Question | Answer |
return to normalcy | President Harding promised |
3 names of the 1920's | Jazz Age, Dazzling Decade, Roaring Twenties |
3 ways America changed after WWI | music, women vote, Warren Harding president |
outlawed the making and selling of alcoholic drinks | 18th Amendment |
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony | promoted women's right to vote |
amendment to Constitution which allowed women to vote | 19th Amendment |
one of the most popular actors of silent films | Rudolph Valentino |
People listened to Jack Dempsey's boxing matches on the | radio |
The young people of the 1920's called themselves | the lost generation |
famous baseball player who became concerned for people's souls | Billy Sunday |
women who wore shorter skirts, rouge, and lipstick and bobbed their hair | flappers |
Evangelists encouraged people to put their trust in Jesus during | revivals |
Evangelist who preached in the southern part of the United States | Bob Jones |
Popular author who wrote about the attitudes and values of the twenties generation | F. Scott Fitzgerald |
Fans flocked to baseball games hoping to see him hit a home run | Babe Ruth |
Men who made million of dollars through illegal activities | gangsters |
Billy Sunday trusted Christ for salvation after hearing a gospel message at the | Pacific Garden Mission |
Guidelines of behavior | manners |
A mobster who was blamed for the St. Valentine's Day massacre | Al Capone |
Approve an amendment to the constitution | ratify |
Places where alcohol was sold in secrety | speakeasies |
The right to vote | sufferage |
A style of music | jazz |
The ban that made it illegal to make or sell alcohol | prohobition |
A written request for a right or benefit from someone in authority | petition |
2 famous policemen who tried to close down the speakeasies | Izzy Einstein and Moe Smith |
a neighborhood in New York City, New York | Harlem |
Artistic movement among the black people of Harlem | Harlem Renaissance |
collected books, pambphlets, poems and pictures about African Americans | Arthur Schomburg |
make large quanities of their products | mass produce |
made products cheaper to make and repair | interchangeable parts and assembly lines |
real estate | property |
the pilot who made the first successful solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean | Charles Lindbergh |
pieces made exactly the same to fit any car | interchangeable parts |
a popular state for buying real estate in 1924 and 1925 | Florida |
to make more products in less time | mass produce |
the movement in which African Americans began to preserve their culture | Harlem Renaissance |
the place where Lindbergh began his solo flight | New York |
payments people make to a bank to pay back a loan | installments |
economic growth | bull market |
part of a company available to buy at the stock exchange; shares | stock |
the process of a bank loaning a person money to be paid back | credit |
economic loss | bear market |
the period when stock prices were higher than any other time | Big Bull Market |
What happened in 1929 | the stock market crashed |