THE “ROARING” TWENTIES Return to Normalcy? Traditional versus Modern • Aftermath of The Great War – Labor Issues – Prohibition – Roles of Women – Laissez-Faire Politics – Organized Crime – The “Lost Generation” and the Harlem Renaissance – Nativism – Consumer innovation Politics in the 1920s • Laissez-faire politics – – – End of progressivism “Return to Normalcy” Adkins vs. Children’s Hospital • • – “Best loved president?” • – – – Amendment Teapot Dome Scandal and others Albert Fall Col. Forbes Daughterty Fordney-McCumber Tariff Conservative Coolidge (“Silent Cal”) – – – • Ohio Gang 18th • • • • Overturns Muller v. Oregon Harding at the helm “Weaned on a pickle” Secretary of Treasury, Andrew Mellon Veto McNary-Haugen Bill Helpless Hoover – – – “Happy” Al Smith Crash ’29 “Rugged individualism” Labor in the 1920s • Retooling to consumer goods – – – • War bred new innovation Henry Ford’s assembly line model Scientific method, Frederick Taylor, “Principle of Scientific Management” Returning WWI veterans – No jobs • • – Time for retooling No veterans benefits Racial tension • • • Nativism Immigration Act, 1921 National Origins Act, 1924 – – Asians banned completely Strikes • • • • • Seattle General Strike, 1919 Boston Police Strike, 1919 Steel Strike, 1919 United Mine Workers, 1919 “Welfare Capitalism” – An American Plan of Business – Unions could not complete, AFL Society in the 1920s • “Americanism” – Red Scare • • • • Bolshevik Revolution, 1917 Labor Unrest Billy Sunday Palmer Raids – Sacco and Vanzetti, 1921 • Anarchists • Nativism – Ku Klux Klan • Not just the south • David Stephenson – Immigration • Quota system – Scopes Trial • Darrow versus Bryan • Fundamentalism – Prohibition • 18th Amendment • Organized Crime • Volstead Act Mass Consumption Economy • Glorification of Business – “The man who builds a factory…” Coolidge • • • – Advertising as an industry • • • – Brief depression “Trickle down” tax policy Laissez-faire politics “The Man Nobody Knows,” Bruce Barton New Innovations Sexual allure Boom economy • Buying on installment plan • Stock Market – – – “Buying on Margin” Corporate revolution • • • – Consumer credit “White collar” workers Expansion of female jobs “Welfare capitalism” More leisure time! • • • • Sports Movies Speakeasies Radio programs Crash of 1929 • Over production, under consumption, and unsound banking practices (gee, what else is new?) – No corporate oversight for reporting on the stock market - speculation – Buying on credit, margin – Hoover tries to help • • • • Hawley-Smoot Tariff Federal Farm Board (Agricultural Marketing Act) Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC) Too little, too late!