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Ch. 7-4-1 A New Mass Culture
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Why It Matters Automobiles created new forms of recreation Americans listened to the radio Went to the movies Followed sports heroes
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Americans Enjoy More Leisure Time Farms people worked from dawn to dusk Farm families played games, read, and sang songs together Occasional picnics and baseball games Did not have the time or money for extensive leisure pursuits
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More Leisure Time Continued City Life: 70 hours of work in 1850 55 hours of work in 1910 45 hours of work in 1930 From 7 days a week to 5 Time, salaries, and wages on the rise
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Americans Flock to the Movies Technology for movies had been around Popularity rose in the 1920s 1920s = 60-100 million Americans to the movies each week Mostly silent pictures = good for immigrants that did not speak English Stars like Charlie Chaplin 1927, The Jazz Singer changed it all Sound matching the action
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The Radio and Phonograph Break Barriers Radios became part of U.S. culture People all over U.S. learned the same songs, dances, and shared popular culture 1927 boxing match between Gene Tunney and Jack Dempsey Phonograph allowed owners to hear music as they wanted
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An Age of Heroes Before 1920s, sports heroes were only local heroes Only the likes of boxer John L. Sullivan and Jim Thorpe were famous all over 1920s called the Golden Age of Sports
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Sports Heroes Win Fans Newspapers and Radios helped propel sports Babe Ruth - baseball home-run king Red Grange - football Jack Dempsey - boxing Bobby Jones - golf Bill Tilden - tennis Helen Wills - tennis Gertrude Ederle - 1st woman to swim English Channel
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Sports Continued Sports writers helped propel the athlete Damon Runyon and Grantland Rice captured the excitement of sports Names like Babe Ruth - the Sultan of Swat Notre Dame’s football backfield - the Four Horsemen After WWI sports helped bring hope
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Babe Ruth Career BA.342 Tony Gwynn.338 BA 714 Home-runs Mark Mcgwire 583 HR 2,873 Hits Ken Griffey Jr. 2,759 hits 94-46 WL record as pitcher Only pitched for a few years 2.28 ERA Greg Maddux 3.16 ERA
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Harold Edward “Red” Grange Helped build pro football popularity Named greatest college football player of all time in 2008 Attended the University of Illinois and played for the Chicago Bears Called the Galloping Ghost
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Grange at Illinois 20 games 3,362 rushing yards Caught 14 passes for 253 yards 40 of 82 passing for 575 yards Scored 31 TDs Against Michigan in 1924 Runs of 95, 67, 56, and 44 yards 402 yards - 212 rushing, 64 passing, and 126 on kickoff returns Involved on 6 touchdowns (5 rushing) Set out a large portion of the game
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Grange With Chicago $100,000 for 19 games Most players made $100/game 1925 versus the New York Giants 35 yrd interception return for TD 53 yards on 11 carries 23 yards receiving 2 for 3 passing for 32 yards 65,000 fans showed up to watch the game Saved the Giants and legitimized pro football
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Lucky Lindy Crosses the Atlantic 1927 Charles Lindbergh flew across the Atlantic Took off from Long Island, NY Flew the Spirit of St. Louis 1st to cross solo and non-stop 33 hour flight Landed in Paris
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