The Roaring 20’s.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 10.3: Clicker Questions “Conflict.
Advertisements

Chapter 21 Section 1 A Republican Decade.
The Red Scare THREATS TO CIVIL LIBERTIES. Red Scare Fueled by 1917, Communist/Bolshevik Revolution in Russia (Lenin) Americans fear a communist takeover.
A Republican Decade What events fueled the Red Scare of the early 1920s? What conflicts led to the major labor strikes of 1919? How did Republican leadership.
Politics of the 1920s CH 12. Politics of the 1920s CH 12.
T HE R OARING T WENTIES. C ONSERVATIVE P RESIDENTS L IMITED G OVERNMENT – P RO B USINESS Warren G. Harding “Return to Normalcy” Presidency filled with.
 Section 1 ◦ Nativism ◦ Isolationism ◦ Communism ◦ Anarchists ◦ Quota system  Section 2 ◦ Ohio gang ◦ Teapot Dome scandal  Section 3 ◦ Urban Sprawl.
A Brief Introduction to 1920s American Politics
America in the 1920’s and 1930’s. Women’s Rights 19 th Amendment is passed in August of 1920 – gave women the right to vote Flappers – women who challenged.
The Roaring 20’s An era of prosperity, Republican power, and conflict.

Begin $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Life in the 1920s Amendments AmendmentsCivilLiberties & More Art & Culture GrabBag Politics of the 1920s FinalFinal Jeopardy.
Ch. 12: The Roaring Twenties African Americans- moved North for economic reasons and to get away from the racism in the South African Americans- moved.
Innovation, Materialism, Fear, and Scandal Most of all an Era of Experimentation.
The Roaring 20’s. American’s seem tired of change, don’t want to look at problems in society or in the world Presidents of the 1920’s are all Republican,
Roaring 20’s Review January ’s Economy  Recession after WWI (soldiers come home, women unemployed, value of farm land decreased)  Bull Market.
Social, Technological, and Intellectual Changes. The Red Scare After WWI, the Russian Revolution brought a Communist government to power in Russia Americans.
Between the Wars The ROARING 20s By 1920, the Great War has officially ended. However, the world has seen more fighting, death, and destruction than.
The main political & social challenges facing America. Why did immigration become such a major issue in US society? Was America a country of religious.
10/12 Bellringer 5+ sentences Throughout history, Congress has passed laws to restrict immigration. Laws were sometimes aimed at specific countries, regions,
The Roaring 20’s After World War I April 8, 1919 Wilson brings peace treaty to the Senate Senate voted against treaty because of –League of Nations –Wanted.
Post WWI America. Three Problems at Home 1.Economic Downturn 2.Labor Unrest 3.Red Scare.
Chapter 23 Roaring Twenties. 1920’s Republican Presidents Warren Harding (1920)- “Return to normalcy” - Teapot Dome Scandal Calvin Coolidge (1923)- VP.
The Jazz Age, the Gilded Age. After WWI… US went back to Isolationism Nativism rose Red Scare: People afraid Communism would overthrow the government.
Choose a category. You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question. Click to begin.
Benchmark 3 Review. Reacting to the end of WWI, the US followed this type of foreign policy A policy of isolationism.
Warren G Harding President: Republican “A Return to Normalcy” Friends with big business Scandals by cabinet Disarmament Quota Acts limited immigration.
Topic 5.6 An Unsettled Society
Chapter 14: Politics and Prosperity
1920’s Review $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $600 This is Easy 20’s Lingo
Review for Test on 1920s.
Between the Wars The ROARING 20s
Vocabulary Unit 6 20’s and 30’s.
WW1 Effects on Foreign Policy/Rights and Immigration
The Roaring Twenties.
The Roaring Twenties.
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 10.3: Clicker Questions “Conflict.
The Roaring 20s The Jazz Age.
The 1920’s.
A Republican Decade Mr. Dodson.
Write your answers to the questions on a piece of paper
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 10.3: Clicker Questions “Conflict.
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 10.3: Clicker Questions “Conflict.
Roaring 20’s, The Great Depression, FDR & the New Deal
The 1920s.
Return to Normalcy: Ch. 12 and 13
Despite the image, all was not well during the Twenties
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values?
20’s Politics.
“It is a war against all nations… Our motive will not be revenge or the victorious assertion of the physical might of the nation, but only the vindication.
Politics, the Red Scare, & Prohibition
The Politics of the 1920’s & The Growing Economy
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values?
Cultural Conflicts Notes.
The Roaring Twenties.
Jeopardy People Business Misc. Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100
American History II Grab a Knights Charge out of the black basket in the front of the room.
An era of prosperity, Republican power, and conflict
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 10.3: Clicker Questions “Conflict.
Politics & Business in the 1920’s
The 1920’s Age of INTOLERENCE
Politics of the Roaring Twenties
The 1920s was a decade of change
The 1920s was a decade of change
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values?
Essential Question: How did the changes of the “Roaring 20s” clash with traditional American values? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 10.3: Clicker Questions “Conflict.
US Attempts Neutrality
1920’s.
A Republican decade.
This IS Jeopardy.
Presentation transcript:

The Roaring 20’s

After 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

After 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

Presidents During 1920s Warren G. Harding Calvin Coolidge Herbert Hoover

Warren G. Harding (1921-1923)

The Harding Presidency Foreign Policy Isolationism, avoid political & economic alliances with foreign countries. Disarmament, a program in which nations voluntarily give up their weapons.

The Harding Presidency Foreign Policy Quota (number limit) on immigrants Refused to join the League of Nations

The Harding Presidency Domestic Policy Normalcy - Harding’s campaign promised a return to pre- WWI peacefulness Red Scare – American fear of communism & other extreme ideas

The Red Scare 1920 – Russia becomes Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) or Soviet Union Gov’t owned land & property Single Political Party No rights for citizens Spread Communism to the World

Palmer Raids Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer Driven by fear of Communism And hopes of one day being president… Held suspects without evidence

IWW (“Wobblies”) Headquarters after a Palmer Raid

Sacco and Vanzetti Suspected militant anarchists Convicted of murder Many felt they did not receive a fair trial because of their political ideas and ethnicity.

Bartolomeo Venzetti and Nicola Sacco

Scandals of the Harding Administration Mostly related to the company his friends – “the Ohio Gang” friends he gave gov’t jobs too Teapot Dome Scandal – the most infamous

The 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 Harding’s Death April 2, 1923 – Harding Dies

This 1924 cartoon shows the dimensions of the Teapot Dome scandal

Coolidge becomes president. “Silent Cal” Calvin Coolidge 1923-1929

Coolidge’s Presidency Continues Harding’s programs & policies Believed in Laissez-faire Re-elected in 1924

Election of 1928 Rep. – Herbert Hoover Dem. – Alfred Smith (Catholic) Hoover used Smith’s religion against him Hoover Wins!

Herbert 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

African Americans Great Migration = Blacks moved north to take advantage of booming wartime industry Black ghettoes began to form, i.e. Harlem

African 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 1920’s

The 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.

African 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

Prohibition 18th Amendment took effect on January 16, 1920, made the manufacture, sale, and transport of liquor, beer, and wine illegal.

Many Americans turned to bootleggers - suppliers of illegal alcohol. Speakeasies – illegal, underground bars Bootleggers expanded their business into other illegal areas

Organized 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.

Homicide Rate dramatically rises, then peaks in 1933 – the year prohibition ends!

One of the most notorious criminals of this time was Al “Scarface” Capone, a gangster who rose to the top of Chicago’s organized crime network.

Issues 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.

A science teacher named John T 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.

1920’s Fads Motion Pictures – promoted common values & created trends 1st sound film – 1927

1920’s Fads Radio – unified the nation, featured news, sports, ads, soaps, & other shows Helped to unify the nation National Broadcasting Co. - 1st national network