changes in the 1920s

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Changes in the 1920s

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Changes in the 1920s. Social Changes. 1. Prohibition- 18 th Amendment. Cause – Progressive Reformers wanted alcohol banned to eliminate family poverty. Effects. Prohibition did not work because people smuggled alcohol and continued drinking. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Changes in the 1920s

Changes in the 1920s

Page 2: Changes in the 1920s

Social Changes

Page 5: Changes in the 1920s

Effects• Prohibition did not work because

people smuggled alcohol and continued drinking. • Gangsters got rich making,

smuggling and selling illegal alcohol. Crime increased.• Prohibition finally ended in 1933.

Page 9: Changes in the 1920s

Immigration RestrictionEffects

• Immigration Act of 1924. It set up a Quota system. The quota was set at 3% of the number of immigrants present in America before 1910.

• The effect of this law was to limit the number of Southern and Eastern European Immigrants coming to America in the 1920s.

Page 15: Changes in the 1920s

4. New KKK • Causes: • Great Migration – African

Americans moving North for jobs during WW1• Red Scare • Large numbers of Immigrants

coming to America from Eastern and Southern Europe

Page 18: Changes in the 1920s

Automobile• The price of cars went down. By 1925, an

average American could afford a car.• Number of cars on the roads increased. • More roads were built, drive in

restaurants and billboards began to change the landscape.

• Inner cities became depopulated. People were able to commute and moved further away from their work places.

Page 21: Changes in the 1920s

Flapper Effects:

• Women began to dress in a more modern way. The skirts became shorter; one inch below the knee.

• Women begin to wear their hair short. They also begin to have a more independent and care free attitude.

Page 22: Changes in the 1920s

Economic changes

• Economy was booming• Wages increased• Assembly line made

production of goods faster and cheaper.

• People began to buy more and more material possessions as installment plan (buying on credit ) became available.

Page 24: Changes in the 1920s

Harlem Renaissance• In the 1920s Harlem was home to

a literary and artistic revival known as the Harlem Renaissance. Harlem Renaissance was the time when African American culture flourished.

• Jazz became the most popular music of the 1920s

Page 25: Changes in the 1920s

Harlem Renaissance

Page 26: Changes in the 1920s

Harlem Renaissance• Missouri-born

Langston Hughes was the movement’s best known poet

• Many of his poems described the difficult lives of working-class blacks

• Some of his poems were put to music, especially jazz and blues

Page 27: Changes in the 1920s

Harlem Renaissance• The Harlem

Renaissance was primarily a literary movement

• Led by well-educated blacks with a new sense of pride in the African-American experience

• Claude McKay’s poems expressed the pain of life in the ghetto

Page 28: Changes in the 1920s

Harlem Renaissance• Zola Neale

Hurston wrote novels, short stories and poems

• She often wrote about the lives of poor, unschooled Southern blacks

• She focused on the culture of the people– their folkways and values

Page 29: Changes in the 1920s

Scopes Trial• Tennessee state

government passed a law outlawing the teaching of evolution in public schools. John Scopes (biology teacher ) decided to challenge the law by continuing to teach evolution.

• He was charged and put on trial.

Page 30: Changes in the 1920s

Scopes Trial• Fundamentalist were the people who believed

that the Bible should be interpreted literally. In other words, every word in the Bible was true. One of the fundamentalists was William Jennings Bryan. These people were associated with rural values, religion, anti evolutionary views and fundamentalism.

• Modernists were people who were associated with urban values, belief that schools should be allowed to teach evolution, and modern views. One example was Clarence Darrow

Page 31: Changes in the 1920s

SCOPES TRIAL• Clarence Darrow,

the most famous trial lawyer of the era defended Scopes

• The prosecution countered with William Jennings Bryan, the three-time Democratic presidential nominee

Page 32: Changes in the 1920s

Scopes Trial• Trial opened on July 10,1925 and became a national sensation.• In an unusual move,

Darrow called Bryan to the stand as an expert on the bible – key question: Should the bible be interpreted literally?

• Under intense questioning, Darrow got Bryan to admit that the bible can be interpreted in different ways

• Nonetheless, Scopes was found guilty and fined $100

Page 33: Changes in the 1920s

Conflict in the 1920s• Scopes Trial 1925 – • Issue: Should evolution be taught in

schools?• This trial shows a conflict between

people who • 1. believed in the Bible and people who

believed in Science.• 2. clash between rural and urban values• 3. Fundamentalism and modernism

Page 34: Changes in the 1920s

Scopes Trial• The Religious Fundamentalists who

did not want evolution taught in public schools won in this trial.

In this case, the government decided what will be taught in schools in Tennessee.

Is it a good idea to have the government decide what should be taught in schools?