Roaring 20s Chapter 32, Part 2. Ford Changes Everything 1910 69 car companies produce 180k cars Taylor—The Father of Scientific Management Model T-

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 8. Good Times and Bad Lesson 1. The Roaring Twenties
Advertisements

Modernism Urged on by Ezra Pound’s exhortation to “Make it new!,” poets and writers of this period made every effort to break with the past.
The New Era: The Roaring 20’s
The 1920s: Coping with Change
Look at the time line on page 704…  What are some critical events that occurred in America during this time period?
The 1920s A New Culture Emerges. A New Urban Culture After WWI, a change in attitudes/culture occurred in America. Mostly in cities. This was the 1 st.
The New Era: The Roaring 20’s. Economic Boom New or Improved Technologies Auto industry Frederick Taylor Ford and GM.
EDUCATION BEFORE THE 1920s ENROLLMENTS TYPES OF COURSES IMMIGRANTS
THE ROARING TWENTIES. Post World War I  Standard of living increased for most  Americans abandoned small towns in exchange for urban living  Economy.
Economy & Culture. Roaring Twenties I. New EconomyI. New Economy –A. Technology 1. Electricity1. Electricity –Rising Demand – x Customers –16%
1920s – Roaring Twenties. Prohibition Passed with the 18 th Amendment, but backup with punishment with the Volstead Act What were the reasons behind this.
The New Era: The Roaring 20’s. Economic Boom New or Improved Technologies Auto industry Frederick Taylor Ford and GM.
A Growing Economy Chapter 10 Lesson 1 Page 322. The Expansion of Industry Industries thrived: telephone companies, new phones, electric companies, large.
The Roaring Twenties Isolationist
Culture & Minority Groups Music Hollywood.
Harlem Renaissance The Great Migration, due to WWI, was the movement of blacks from the rural South to industrial North Black populations, looking for.
1920s.
Chapter 14 Section 3 A Creative Era Jazz music gained a wide following during the 20’s. It began down south from West African rhythms, African American.
US II Review Game 1. An emancipated young women who embraced the new fashions and urban attitudes of the day. A: Flapper.
Unit 3 Prosperity, Depression and the New Deal ( ) The Post-World War I period was characterized by economic, social and political turmoil. Post-war.
The Roaring 1920s Decade of Decadence. How Much is Too Much? Decadence: overabundance of: alcohol crime music parties consumer goods Counterculture emerges.
THIS IS s Presidents Music and Movies Miscellane ous Sports and Literature FearsBusiness.
1920s Culture Alicia Yen Andrew Darley Adam Waldron Audrey Kost.
RURAL VS. URBAN Scope’s Trial - “monkey trial” Evolution or Science??
Harlem Renaissance & The Jazz Age
Women who rejected traditional values and dress Red Scare Laissez-faire Recession Biggest factor behind prosperity of the 1920s Awakening of African American.
Education – Popular Culture CHAPTER 13 SECTION 3.
U.S. History.  F. Scott Fitzgerald The Great Gatsby  Sinclair Lewis Main Street  Ernest Hemingway For Whom the Bell Tolls “The Lost Generation”
The 1920s I. Republican Leadership A. Warren G. Harding – election of 1920 – “return to normalcy” 1. Republican Conservative Economics and Business 2.
Education and Popular Culture
Chapter 9 Lesson 2 EQ: How did technology effect Americans in the 1920’s? EQ: What changes were there in the music and entertainment industries? EQ: What.
The 1920’s Education and Popular Culture. Progressive Education – John Dewey By 1914,1 million American students attended high school By 1926, 4 million.
 Phonograph  Radio  Jazz  Louis Armstrong  Jelly Roll Morton.
More interesting stuff from the 1920’s Prohibition – by 1920 – the 18 th amendment was passed This law made the sale, manufacture, or transport of alcohol.
Ch. 23 Section III A Creative Era.
20.2 Mass Media and the Jazz Age. Hollywood came about because of: variety of landscapes, warm climate, and a lot of sunlight needed for films.
Mass Media -schooling is expanded to educate the masses -new coverage of events began to shape public opinion -invention of radio became a powerful influence.
The New Era: The Roaring 20’s. Take Five… In the 1920s, the United States experienced an economic boom due to, among other things, A) the mobilization.
 Phonograph  Radio  Marconi  Jazz  Louis Armstrong  Jelly Roll Morton.
The Arts in the 1920’s. The Lost Generation “Bohemians” and ex-pats in Paris “Bohemians” and ex-pats in Paris Hemingway “The Sun Also Rises” Hemingway.
MASS MEDIA & THE JAZZ AGE. MOVIES o Movies – wildly popular mass medium o  5,000 theaters rose to 22,500 o Late 1930s  100 million Americans.
A Creative Era Anna Kim Sun Hong.
The Emergence of New Values in the 1920s. Women Women began to demonstrate new independence & assertiveness Women began to drink & smoke in public Began.
THE ROARING TWENTIES The American Age of Ballyhoo The Jazz Age.
The “Roaring” Twenties People and Main Events!!. Consumer Culture New products make day-to-day work easier US becomes a Consumer Culture ◦A culture that.
The Roaring Twenties.
Mass Media/Jazz Age. Objective Analyze the impact of the growth of the nation’s mass media Identify some of the major figures of the Jazz age Show how.
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,
American Life in the Roaring Twenties Chapter 31.
Ch. 31 – 3 notes. Combined with autos, RR suffered more setbacks Radio – 1st in US was KDKA out of Pittsburgh United country with standard accents and.
Objective 9.03 Analyze the significance of social, intellectual and technological changes of lifestyle in the United States.
Match the term with the description ___1) Lynching ___2) Russia ___3) Red Scare ___4) Sacco and Vanzetti ___5) Ku Klux Klan ___6) Warren G. Harding A)
The Roaring 20’s America After WWI. Impact of the Automobile Car sales grew rapidly in the 1920s because Henry Ford’s assembly line made them so cheap.
Mass Media and the Jazz Age 4.8. Hollywood!! Few people outside of Los Angeles had heard of the subdivision northwest of the city Early 1900s filmmakers.
Chapter 25, Section 3: The Roaring Twenties Main Idea: While new lifestyles and new ideas affected fashion and music, a new generation of writers rebelled.
Unit 12.1 American Society in the 1920s. The Culture of Modernism: the Arts and Mass Entertainment.
America undergoes great changes to their way of life amidst an undercurrent of fear, extravagance, and crime. Chapter 31 – Roaring 20’s ( )
The Roaring Twenties Unit Question  How does pop culture reflect and affect the temper of the times?  Pop culture  Collection of ideas that permeate.
Bell-ringer (on loose-leaf):
Chapter 14 Section 3 A Creative Era
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,
American life changed during 1920’s
Education – Popular Culture
Roaring 20’s Quiz.
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,
Beginning of Unit 3 – Chapter words
Roaring ’20s & The Great Depression
Consumerism And Culture
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 Roaring 20’s a.k.a. The Jazz Age.
Presentation transcript:

Roaring 20s Chapter 32, Part 2

Ford Changes Everything car companies produce 180k cars Taylor—The Father of Scientific Management Model T- tin lizzy, affordable even by a Ford worker, $260 Made 500k by 1914, 20 million by 1930 The assembly line, control of workers

Gasoline Age Bigger than steel, thousands of new jobs Rubber, glass, fabric, steel, service stations, garages Petroleum business!! California, Texas, Oklahoma Highways, greatly improved commerce Less isolation Helped criminals

Americans owned more cars than bathtubs You can’t go to town in a bathtub.

Airplanes Wright Bros. 12/17/03 Lindbergh takes the Spirit of St Louis New York to Paris in 33+ hours ($25K)

Radio Italian Marconi, 1890 KDKA broadcasts Harding election results Amos and Andy, A&P Gypsies Advertising, soap operas, serials

First big silent film

First talkie

Changing Times Margret Sanger tries to popularize contraceptives ERA campaign by Alice Paul Flapper styles Jazz! WC Handy (St. Louis Blues), Jelly Roll Morton, King Oliver

Harlem Langston Hughes with his common language poetry Marcus Garvey, United Negro Improvement Association, resettlement

Cultural Changes New Yorker Edith Wharton Willa Cather, life on the praries HL Mencken, Bad Boy of Baltimore, anti establishment F Scott Fitzgerald’s This Side of Paradise a book for the times Hemingway The Sun Also Rises, Farewell to Arms Babbitt, by Sinclair Lewis

Writers/Artists Ezra Pound’s poetry TS Eliot, The Waste Land Poet ee cummings Playwright Eugene ONeill Frank Lloyd Wright tries to create architecture from the site 103 Story Empire State Building

Bull Market Investments hopping Melon reduces taxes