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1920s terms&people

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Term
Definition
Palmer raids   attempts to round up & deport radical left-wings that were suspected to be communists; part of the "red scare"; leading the "raids" was Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer  
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Sacco & Vanzetti Case   case in which Italian immigrants Nicola Sacco & Batolomeo Vanzetti were convicted & electrocuted for the crime of murdering a Mass. paymaster and his guard; trial was held with a biased jury; it is now speculated that Sacco & Vanzetti were falsely accused  
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Ku Klux Klan   reborn in 1920s; not just anti-black, also against immigrants & those of diff. views (aren't WASP); spread throughout the country regardless of class or region; took on a noble, chivalrous image; had to be a member to succeed in certain occupations  
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Emergency Quota Act   (1921)temp. solution; restricted # of immigrants to 3% of the population of the immigrant's nationality in the US in 1910; favorable towards immigrants from southern & eastern Europe because many peoples from these areas immigrated to the US before 1910  
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Immigration Act of 1924   reduced immigration quota to 2% of each nationality according its population in the US in 1890; favored N. Europeans because there were hardly any S. European immigrants in the US before 1890; signaled end of nearly unrestricted immigration  
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Eighteenth Amendment   authorized 1919; banned alcohol w/content>2.75%; implemented by Vosltead Act; in S., represented whites fearing drunk blacks; in W., represented attack on "wild west" culture; in E. cities, for immigrants, drinking is a part of sociability  
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Prohibition   no alcohol w/content>2.75%; noble but naive concept; helped increase bank savings & reduce car accident death rate&drunk worker absences, but enforcement wasn't solid; hard alcohol in speakeasies & the White House; led to increase of gangsterism  
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"drys" vs. "wets"   "dry"=alcohol content<2.75% "wet"=hard alcohol content>2.75%  
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"noble experiment"   prohibition;while the it had good intentions (hence "noble"), nothing like it had been tried before in the US (hence "experiment"); results were good (increased bank savings, decreased factory absences & car accidents), but prohib. not followed completely  
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Scopes Monkey Trial   Dayton, TN 1925; sham trial to bring attention to creation vs. evolution; John T. Scopes' (gym, not biology, teacher) defense attorney-Clarence Darrow; WJ Bryan- prosecutor; Bryan gets cross-examined, Darrow chickens out; Scopes found guilty & fined $100  
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Model T   "Tin Lizzie"; one of 1st functioning gasoline-powered cars, 1st gasoline car fit for consumers; developed by Henry Ford & built on an assembly line; led to cultural & sexual revolution, car-related inventions, & higher standard of living  
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Standardization   setting a norm for American culture; e.g. mass production (all Model T's look alike and many people own one; every house has a radio) and tastes (colloquialism, entertainment)  
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"Fordism"   economic & sovcial system based on mass-production (stems from Ford's use of the assembly line to mass produce Model T's)  
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KDKA   Pittsburgh radio station that broadcast news of Harding landslide; world's 1st commercial radio station  
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The Birth of a Nation   (1915) by DW Griffith; glorified KKK and defamed blacks & N. carpetbaggers; phenomenal filming skill for its time; shown in White House under Wilson; credited with rekindling the KKK  
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The Jazz Singer   (1927) 1st "talkie" movie; featured White Jew Al Jolson in blackface; movie theaters had to be "wired for sound"  
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flappers   free-spirited women who went against traditional views of females; wore short dresses, lipstick, and one-piece bathing suits, had short hair, drank alcohol, and danced to jazz ("black music"), e.g. the Charleston  
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Harlem Renaissance   time in 1920s during which the black community of Harlem nurtured numerous black artists and writers, one of which was Langston Hughes  
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United Negro Improvement Association   founded by Jamaincan-born Marcus Garvey in Harlem; promoted resettlement of American blacks to "African homeland"; inspired race pride among 4 million black UNIA followers; important to founding of Nation of Islam movement  
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The Lost Generation (to be found elsewhere)   generation that came after WWI; term popularized by E Hemingway; writers of this generation were many times "new immigrants" and wrote of new codes of morals & understanding, focusing on themes relevant to modern occurrences (e.g. WWI, cultural changes)  
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The Great Gatsby   (1925) written by F. Scott Fitzgerald; story based on wild life of flappers & rich party-goers  
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The Sun Also Rises   (1926) written by Ernest Hemingway; story about disillusioned, spiritually numb Americans in Europe after the war  
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Bull Market   frenzied speculation; boom-or-bust trading on the stock market; people invested everywhere, buying stocks "on margin"; wall street investors = bulls; allure of quick riches through the stock market drew in those with less money  
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"Never sell America short"   never deny Americans of what they want (which is $$$$)  
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A. Mitchell Palmer   AKA "fighting Quaker"; an attorney general who took a large part in accusing radical left-wings of being communists; rounded up about 6,000 suspects; house was once bombed  
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Nicola Sacco   shoe factory worker, Italian, atheist, anarchist, & draft dodger; convicted and electrocuted for murdering Mass. paymaster & guard  
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Bartolomeo Vanzetti   fish peddler, Italian, atheist, anarchist, & draft dodger; convicted and electrocuted for murdering Mass. paymaster & guard  
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Al Capone   AKA Scarface/Public Enemy Number One; rich gangster from Chicago; sold "wet" liquor; murdered his competition; jailed in 1932 for (of all things) falsifying income tax returns  
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William Jennings Bryan   prosecutor in Scopes Monkey trial; Presbyterian Fundamentalist & expert on the Bible; allowed Darrow to cross-examine him but never got the chance to cross-examine Darrow; Darrow made him look like a fool; died 5 days after the end of the trial  
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Clarence Darrow   famous criminal lawyer; defended Scopes; mocked Bryan while cross-examining him, resigned from him job before he himself got questioned  
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Andrew Mellon   war & Treasury Secretary; tax policies favored expansion of capital investment  
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Henry Ford   built fortune from an impoverished life; built the Model T & perfected the assembly line method of production; proclaimed "History is bunk" (ironic that he's now in a history book)  
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George Herman Ruth   homerun hero and "image-maker" of the Yankees; countless fans bought tickets to see him; aided in making baseball part of the consumer economy w/his popularity drawing people in  
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Jack Dempsey   heavyweight champion; some fans were willing to pay over a million dollars to watch him fight; aided in making boxing part of the consumer economy  
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Charles Lindbergh   AKA flyin' fool; performed 1st solo W->E trip over the Atlantic for $25,000, using a single-engine plane; Americans found him to be a hero; helped strengthen aviation industry by dramatizing & popularizing flying, which was safer&faster than other options  
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Guglielmo Marconi   Italian inventor who invented wireless telegraphy in 1890s  
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D.W. Griffith   directed "The Birth of a Nation" (1915)  
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Al Jolson   white Jew who performed in blackface as a jazz singer, both when acting in "The Jazz Singer" and as an occupation in the south  
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Dr. Sigmund Freud   Viennese physician & pioneering psychologist; argued that sexual repression caused nervous & emotional ills, so health called for sexual gratification & liberation  
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Marcus Garvey   feminist who championed use of contraceptives; founded "Birth Control Federation" which is now Planned Parenthood; believed in Eugenics  
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Langston Hughes   a writer who was a product of the Harlem Renaissance; published 1st volume of verses in 1926 ("The Weary Blues")  
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F. Scott Fitzgerald   Minnesota-born Princetonian; wrote about wild lifestyle in 1920's; became famous w/his work This Side of Paradise (1920); went on to write The Great Gatsby  
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Ernest Hemingway   fought in WWI on Italian front 1917, which influenced most of his works; wrote The Sun Also Rises (1926) and A Farewell to Arms (1929); devised a lean, word-sparing, word-perfect style; shot himself in 1961  
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William Faulkner   Mississippian; wrote bitter war novel Soldier's Pay (1926) and 2 novels about Deep South county, The Sound and the Fury (1929) and As I Lay Dying (1930)  
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Ezra Pound   Idahoan poet; moved to Europe, rejected civilization; strongly influenced by T. S. Eliot ("The Waste Land" (1922))  
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Eugene O'Neill   New York dramatist, Princeton dropout, playwright; wrote Strange Interlude (1928) about Freudian ideas of sex; wrote more than a dozen plays in 1920s & won Nobel Prize in 1936  
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gangsterism   greatly increased in 1920s by prohibition; revolved around alcohol; bribed police; threatened citizens into giving money; machine guns; violence especially in Chicago w/Capone; eventually, gangsterism spread to prostitution, gambling, & narcotics  
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music   jazz became more popular- Handy, "Jelly Roll" Morton, "Joe" King Oliver, Louis Armstrong-famous black musicians; but although jazz originates from African culture, industry replaced black bands w/ all-white bands (Paul Whiteman)- profits went to whites  
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roaring economics   bull market + "never sell America short" + exponential increase in American debt + cutting down on income taxes = "roaring economics" = bad news for the future of the economy  
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