The Roaring 20's: What was it really like?

Page 1

This image cannot currently be displayed.

30 â‚ľ November Issue


Table of Contents Articles in Order of Appearance

o

Impact of New Communication

o

By: Carsyn Knebel

o

Post Isolation

By: Najha Jones

o

By: Carsyn Knebel

o

Credit and Installment Buying

Immigration Tensions

Economic Boom By: Najha Jones

o

Impact of New Celebrities By: Katie Fliehler

By: Carsyn Knebel

o o

Post War Disarmament

Impact of Film By: Katie Fliehler By: Lily Lucas

o o

Henry Ford

19th Amendment By: Katie Fliehler By: Lily Lucas

o

Advertising By: Lily Lucas

o

Impact of Sports By: Sofia Perez

o

Scopes Trial By: Sofia Perez

o

Forms of Transportation By: Sofia Perez

o

Urban v. Rural By: Simran Sarin

o

18th Amendment By: Simran Sarin

o

Unions and Strikes By: Simran Sarin

o

Dating Patterns By: Najha Jones

2


3 First commercial radio station in the U.S.


Impact of Communication By: Carsyn Knebel

In

the

media

1920’s,

print

(newspapers

magazines)

and

big

Americans

deal.

they

radio

could

audiences

by

and were

Newspapers

really

liked

controversy.

a Radio

realized

reach

large

selling

papers,

was

also

a

very

popular thing in the 1920’s. The

things

being

in

the

radio.

now had a voice put to them.

Americans started reading and

Americans turned to the radio

listening

for

or

information

on

to

being

sent

media

and

the

information

nationwide. the

Print

radio

also

important

elections, and

radio

magazines

events,

sports,

music.

commercial

helped lead to celebrities.

and

about

broadcasting

magazines,

newspapers

read

The

comedy, first

station

was

KDKA. Radio led to the idea Print

media

everywhere Most

in

was

the

Americans

newspapers,

of television.

1920’s. bought

magazines,

or

both. People were reading the same

things

that

everyone

else in America was reading. Newspapers events, and

wrote

about

political

elections,

celebrities.

no

There

longer

differences

in

big

were

regional the

United

States because newspapers and magazines

showed

the

newest

fashions and ideas.

4


foreign trade for their jobs.

Post-war Isolationism

The

United

States

becoming

By: Carsyn Knebel

isolated from other countries After World War I, most people

in

the

United

States

would

affect

their

greatly;

and

did not want to be involved

Americans

would

with

jobs.

anything

again.

like

it

ever

Isolationism

Most

a

jobs

lot

of

lose

their

Americans

liked

was

the idea of isolationism but

strong in the Senate when it

they also wanted world peace.

voted

Also,

no

to

Versailles. no

to

the

The

Senate

the

Versailles

Treaty

countries

the United States a lot after the war, so they needed a way

did

to get that money. The United

they

States

began

to

countries

and

would

The

really

hurt

United States had the

realize

isolationism

their

problems.

owed

of

not want to be involved with other

other

voted

Treaty

because

of

the

economy.

strongest The

isolationist feelings because

towards they

States

Europe

did

not

world

want

involvement in anything to do

1920’s.

with

reduction

the

last

war.

After

also

peace

They and

United wanted in

the

wanted

weapon

navies

to

be

World War I the United States

smaller. The U.S. wanted this

wanted

to help prevent future wars.

to

normalcy,�

“return as

to

President

Many

countries

United

Harding said.

States

Kellogg-Briand Harding,

Coolidge,

Hoover

realized

trade

connected

States

to

world.

American

business

the people

and

that

foreign

the

United

rest

of

the

farmers

and

relied

on

treaty

including

the

signed

the

Pact.

rejected

This war.

Americans thought this was a good

step

towards

world

peace.

5


money to the buyer, so that

Credit and Installment Buying

they buyer

By: Carsyn Knebel

loan In

the

1920’s,

can

get

has in

the

to

pay

monthly

item.

The

back

the

installments

credit and if they don’t, the seller

and installment buying became can take the item away from very

popular.

Americans them.

couldn’t goods

afford

that

all

they

of

the

wanted

and

needed. The new products that were

coming

than

the

out

cost

and

Americans installment

ones

credit

buying

and

thought that things would be great

for

a

long

time.

more Americans

old

loved

bought

things

that

people they often times didn’t need

already

had.

At

the

end

of in the 1920’s. They did not

the 1920’s, 15% of all retail realize that this could cause sales were an installment. future economic problems. Credit

helped

Americans

get what they needed without having

to

pay

right

away.

They would buy something with borrowed

money

and

pay

the

loan off over time. People in America used to think it was not okay to borrow money to purchase

items.

In

the

1920’s, buying things without credit

or

installment

was

very uncommon. Installment

buying

is

when the buyer makes a down payment on the item and the seller loans the rest of the

6


7 Advertisement for the motion picture Modern Times


Impact 1920’s

of

Film

in

the

By: Lily Lucas

Motion

pictures

were

first

time,

there

were

celebrities.

Movies

exposed

people

to

new

fashions,

hairstyles,

and

different

first social behaviors. A historian

developed

the

1890s.

At

the quoted,

time,

movies

were

“Radio

told

the

silent. masses what to do, and movies

Many

people

went

to

watch

they

could

showed them how to do it.� movies

so

that

escape post-war problems. The annual

income

from

movies

rose from $30 million in 1921 to

$721

Also,

million

weekly

in

1929.

attendance

rose

from 50 million in 1920 to 90 million in 1929. When

they

found

add

sound

to

completely

out

Jazz

first

movie

Movies

with

to

movies,

changed

world.

how

the

Singer

it

movie

was

with

the

sound.

sound

made

a

large impact because not only could but

people they

add

could

dialogue, also

add

music. Dialogue was also good for

writers

because

it

gave

them more job opportunities. Movies

helped

stars.

They

become

famous,

make helped and

movie people for

the

8


The 19th Amendment

Some

groups

thought

that

since they worked so hard to

By: Lily Lucas

get the right to vote, they The the

nineteenth

right

to

gave

vote.

women

It

would

vote

as

a

well.

Women

argued

group

as

that

the

was

ratified on August 18, 1920. “women’s vote” could end war, This

was

good

for

women crime,

because

it

meant

that

and

corruption

in

they politics.

Some

women

formed

could finally vote. The same year

that

the

amendment

grass

roots

These

were

organizations.

was known

as

the

ratified, women were able to League of Women Voters. These vote

for

the

president

for women

the

first

time.

For

this

was

worked

themselves suffragists,

and

to other

educate voters

on public issues. everything they wanted.

9


Advertising By: Lily Lucas

Advertising 1920’s

helped

consumer culture enjoys

is

a

the

create

culture.

a

Consumer

culture

purchasing

finds

that

goods

and

happiness

consumerism. as

in

Companies

Listerine

advertising

in

to

such

psychologists

to

figure

what they should put in their advertisements would

so

buy

people

them.

consumers

that

it

used

false

the

latest

promote

their

advertising eventually led to

installment

buying.

let

buy

the

radio,

in

magazines, and newspapers.

big

people

wanted Companies

even

was

of

if

False

credit

and

Credit

what they

they didn’t

stopped have

product

use

fashions.

advertised

telling

was

important to be up-to-date on

a

clearly

Also,

advertisers tried to convince

products. These products were on

out

what

their

in

their

and

instead

later.

enough

money,

Installment

and buying

pay is

when the buyer makes payment advertisements,

when they buy a product, and twisted

the

truth

around

to then keep paying off the rest

appeal

to

consumers. of

Advertisers

began

to

the

product

in

hire installments every month.

10


11 Famous baseball player, Babe Ruth


Impact of Sports in the 1920’s By: Sofia Perez

Sports changed a lot in the

unbroken record for 34 years.

1920’s.

Ruth

Watching

attending

sports

popular.

and

became

Attendance

athletic

events

records

broke

during

the

attracted

so

many

fans

very

to Yankee Stadium that people

at

nicknamed it “The House That

all

Ruth Built.”

1920’s. A big change for women was

Spectator

Sports,

or

sports being able to become

that

attract

large famous

numbers

of

fans

athletes.

who Helen

attend very

games,

Wills,

also

became

common

known

as

“Little

Miss

Poker

Face,”

during

this time. was Sports

celebrities

known

ability

were a big reason why

tennis

spectator

than

sports

became

popular.

Everyone know

wanted

about

players,

and

hit

the

to ball

harder

any

of

calm favorite

Gertrude

this,

national

with

sports celebrities were born.

records

The

Before,

most

her

her

opponents and with a

to

their

for

famous

sports

Ederle

broke

world

swimming

and on

manner.

a

women

regular weren’t

basis. seen

celebrity of the era was Babe

this way. Women were to cook

Ruth,

the

and clean at home and devote

Sultan of Swat. In the season

their lives to their family.

of

Sports

also

1927,

runs,

known

Ruth which

hit

as

60

home

became

an

helped

women

become

more independent.

12


Scopes Trial By: Sofia Perez

Traditionalists

believed

and

taught

a

lesson

of

that the Bible is the world

evolution the next day in

of God, and since the Bible

his

said that all creations are

Scopes

biology Trial

class.

The

started

July

God’s,

10,

evolution

1925.

Clarence

didn’t

Darrow,

make

Scopes’

sense.

In

lawyer,

other

was

words,

to

evolution

able trick William

conflicted

Bryan,

a

with

creationism. the

law

for

That’s

when

banning

the

teaching of evolution took place. first

Tennessee was the state

to

enact

the

law. John

fundamentalist, admitting

that

into he

himself

didn’t interpret every word in the Bible as the actual, literal truth. In the end, Scopes was found guilty and

Scopes,

young

was

fined

science teacher, wanted to

Supreme

show the law was ridiculous

the

$100,

Court

but

the

overturned conviction.

13


Forms of Transportation By: Sofia Perez

Henry big

Ford

was

innovator

a

distances

during

from

their

job

because they could just drive

the 1920s. First, he

to

made automobiles more

life a lot easier for people.

affordable.

But

this

He

by

did

increasing

work.

they

Automobiles

weren’t

vehicles

that

the

only

made

the

distance

efficiency

easier.

of

made

long

traveling

his After

assembly

World

War

I, airplanes became

lines. With

cars

being

more

very

useful.

U.S.

Post

Office

bought affordable, people them.

The

surplus

more

could

buy

the

late

by

1920’s,

military planes and used them to deliver mail between some large cities. Henry Ford was

Americans

partly

responsible

for

the

owned more cars than evolution

of

this

vehicle.

bathtubs. By: 1926, Ford was producing With automobiles being more

all-metal

airplanes.

common in American families,

airplanes

were

it gave women and teenagers a

three engines instead of one,

new

and

sense

cars

of

ended

freedom.

the

Also,

isolation

of

could

passengers

farmers because it was easier

hour.

to travel long distances, and

airplanes

urban

common

needed

workers to

no live

longer walking

at

These

powered

by

carry 100

This were people,

ten

miles

per

changed

how

used

for

and

will

evolve much in the future.

14


15 New York City in the 1920’s


Urban vs. Rural By: Simran Sarin

In 1920 in the United States, World War I had just ended. The country was prospering and had gained a significant amount of world power; however, tensions began to occur. After the war, many soldiers left their small towns and moved to the city. More and more people moved to urban cities, leaving less and less people in the rural towns. The people living in the cities began to form new trends that shocked rural dwellers, and tensions between the two areas began to increase. About 19 million people moved from small, rural towns to the city in the 1920s, and the 1920 census revealed that 50 percent of the country’s population was living in the city. People moved to the city for working opportunities, causing an economic boom and an increase in the demand for workers. Worker’s wages increased while the consumer price index stayed the same, resulting in a higher standard of living for

people who lived in the city. People in the city began to form a new culture. They explored different ways of living and thinking, and in their free time, people went to movies, museums, and concerts. People also began to meet others from different cultures, buy and read magazines, drink, gamble, and go on casual dates without being seen as immoral. However, things were very different outside the city. Rural areas were small, quiet communities. People living in rural communities did not like the new ideas and cultures forming in the cities. Many people living in rural towns supported prohibition and felt that it stopped the influences of foreigners on traditional moral values in America. People who lived in the rural areas were also against children being taught about evolution and felt that cities defied religious beliefs.

16


18th Amendment By: Simran Sarin

“After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited.” The th 18 Amendment was passed in 1919. It was the only amendment to be repealed from The Constitution because of all the troubles and tensions it caused. The 21st Amendment was passed in 1933; this amendment th repealed the 18 Amendment. The 18th Amendment split the country into two groups: the “wets” and the “drys.” The drys were people who supported the prohibition of alcohol. Many drys lived in rural areas. They believed that the prohibition of alcohol would help make society healthier and happier. They

also thought that prohibition would dull life in the city, and at first, the amendment did deliver these advantages. The wets were the people who were against the prohibition of alcohol. At first, there were few wets in the country, but once the 18th Amendment was passed, the number of people who opposed it grew. The 18th Amendment resulted in an increase in illegal behavior. Wets would make their own bathtub gin, there were many bootleggers, or people who illegally carried alcohol, and many people went to speakeasies, which were secret drinking clubs. Bootlegging became a huge business and one of these famous bootleggers was Al Capone. Al Capone bribed and murdered many people for money during prohibition, but in 1931, he was only arrested for tax evasion.

17


Unions and Strikes By: Simran Sarin

During World War I, the National

War

government

Labor

Board,

funded

a

program,

World

(IWW)

union.

Instead

improve

was of

another trying

conditions

to for

settled labor issues and made

skilled workers, IWW believed

sure that workers were happy

in

so

would

these helped workers stand up

Wages

for

that

continue

products to

be

made.

increased,

unemployment

socialism. their

there

Unions

rights.

were

like

In

1919,

over

3,600

levels decreased, there were

strikes, and one out of every

better

10 workers quit their jobs.

and

working

only

conditions,

8-hour

workdays. Besides

After World War I, this all changed. no

The

longer

government

was

in

for

need

supplies, so the National War Labor

Board

left.

decreased, levels

Wages

unemployment

increased,

conditions

got

working

worse,

and

workers sometimes had 12-hour workdays.

People

tried

to

form unions and go on strikes to

protest

the

unfair

of

Labor

that

American

Federation

(AFL)

was

attempted

to

wages

and

skilled Industrial

a

union

improve

conditions

workers. Workers

unions,

people also started strikes. Seattle had a general strike where were

about

100,000

involved.

The

workers military

had to interfere, and it took five days to end the strike. Also,

in

force’s they

Boston, wages

went

on

the

were

police cut

strike.

so

Calvin

Coolidge, who was the mayor, fired all the police officers that were on strike and hired

treatment of workers. The

joining

for

new

ones.

lots

of

Coolidge

publicity

gained

from

this

action, and it would help him become

president

in

the

future.

The of

the

18


19 A flapper with her boyfriend


Dating patterns By: Najha Jones

often would just go to the Dating in the 1920'S was a serious thing. The person you

were

become life

dating

the and

love the

could of

your

person

you

spent the rest of your life with.

When

you

went

on

person’s house long enough to

drink,

joined.

would

outfit; just

the men

throw

Women

would

outfit, their

teeth

an brush

do

their

ask the parents’ permission to date the daughter.

patterns younger changing

the changed

their

the started

ways.

child

dating. of

The

clothes it

was

dresses,

new

hairstyles

and

lot

more

makeup.

Also

a

new

a

thing

where your friend would set you up on a date and you wouldn't person

people

know was

looked dating

generation

their

know

was “blind dating,”

and

hair. The man would have to

Soon,

whom

short

something

and

hardly

changed;

wouldn’t

shower,

separate

would

style

perfect

find

your

was

that was lying around they

go

meet this person and they

a

nails, and makeup done find

and

ways. The parents wouldn’t

would get their hair,

and

high,

have sex. After this, you

first date the parents often

get

or

like. who

patterns

who

this

what

they

These

new

changed were

dating

known

as

“flappers.”

You

20


Immigration Tensions By: Najha Jones

In

the

started

1920s

taking

Immigrants jobs

Americans

felt

were

and

lead

to

this

Nativist

mainly

that theirs,

Nativism.

focused

on

also targeted hatred towards anyone

who

case,

which

also

lead

Defamation

Europeans

organization

they

looked

only

because

different,

an

Anglo

Saxon descent. The Leo Frank

Catholics, Jew, and Southern not

wasn’t

started to

the

KKK

the

Anti-

Ledge,

an

of

Jews.

The

but

goal of this organization was

also because they also spoke

to stop the false accusation

different

languages.

of

people

faced

Chinese

Jews.

The

long-term

was

to

goal

secure

discrimination

justice

so

from

all

citizens

the

U.S

government because

could they

all

with

looked

alike

be

that

treated

the

same

respect.

and

nothing

like

Americans.

In

In

the 1920’s, an emergency act

some

communities, refused

landlords

to

let

Jews

and

was passed which established others

who

weren’t

American

a quota system that decimated the

amount

of

immigrants

rent

and

live

in

their

apartments.

Colleges

also

limited

number

of

Jews

When

the

granted access to the states. Social conflict often came

they

the

accepted.

from the KKK (Ku Klux Klan).

number

This

increase to 2.4 million this

was

that African

an

mainly

all-white focused

Americans.

But

group on they

started

of

Jews

the

started

to

anti-Semites

prejudge against them.

21


Economic Boom By: Najha Jones

After World War I, the U.S entered

a

period

extraordinary

of

but

it

wasn’t

everyone.

economic

still

now

an

lived

in

increase in sales of products

there

in

They

growth.

There

the

was

economy.

The

easy

African

for

Americans

struggled

and

they

the

ghetto

where

was

lots

of

also

had

to

violence. watch

out

development of new inventions

for the KKK. People wouldn’t

let

and

let blacks work so at times

money

African Americans got evicted

people

people on

work

began

to

less, spend

unnecessary

America

products.

discovered

from their homes.

great Another

way

of

purchasing

stock of natural resources to goods was to use installment work with after World War I. America

also

took

over

many

oversea markets while Europe

buying.

In

buying,

someone

purchase

installment could

something

and

not

was recovering from the war. pay full price. Instead, they Credit made it easier for middle

class

people

to

buy

would pay

make

the

down

rest

payment

of

the

and

money

things. It became fashionable

back in monthly installments.

for

If they got behind or stopped

people

People and

would

the

they

to

spend buy

person

bought

it

from

would

make

the

product

and

money.

something

making

payments

the

seller

could

reclaim

their

product.

People and

then go and spend

that

the

economic

money

right

away.

This

soon

would

became

a

cycle

end.

hoped thought the boom never

22


Impact

of

New

Celebrities

By: Katie Fliehler

After the discovery on how to add sound to motion pictures, a

new

group

emerged.

of

celebrities

These

celebrities

became nationally known and had fans

all

over

worshipped

the

and

country

obsessed

who over

them. These celebrities exposed American’s

to

hairstyles,

new

and

fashions,

loosened

the

rules of social behavior. Rudolph otherwise

Valentino,

known

as

“The

Great

Lover,” was a very popular movie star in the 1920s. When he died at

only

31

years

old

100,000

people lined the streets for him in

New

York

City.

People

had

become very dedicated fans and were died.

extremely Valentino

important

upset became

celebrity

in

when a

he very

popular

culture.

23


The Kellogg Briand Pact was an

Post-War Disarmament

agreement among nations to try By: Katie Fliehler

to settle international disputes by In 1921, President Harding invited

Great

France,

Britain,

Italy,

countries

to

reduction. called

This

the

Conference.

States

other

outlaw

war

naval

countries.

weapon

eventually

meeting

Washington

was Naval

Charles Evan Hughes

rather

than

war. This treaty began with the United

and

and

means

Japan,

discuss

disarmament

peaceful

and

France

to

between

their

Sixty-two

nations

signed

this

treaty.

Many Americans liked the Kellogg Briand

Pact

because

reach peace with

it

helped

other nations

without having to go to war.

shocked delegates by offering to scrap 30 U.S. war ships. This is when other countries agreed to limit the size of their navies also.

Supporters

this

would

wars,

but

hoped

discourage those

who

that future

disagreed

feared that we wouldn’t be able to

contain

this

easily.

The

people who disagreed were right because limited,

although

navies

were

ships

and

small

submarines weren’t affected. Many

Americans

longed

for

world peace after World War I.

24


Ford’s

Henry Ford

innovation

reduced the time it took to

By: Katie Fliehler

build cars from twelve hours Henry

Ford

changed

the

way many people lived in the 1920s.

Cars

sense

became

of

a

new

freedom

for

everyone,

especially

for

women

teenagers.

They

and

were now able drive anywhere they

wanted,

and

teenagers

could go places without their parents. far

Cars made traveling

away

enjoyable were

no

could time

from and

fun.

longer

drive

line

into

different

eighty-four

steps.

He

trained

each of his workers so they were

each

able

to

do

a

different step. Ford was able to cars

lower and

the

price

still

of

make

his good

profit.

Farmers and

town

any

In

the

wanted.

almost

broke the model T’s assembly

more

isolated

into

they

1920’s

home

to just two and a half. Ford

all

middle

class families had cars. Assembly helpful

and

because

of

inspired

lines

are

became Ford. by

popular Ford

the methods

flourmills,

breweries,

He

lines

for

installed

manufacturing built

pieces

of and moving

of

process.

machines

was flow

production

more.

very

that

the Ford could

stamp out parts automatically instead of by the human hand. 25


Bibliography Sofia Perez: Textbook: Hart, Diane. History Alive!: Pursuing American Ideals. Palo Alto, CA: Teachers’ Curriculum Institute, 2013. Print. Websites: xroads.virginia.edu/~ug97/inherit/1925ho me.html voices.yahoo.com/transportation-1920s2015937.html Picture sites: http://sabr.org/bioproj/person/9dcdd01c http://www.californiagoldenblogs.com/2010/6/ 30/1546260/ helen-wills-moody-cals-great http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftria ls/scopes/ scopesreflections.html http://fluentbeauty.blogspot.com/2011/10/ fashion-through- decades-1920s.html

Lily Lucas: Textbook: Hart, Diane. History Alive!: Pursuing American Ideals. Palo Alto, CA: Teachers’ Curriculum Institute, 2013. Print. Book: Websites:

[insert]

http://en.wikipedia/org/wiki/advertising

26


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ nineteenth_amendment_to_the_united_states_c onstitution Picture sites: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlie_Chaplin

http://www.kilmerhouse.com/2008/02/listerineantiseptic-a- very-usefulproduct/http://www.learntci.com/shared/sections/8314

Katie Fliehler: Textbook: Hart, Diane. History Alive!: Pursuing American Ideals. Palo Alto, CA: Teachers’ Curriculum Institute, 2013. Print. Websites:

www.boundless.com www.history.com/this -day-inhistory/fords-assembly-line- startsrolling

Picture sites: http://www.silentsaregolden.com/photos2/ rudolphvalentinophoto2.html http://historyofww2.webs.com/weaponsoftheun itedstates.htm http://pastfoundation.org/previousprograms/Arizona/ ArizonaHistory.htm

Simran Sarin: Textbook: Hart, Diane. History Alive!: Pursuing American Ideals. Palo Alto, CA: Teachers’ Curriculum Institute, 2013. Print.

27


Website: www.qustincc.edu/lpatrick/his1302/hicks.html Kids.law.come/18th-amendment www.foxbusiness.com/markets/2011/08/09 /10-biggeststrinkes-in-american-history/ Picture sites: http://thamanjimmy.blogspot.com/2010/11/h istory-of-18th- amendment.html http://www.learntci.com/shared/sections/8351

Carsyn Knebel: Textbook: Hart, Diane. History Alive!: Pursuing American Ideals. Palo Alto, CA: Teachers’ Curriculum Institute, 2013. Print. Websites:

www.U-S-history.com/pages/h1601.html library.thinkquest.org/27629/themes/me dia/md20s.html econclo.bU.edu/

http://16034173.nhd.weebly.com/thePicture sites: assembly-line.html http://broadcastarchiveumd.tumblr.com/post/51469567374/ thepittsburghhistoryjournal-the-worlds-first http://en.wikipedia.org/wi ki/ Timeline_of_labor_issues_ and_events

28


http://ic.galegroup.com/ic/uhic/ReferenceD etailsPage/ ReferenceDetailsWindow? displayGroupName=Reference&zid=6d3bef0712b 41d824dc3 a746da70ef24&action=2&catId=&documentId=GA LE %7CCX3425600011&userGroupName=mlin_c_montyt ech& jsid=c9674adb2ee4f7742f7c0575588b0c0d

Najha Jones: Textbook: Hart, Diane. History Alive!: Pursuing American Ideals. Palo Alto, CA: Teachers’ Curriculum Institute, 2013. Print. Webites: http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/American_economy http://wiki.answers.com http://www.blog.neu.com http://www.fags.org http://www.studymode.com/essays/socialten sionofthe1920’s http://articals.usapeople-search.com Picture sites: http://www.freewebs.com/svmike05/kkk.html

http://forums.thefashionspot.com/f116/1920sflappers-52047-2.html http://www.flickriver.com/groups/671283@N 23/pool/ random/

29


http://www.canadiancar.technomuses.ca/en g/ frise_chronologique-timeline/1920/

30


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.