The Roaring 20s - Newsela
The Roaring 20s - Newsela
The Roaring 20s - Newsela
By Joshua Zeitz, The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, adapted by Newsela staff on 12.15.16
Word Count 982
Level 1200L
TOP: Russell Patterson's "Where There's Smoke There's Fire," showing a fashionably dressed woman of the time, often called
a flapper, was painted around 1925. Courtesy of Library of Congress. BOTTOM: Calvin Coolidge in the late 1910s. Photo
courtesy of Wikipedia.
The 1920s heralded a dramatic break between America's past and future. Before
World War I (1914-1918), the country remained culturally and psychologically
rooted in the past. In the 1920s, America seemed to usher in a more modern era.
The most vivid impressions of the 1920s are of flappers, movie palaces, radio
empires, and Prohibition, the nationwide ban on alcohol that led to people making
alcohol and drinking it in secret. But also during this era, scientists shattered the
boundaries of space and time, aviators made men fly, and women went to work.
The United States was confident and rich.
But the 1920s were also an age of extreme contradiction. The unmatched
prosperity and cultural advancement was accompanied by intense social unrest
and reaction. The same decade also reintroduced the Ku Klux Klan, discrimination
against immigrants, and pitted religious fundamentalism against scientific
findings.
Many of the trends that converged to make the 1920s distinct had been building
for years.
It was an era of liberation for women as the decade gave rise to flappers, who
were young women who dressed and acted boldly for that time. Meanwhile, a
powerful women's political movement demanded and won the right to vote in
1920.
Independent women
Spurred on by economic growth that required a larger female labor force, young
women now were able to lead independent lives and, as such, many female
workers lived alone in private apartments or boardinghouses, free from the
watchful eyes of their parents.
The 1920s are often thought of as an era of prosperity and, in many respects,
Americans had never lived so well. Advancement in machinery and technology
made it possible for people to work fewer hours and earn more money.
Furthermore, people also had more opportunities to buy material things, thanks
to new methods of production and distribution. By 1929, American families spent
over 20 percent of their household earnings on factory-made furniture, radios,
electric appliances, cars, and entertainment, such as going to movie theaters or
amusement parks.
The proliferation of advertising helped expose people to lives associated with the
purchase of goods and services by selling them their dreams, or what companies
wanted people to think their dreams were.
For the first time ever, more Americans lived in cities than in villages or on farms
during the 1920s. This urbanization also included economic growth, as machines
increased productivity in manufacturing, railroads, and mining. Much of this was
due to technological advancements, including electricity, which almost two-thirds
of households had by the mid-1920s. The electric vacuum cleaner, the electric
refrigerator and freezer, and the automatic washing machine became staples in
middle-class homes, and cars became affordable and trustworthy.
Meanwhile, film and radio advanced during the 1920s. On November 2, 1920, a
radio station in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, broadcast the presidential election
returns for the first-ever live radio news. Shortly thereafter, Americans were
listening to music, live baseball games and more on the radio.
Warren G. Harding was America's 29th president, serving from 1921 until he died
while still in office in 1923. Although his administration was full of scandal,
Harding was widely admired by the American voters.
The great revolution that was sweeping through America didn't meet with uniform
approval from everyone.
In 1925, a young high school science teacher in Tennessee named John Scopes
violated the state's law that evolution could not be taught. Evolution is the
scientific process of a gradual, natural development of living things over time.
This process was at odds with many religious beliefs. In Tennessee, a battle
between science and fundamentalist Christianity followed, as did a trial in court.
The anti-evolution law remained until the 1960s.
Meanwhile, the Ku Klux Klan had faded away until 1915, when it was reorganized.
The new Klan included among its list of enemies Jews, Catholics, Asians, and "new
women." By 1925, the organization claimed at least 5 million members, with the
Klan controlling politics in several states and helping put in place anti-
immigration laws that would last for years.
Amid the great prosperity and excess of the 1920s, America's economy was weak.
There were massive gaps between the rich and poor, with those living in the
countryside being affected the most as farm prices hit rock bottom while cities
prospered.
The stock market collapsed in 1929, and the influences of under-consumption and
over-estimating the success of stocks began wreaking havoc on the American
economy as the nation's first modern decade drew to an end.
Joshua Zeitz is an author and has taught American history at Harvard University
and Cambridge University.