1920s Facts and Fads
1920s Facts and Fads
1920s Facts and Fads
The 1920s have been called “The Roaring Twenties”, “The Jazz Age”, “The Fabulous Decade”, and
“The Era of Wonderful Nonsense”. It was all of these and more.
After the Great War ended in 1918 and the suffering of the depression in 1919 was coming to an end,
Americans were determined to begin enjoying themselves as much as possible. The United States
turned its back on the rest of the world (isolationism) and began two decades of drifting. They hoped
to find meaning in making fortunes, having fun, and living out fantasies. President Calvin Coolidge
said in 1925, “The business of America is business.”…..and American businesses boomed during the
twenties. It was a decade devoted to the making and spending of money. The only goal was to make
a profit and business leaders became national heroes.
Read each of the 1920s categories below. Answer the questions in the box to the right of the
passage.
Read each question thoroughly and pay close attention to what the question is asking.
AUTOMOBILES
Henry Ford put America on wheels in 1908. To produce the
automobile, he organized a mass production system using a
moving assembly line. Each worker performed the same
task all day long. An entire car could now be built in two
hours. The auto industry also gave birth to new industries –
service stations, garages, rubber, plate glass, and tourism.
Automobiles, called “tin lizzies”, became the symbol of the
20s. Additionally, cars gave people a sense of freedom and
independence. They could go places they never had before.
In 1925, the ford Model T cost about $300 and came in any
color – as long as it was black.
MOTION PICTURES
Films were silent through much of the 20s with a piano
player providing the background music while subtitles
explained the plot. “Newsreels” were shown before the
main feature. Most every large city had a large, fancy
theater called “dream palaces”. Hollywood, California
became the movie capital due to its sunny weather. The
most famous stars were comedian Charlie Chaplin in the
“Little Tramp”, Lon Chaney, Sr. for his leading roles in
“The Hunchback of Notre Dame” and “The Phantom of
the Opera”, and Rudolph Valentino was the male
heartthrob in romantic pictures. The “talkies” began in
1927 with the release of The Jazz Singer, starring Al
Jolson. One year later, Mickey Mouse made his first film
called “Steamboat Willie”.
NATIVISM RESURGES
The depression of 1919 helped fuel the resurgence of
nativism and racial tensions as many returning soldiers
found it hard to obtain employment. At the forefront of
the movement to restrict immigration was the Ku Klux
Klan. The Klan targeted Catholics, Jews, immigrants,
blacks, and other groups said to be “un-American”. One
of the famous cases that reflected the prejudices and
fears of the era against immigrants was the Sacco-Vanzetti
Case. Police arrested two immigrants for robbery and
murder of two employees of a shoe factory. The evidence
against them was questionable, but the fact that the
accused men were anarchists and foreigners led many to
assume they were guilty. They were sentenced to death
and executed in 1927.
FUNDAMENTALISM
While many people embraced the relaxed ethics of the
20s, others feared that the country was losing its
traditional values. They responded by joining a religious
movement known as “fundamentalism”. They believed
that the Bible was literally true and without error, including
the idea of creationism – the belief that God created the
world. Therefore they rejected Charles Darwin’s new
theory of evolution, which said that human beings
developed from lower forms of life over the course of
millions of years. They tried to outlaw any lessons in
school that taught evolution and denied creationism. A
teacher, John Scopes, was put on trial and found guilty for
teaching evolution. The Scopes “Monkey” Trial was
broadcast over the radio and public opinion slowly started
to move away from fundamentalism.
HARLEM RENAISSANCE
During WWI and the 1920s, hundreds of thousands of
blacks joined in the Great Migration from the rural south
to the industrial cities in the north. As populations swelled
in the cities, nightclubs began to immerge, none more
prominently than New York’s Harlem neighborhood. It was
there that black artists expressed themselves through
writing, art, and music. When New Orleans native Louis
Armstrong moved to Chicago in 1922, he introduced an
early form of Jazz that would spur the growth of many new
musical talents. Duke Ellington led a small band that
would play at a famous nightclub called “the Cotton Club”.
The jazz movement would continue its growth seeing
many black artists play the Cotton Club, like Bessie Smith
and Benny Goodman, ironically to all white audiences.