CHAPTER 25 TRANSITION TO MODERN AMERICA

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Transcript CHAPTER 25 TRANSITION TO MODERN AMERICA

TRANSITION TO MODERN
AMERICA
America: Past and Present
Chapter 25
The Second Industrial
Revolution
• U.S. develops the highest standard of
living in the world
• The twenties and the second revolution
• electricity replaces steam
• modern assembly introduced
The Automobile Industry
• Auto makers stimulate sales through
model changes, advertising
• Auto industry fosters other businesses
• Autos encourage suburban sprawl
Patterns of Economic Growth
• Structural change
• professional managers replace
individual entrepreneurs
• corporations become the dominant
business form
• Big business weakens regionalism,
brings uniformity to America
Glenwood Stove Ad
Economic Weaknesses
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Railroads poorly managed
Coal displaced by petroleum
Farmers face decline in exports, prices
Growing disparity between income of
laborers, middle-class managers
• Middle class speculates with idle money
City Life in the Jazz Age
• Rapid increase in urban population
• Skyscrapers symbolize the new mass
culture
• Communities of home, church, and
school are absent in the cities
Women and the Family
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Ongoing crusade for equal rights
“Flappers” seek individual freedom
Most women remain in domestic sphere
Discovery of adolescence
• teenaged children no longer need to
work
• indulge their craving for excitement
The Roaring Twenties
• Decade notable for obsessive interest in
celebrities
• Sex becomes an all-consuming topic of
interest in popular entertainment
The Flowering of the Arts
• Alienation from 20s’ mass culture
• "Exiled" American writers put U.S. in
forefront of world literature
• T.S. Eliot
• Ernest Hemingway
• F. Scott Fitzgerald
• Harlem Renaissance--African
Americans prominent in music, poetry
The Rural Counterattack
• Rural Americans identify urban culture
with Communism, crime, immorality
• Progressives attempt to force reform on
the American people
• upsurge of bigotry
• an era of repression
The Fear of Radicalism
• 1919-- “Red Scare”
• illegal roundups of innocent people
• forcible deportation of aliens
• terrorism against “radicals,”
immigrants
• 1927-- Sacco and Vanzetti executed
Prohibition
• 1918--18th Amendment ratified
• 1920--Volstead Act prohibits production,
sale, or transport of alcoholic beverages
• Consumption of alcohol reduced
• Prohibition resented in urban areas
• Bootlegging becomes big business
• 1933--18th amendment repealed
The Ku Klux Klan
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1925--Klan membership hits 5 million
Attack on urban culture, inhabitants
Defense of traditional rural values
Klan seeks to win U.S. by persuasion
Violence, internal corruption result in
Klan’s virtual disappearance by 1930
Immigration Restriction
• 1924--Congress restricts all immigration
• Preferential quotas to northern
Europeans
• Mexican immigrants exempt from quota
The Fundamentalist Challenge
• Fundamentalism: stress on traditional
Protestant orthodoxy, biblical literalism
• 1925--Scopes Trial discredits
fundamentalism among intellectuals
• “Modernists” gain mainline churches
• Fundamentalists strengthen grassroots
appeal in new churches
Politics of the 1920s
• Republican party apparently dominant
• Urban wing of the Democratic party
emerging as the most powerful force
Harding, Coolidge, and Hoover
• Republican presidents appeal to
traditional American values
• Harding scandals break after his death
• Coolidge represents America in his
austerity and rectitude
• Hoover represents the self-made man
Republican Policies
• Return to "normalcy"
• tariffs raised
• corporate, income taxes cut
• spending cut
• Coolidge blocks Congressional aid to
farmers as unwarranted interference
• Government-business cooperation
• Expansion of federal bureaucracy
The Divided Democrats
• 1924--Urban-rural split weakens
Democrats
• Major shift in political loyalties
• Democrats gain more Congressional
seats than Republicans after 1922
The Election of 1928
• Democrat Al Smith carries urban vote
• governor of New York
• Roman Catholic
• Republican Herbert Hoover wins race
• Midwesterner
• Protestant
• Religion the campaign’s decisive issue
The Old and the New
• Old historical view: the Depression
ended the spirit of the twenties
• New historical view: the twenties laid
the foundations of modern America