The Roaring 20’s

WWI changed many things in society

-  a revolution in production occurred

-  Manufacturing up 64%

-  Output per worker up 40%

-  Sale of electricity doubled

-  Consumption of fuel oil doubled

-  Economy grew by 7% - largest ever for peace time

-  Industry grew big time

-  People got paid more and worked less hours

Automobile

-  Model T before assembly line $845 after $290

-  A car came off the line every 10 seconds

-  Ford paid high wages – double the rate

-  He had too, horrible work

-  Car is now affordable for people

Car on society

-  prostitution on wheels

-  caused a sexual revolution

Women

-  before the war it was illegal for a lady to smoke openly, to use profanity, appear on public beaches without stockings, drive w/o a man present

-  after the war people were more accepting so some pushed the new limits

-  Flappers - most wore makeup, wear close fitting felt hats, long-waisted dresses, strings of beads, and unbuckled galoshes

-  once these women were married they generally gave up this lifestyle

-  in 1930 60% of female workers were African-Americans or foreign born

-  “labor-saving” devices raised the standard of in home cleanliness, electric washing machines, vacuums etc…

Youth

-  education increased, majority went to high school

-  college enrollment jumped 7%

-  leads to a formation of a “peer culture” teens spent more time out of the home with their friends rather than family

-  why- athletics, clubs, sororities and frats, dating, proms, “bull sessions” and movies

-  premarital sex increased, but didn’t become casual

-  necking and petting parties

-  car led to unsupervised dating and a rise in sex crimes

Jazz

-  was born at this time and it took off like wild fire

-  the folk music of the machine age

Radio

-  the first radio stations went on the air in 1920, by 1929 there were +800 stations that reached +10 million homes

-  leads to NBC and CBS

-  people would sit at home as a group and stare at this talking box

Movies

-  nickelodeons – nickel movie houses – silent movies

-  theater anything but silent – kid interpreters, cracking Indian nuts, young cowboys would shot off cap guns

-  first feature length silent movie – The Great Train Robbery in 1903

-  drawing 100 million people a week – roughly equal to the national pop.

-  20’s lead to lavish theaters – ushers, drapes, plush carpet, organs

-  first talkie the Jazz Singer was in 1927 – changed Hollywood – silent stars out of work

Sports

-  college football is in its heyday

-  huge stadiums built – 64,000 at Ohio State

-  national pastime – baseball had a lot to overcome – 1919 Blacksocks

-  one man brought it back to the national spotlight – George Herman Ruth

-  1927 – 60 home runs

-  best athlete of the day unquestionably was Jim Thorpe

-  graduate of the Carlisle Indian school

-  wins both the pentathlon and decathlon in the 1912 Olympics in Stockholm

-  later has his gold stripped away because he accepted money before this for playing semi-pro baseball

-  also played professional football and mlb

-  Lindbergh May 27 wins $25,000 for the first solo nonstop flight from NY to Paris aboard the Spirit of St. Louis

-  Amelia Earhart did it the next year

Prohibition

-  in cities it lead to speakeasies, bootlegged alcohol or smuggled it in

-  Gangs shot up – Al Capone and others made millions

-  Gangs lead to gambling, prostitution, and dance halls, and “protection” for local businesses

-  Leads to the 21st Am. In 1933

Fundamentalism

-  Christianity - word for word the truth with a literal translation of the Bible.

-  biggest issue was Darwinism

-  Convinces the Tennessee Legislature to make it a crime to teach “that man has descended from a lower form of animals.”

Scopes Monkey Trial – July 1925

-  With the support of the ACLU, John T. Scopes tested Tennessee’s law.

-  Trial gets the press of a championship-boxing match.

-  Clarence Darrow (defense) vs. William Jennings Bryan (prosecution) in “a duel to the death” between education and Christianity.

-  The judge says the claim of scientists was “hearsay” as they weren’t present at the time of creation.

-  Darrow puts Bryan on the stand as the resident expert on the Bible. Darrow gets Bryan to admit the 6 days of creation may not have been 24 hour days = he loses all credibility.

-  Jury presides for…8 minutes…Scopes fined $100…trial had turned in to a joke…however, Bryan’s reputation is ruined

KKK

-  Reborn on Thanksgiving night in 1915 on Stone Mountain, GA with a cross burning ceremony

-  Why – immigrants, uppity women, and blacks that didn’t know their place.

-  The new clan would only accept the W.A.S.P.

-  1920’s capital moved to Indianapolis – was very patriotic and gave lots of money to charity…although could still be violent when needed.

-  Klan promised security, status, and a promise for a better tomorrow.

-  3 million members in 1920 however corruption and scandal led to it’s downfall.

The Crash of 1929

American History

Get Rich Quick

*  Hoover, “nearer to the final triumph over poverty than ever before in the history of any land.”

*  Key to getting rich quick – play the stock market

Stock Market

*  Bull vs Bear Markets

l  Bull – things going very strong – horns up

l  Bear – things going slow – claws down

Buy low, sell high; buy high, sell higher

You couldn’t lose at this game

Why was it so easy?

*  Lots of money in circulation

*  1920-29 +$900 million worth of gold came into the U.S.

*  Profits for everyone on the rise

*  Margin buying

l  Place 10%-50% down to place order

l  You bought with paper/fictional money

Black Thursday

*  Oct. 24, 1929 – PANIC – prices drop

*  13 million shares traded (record)

*  Losses reach $3 billion (record)

*  Wall Street says “the worst has passed”

Black Tuesday

*  Oct. 29, 1929

*  16 million shares dumped at a loss of $10 billion

*  All loans were called in = people had to sell their fictional stocks

Effects of the Black Days

*  Within a month most stocks lost half their value

*  Ex. 1929 – stocks worth $87 billion by 1933 their value drops to $13 billion

*  Wages cut in half

*  85,000 businesses failed

*  Banks closed

*  Margin buying means people can not repay loans

*  No FDIC

Did the Crash cause the Great Depression?

*  No

l  Unemployment was rising before the crash

l  Warehouses were beginning to grow – economic slowdown

l  Business expanded without a wage increase

l  Prices outpaced wages = buy on credit

l  The wealth of the wealthy (1%) increased 63% while the poor (93%) increased 4%

Basic Story of the Depression

*  Government calculated that for a family of four it would cost $2000 for the necessities, which was more than 60% of what American families earned. By 1932 the average family annual income was $1348.

Hoover’s Response to the Great Depression

Hoover

n  Quaker from IA

n  Self made millionaire by the age of 40

n  WWI made him famous

n  As a republican President Hoover held the belief that the government can not affect the individual.

n  Hoover felt private organizations should be in charge of the relief effort – like he did in WWI

n  Rugged Individualism – success through individual effort and private enterprise.

n  Plan would have worked if the problem was smaller

n  Hoover Dam

n  But people still didn’t have hope.

Bonus Army

n  WWI Veterans want to receive their pensions early to help them now when they most need the money.

n  The movement begins on the west coast and ends in D.C.

n  They set up camp in the streets and parks of D.C. Every morning they do drills.

n  Congress doesn’t pass the bonus bill, and an altercation breaks out leaving two vets and two policemen dead.

n  Hoover orders the army to remove the bonus army peaceably. However, he places Gen Douglas MacArthur in charge.

n  MacArthur moves against the veterans with the cavalry, tanks, tear gas, machine guns, water hoses, and swords. He used the gas, burned buildings etc…Hundreds were injured, and three died.

n  The Great Depression was not Hoover’s fault…however he is the one that received all the blame.

n  1932 “All the money in the world couldn’t induce me to live over the last nine months.”

FDR

n  New Deal (3 R’s) – Boosts public hope, aided unemployment etc…

n  People didn’t vote rep. or dem. but rather for FDR.

n  FDR was also very accessible to the people, unlike the distant Hoover.

n  Fireside Chats

n  Eleanor

n  “My Day” Newspaper column
n  Traveled +4000 miles a year…Secret Service nicknamed her Rover.
n  In 1939 she was more popular than her husband.

n  5000-8000 letters a day for the President

First 100 Days

n  FDR’s brain trust gets together and established the first 15 new programs.

n  Declares a bank holiday for an audit. Only sound banks were allowed to reopen under the Emergency Banking Act.

n  Then he follows with his Alphabet Agencies.

Hoover’s Response to the Great Depression

Hoover

n  Quaker from IA

n  Self made millionaire by the age of 40

n  WWI made him famous

n  As a republican President Hoover held the belief that the government can not affect the individual.

n  Hoover felt private organizations should be in charge of the relief effort – like he did in WWI

n  Rugged Individualism – success through individual effort and private enterprise.

n  Plan would have worked if the problem was smaller

n  Hoover Dam

n  But people still didn’t have hope.

Bonus Army

n  WWI Veterans want to receive their pensions early to help them now when they most need the money.

n  The movement begins on the west coast and ends in D.C.

n  They set up camp in the streets and parks of D.C. Every morning they do drills.

n  Congress doesn’t pass the bonus bill, and an altercation breaks out leaving two vets and two policemen dead.

n  Hoover orders the army to remove the bonus army peaceably. However, he places Gen Douglas MacArthur in charge.

n  MacArthur moves against the veterans with the cavalry, tanks, tear gas, machine guns, water hoses, and swords. He used the gas, burned buildings etc…Hundreds were injured, and three died.

n  The Great Depression was not Hoover’s fault…however he is the one that received all the blame.

n  1932 “All the money in the world couldn’t induce me to live over the last nine months.”

FDR

n  New Deal (3 R’s) – Boosts public hope, aided unemployment etc…

n  People didn’t vote rep. or dem. but rather for FDR.

n  FDR was also very accessible to the people, unlike the distant Hoover.

n  Fireside Chats

n  Eleanor

n  “My Day” Newspaper column
n  Traveled +4000 miles a year…Secret Service nicknamed her Rover.
n  In 1939 she was more popular than her husband.

n  5000-8000 letters a day for the President

First 100 Days

n  FDR’s brain trust gets together and established the first 15 new programs.

n  Declares a bank holiday for an audit. Only sound banks were allowed to reopen under the Emergency Banking Act.

n  Then he follows with his Alphabet Agencies.

Great Depression

American History

Effects of the Great Depression

•  1929-1932 an average of 100,000 people lost their job a week

•  Highest unemployment – 13 million

•  In Chicago people waited in line at the city garbage dump to look for food

•  In Kentucky people ate flowers and weeds thought fit only for cattle

•  1 in 5 kids were suffering from malnutrition

–  Hoover’s response…

More Effects

•  1932 up to 2 million homeless and 25,000 nomadic families

•  Emigration outpaces immigration

•  Poor man’s divorce (desertion) becomes common

•  No pride

•  Shantyvilles and Hoovervilles become the norm

Farm Life

•  Farming very difficult

•  1932-36 Dust Bowl

•  In one day in Chicago, 1934, 12 million tons of dirt landed

•  Many go to California

•  Okies

Escapism

•  Pinball, Monopoly, six-day bike races, dance marathons, and reading

•  Radio and movies use imagination

•  Lone Ranger and War of the Worlds

•  Marx Brothers, Gangster movies, Bette Davis, Greta Garbo, Mae West, Mickey Mouse and Shirley Temple