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The 1920s: Coping with Change 1920-1929
Chapter 23
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Guiding Questions 1.) What economic developments underlay American prosperity of the 1920s, and how did those developments affect different social groups? 2.) What political values shaped public life in this era of Republican dominance? 3.) How did the Republicans of the 1920s promote U.S. economic interests abroad? 4.) What is meant by “mass culture”? 5.) What developments in American society contributed to creativity? Social tension?
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Booming Business; Ailing Agriculture
After the War Unemployment Rates during the 1920s Home Appliances and the economy Entertainment
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The Auto Industry Mass Production Assembly Lines Henry Ford (Model T)
General Motors Car Ownership Auto-Related Industries
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Workers Wages Women’s Wages Mexican-Americans African-Americans
Last hired first fired Farmers during the 1920s
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Changing Businesses Henry Ford’s Approach to business Ford Dealerships
General Electric and Westinghouse Chain Stores Air Conditioning
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Advertising Advertising Companies Successful Marketing Techniques
Installment Plans America becomes a consumer society What types of things did people buy on credit?
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Women in the Workforce Female Employment
Secretaries, Typists, and Filing Clerks Female Wages Traditional Female Jobs
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Labor Unions Labor Union Membership Higher Wages Henry Ford
Better Facilities Stock Options Welfare Capitalism
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Politics Warren G. Harding
Charles Forbes (Head of the Veterans Bureau) Secretary of the Interior Albert Fall The Teapot Dome Scandal Harding’s Death
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Coolidge Calvin Coolidge Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon
The Trickle Down Theory The Flood of 1927 The Flood Control Act 1928 The McNary-Haugen Bill
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International Politics
The League of Nations The Washington Naval Conference The Five Power Treaty The 5:5:3 Ratio Arms Limitations The Kellogg-Briand Pact
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Women and Politics The 19th Amendment Alice Paul
The Equal Rights Amendment What was the focus of the Women’s Rights Movement in the 1920s?
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Mass Media Radio National Magazines The Saturday Evening Post
The Movie Industry
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Pop culture National Sports Heroes Babe Ruth Charles Lindbergh
Cultural Values Sigmund Freud Flappers
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Pop Culture F. Scott Fitzgerald Sinclair Lewis Ernest Hemingway
The Lost Generation The Harlem Renaissance Langston Hughes Zora Neal Hurston Marcus Garvey
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Pop Culture Georgia O’ Keeffe Jazz Louis Armstrong Duke Ellington
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Immigration Restrictions
National Origins Act (1924) Xenophobia Sacco and Vanzetti
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New Science John T. Scopes The Scopes Trial The “Monkey” Trial
The American Civil Liberties Union William Jennings Bryan Clarence Darrow's opening argument at the Scopes trial
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Racial Attitudes The Rise of the KKK The Birth of a Nation
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Prohibition The 18th Amendment The Volstead Act Bootleggers
Speakeasies The 21st Amendment
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The End of an Era Herbert Hoover Republican Dominance Overproduction
Declining Demand The Great Depression
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