COS Standard 5 Evaluate the impact of social changes and the influence of key figures in the United States from World War I through the 1920s, including.

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COS Standard 5 Evaluate the impact of social changes and the influence of key figures in the United States from World War I through the 1920s, including Prohibition, the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment, the Scopes Trial, limits on immigration, Ku Klux Klan activities, the Red Scare, Susan B. Anthony, Margaret Sanger, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the Harlem Renaissance, the Great Migration, W. C. Handy, the Jazz Age, and Zelda Fitzgerald.

Determining the relationship between technological innovations and the creation of increased leisure time Chapter 21 Section 2

Technological Innovations Products will start being mass produced. Large scale manufacturing done by machines. Increases supplies and decreases cost. Assembly lines increases manufacturing efficiency by dividing up operations into simple tasks that unskilled workers could perform. Henry Ford’s Model T: affordable automobiles Garages and gas stations opened. Petroleum industry expands. People can live further away from work: isolation ended.

Technological Innovations continued

Technological Innovations continued

Technological Innovations continued More disposable income made innovations affordable. Electric razors Frozen food Household cleaning supplies Labor saving devices Used income to make life easier.

Technological Innovations continued

Technological Innovations continued

Technological Innovations continued The Postal Service used the Railroad to get mail to people faster. Charles Lindbergh flew a transatlantic solo flight in 1927. By end of 1928, 48 airlines flew to places in America. NBC (1926) and CBS (1928) set up daily programming radio stations.

Consumer Society Americans bought things on credit and the ideas of thrift shifted (standard of living changed). Americans thought they could pay back what they bought on credit. Advertising convinces Americans they need new products to make their lives better. Americans want these new conveniences because they want more leisure time. Sports: Baseball, college football, boxing Movies: silent or talking Radios Theatre And other forms of entertainment