
  • women didn't want to sacrifice wartime gains -
    amounted to a social revolt
  • characterized by the FLAPPER/ "new woman"
  • (bobbed hair, short dresses, smoked in public...)

22
The Flapper
  • An image often used in the advertisements of the
    1920s.
  • She was a slim woman with short hair and a short
    skirt who was free to dance and enjoy her
    freedom.
  • While only a small number of women were actually
    flappers in the 1920s, this image was a powerful
    and popular symbol of the changing role of women
    during this time.

23
A Society in Conflict
  • Anti-immigrant
  • National Origins Act
  • Discrimination
  • Sacco-Vanzetti Trial
  • Italian immigrants
  • Unfair trial

24
Sacco and Vanzetti
  • On April 15, 1920, two men robbed and murdered
    two employees of a shoe factory in Massachusetts.
  • Sacco Vanzetti are arrested and charged with
    murder
  • Two Italian anarchists (this meant they didn't
    believe in government).

25
Sacco and Vanzetti
  • Evidence was questionable but because they were
    immigrants and because of their radical political
    beliefs.
  • July 14, 1921, they are found guilty and
    sentenced to death.
  • After 6 years of appeals they were executed on
    August 23, 1927.

26
  • for immigrants the point of origin had shifted
    to S E Europe and new religions appeared
    Jewish, Orthodox, Catholic
  • this fear of immigrants was known as NATIVISM
  • many wanted Congress to restrict immigration,
    leading to a quota system that favoured n. areas
    of Europe
  • fear of immigrants (from SE Europe) led to a
    sentiment known as the Red Scare (fear of
    communism- post-Bolshevik Rev.)

27
In 1924, Congress passed the National Origins Act
  • This law set quotas for how many people could
    move to the United States.
  • It limited the number of new immigrants to 2
    percent of the number from that country who had
    been living in the United States in 1890.
  • The law eliminated all immigration from Asia and
    was aimed at preventing immigration from Southern
    and Eastern Europe.

28
Red Scare
  • This fear of international communism was called
    the Red Scare because red was the color of the
    communist flag.
  • This fear led to the government pursuing
    suspected communists and socialists

29
The Ku Klux Klan
Great increase In power
Anti-black
Anti-immigrant
Anti-Semitic
Anti-Catholic
Anti-womens suffrage
Anti-bootleggers
30
The Prohibition period
  • The manufacture, sale, and consumption of alcohol
    was illegal.
  • Started in 1919 with the passage of the 18th
    Amendment. Prohibition had wide Progressive
    support because leaders believed that it would
    improve society and help end poverty.

31
The Prohibition period
  • Led to a rise in gangster warfare as rival mob
    bosses competed in the bootlegging business.
  • Though alcohol was illegal, there was still
    strong demand, which the black market rushed to
    supply.
  • The center of this conflict was Chicago, home of
    Al Capone.

32
Prohibition
18th Amendment
Volstead Act
Gangsters
untouchables
Al Capone
33
0
  • in WWI, temperance became a patriotic movement. -
    drunkenness caused low productivity
    inefficiency, and alcohol needed to treat the
    wounded
  • a difficult law to enforce... organized crime,
    speakeasies, bootleggers were on the rise
  • Al Capone virtually controlled Chicago in this
    period - capitalism at its zenith
  • Prohibition finally ended in 1933 w/ the 21st
    Amendment
  • forced organized crime to pursue other interests
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