u.s. history (ch 20) ford

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QUIZ CH 19 S 4 1. Cease fire or truce 2. Ethnic group forming their own nation 3. International organization to settle disputes 4. Name 3 new nation created after WW1 5. Who was the president of US during WW1 6. When was the exact date WW1 ended 7. Name 3 new weapons used during WW1 8. Name the peace plan of US 9. Payment for war damages 10.Clause blaming Germany for starting the war

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Page 1: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

QUIZ CH 19 S 4

1. Cease fire or truce

2. Ethnic group forming their own nation

3. International organization to settle disputes

4. Name 3 new nation created after WW1

5. Who was the president of US during WW1

6. When was the exact date WW1 ended

7. Name 3 new weapons used during WW1

8. Name the peace plan of US

9. Payment for war damages

10.Clause blaming Germany for starting the war

Page 2: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Chapter 20

Page 3: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Warren G. Harding- 29th

• Election of 1920

• Campaign for “Normalcy”

Page 4: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

The Teapot Dome Scandal

• In the early part of the 20th century large oil reserves were discovered in Elk Hills, California and Teapot Dome, Wyoming.

Rocky Mountain Oilfield Testing Center on the Teapot Dome Naval Petroleum Reserve No. 3 near Midwest, Wyoming.

Page 5: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

• In March of 1921, President Warren Harding appointed Albert Fall as Secretary of the Interior.

Pres. Warren Harding Secretary of the Interior Albert

Fall

Page 6: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

I appoint Albert Fall to be the Secretary of the Interior.

President Warren G. HardingPresident Warren G. Harding

Psssssst. Albert,Take this. Ooh la la!

A hundred thousand dollars!

Why thank you very much Harry Sinclair of the Mammoth Oil Corp and Edward

Doheny of Pan American Petroleum.

Page 7: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Secretary of the Interior Albert Fall

Harry Sinclair

(Mammoth Oil Corp.)

Edward L. Doheny (Pan-American Petroleum)

Yo, Albert buddy! How about letting Edward and I drill for oil in Elk Hills and

Teapot Dome!

But that’s Naval property! You can’t

drill there!

Maybe $100,000 would help you

change your mind!

Why didn’t you say so, Ed?

You’ve got a deal!

Page 8: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Elk Hills,CaliforniaElk Hills,California

Teapot Dome,Oil reserved

forU.S. NAVY

Teapot Dome,Oil reserved

forU.S. NAVY

Mammoth Oil Corp

1921

U.S. NAVY

O I L

Pan American

Petroleum

Hey, the bribe worked, Harry. Our buddy Albert let us lease Naval reserves and drill for oil.

Sssssweet Ed!

Teapot Dome Scandal- Fall accepted a bribe from companies to lease a federal reserve land

Page 9: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Except I’m in jail!

1927

Page 10: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

• In 1923, Harding died of a heart attack. Vice-President Calvin Coolidge took over.

Page 12: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Calvin Coolidge- 30th • Business

principles should guide the US

Page 14: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Assembly Line • each worker assign a special task• faster, cheaper• produced 2,000 in hour

Page 15: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

The Model T• As Henry Ford said “ You can paint it any color you like, as long as it is black.”

• The early Model Ts actually did come in a variety of colors, but beginning in 1914 and for the next eleven years, the Model T would be sold in only one color: black.

• The reason for this was the black enamel used dried more quickly than other paints and sped up production.

• Consumers were not offered a choice of colors again until 1926, due in part to slumping sales.

We’re all BLACKWe’re all BLACK

Page 16: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Impact of automobiles:

• Highways (paved road) developed

• Gas stations• Traffic lights • growth in

suburbs

Page 17: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Ex.) Model-T

1909 - $850

1916 - $360

1924 - $290

· The efficiency of the assembly line helped to decrease car prices.

Page 18: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

• They called it the car for Everyman

• Henry Ford himself called it a car for the “great multitude”

• It was functional and simple like your sewing machine or cast-iron stove.

• You could learn to drive it in less than a day….

• When Ford first conceived the Model T it took 13 hours to assemble.

• Within 5 years he was turning out a vehicle every 90 seconds.

• And of course, the real invention wasn’t the car… it was the assembly line that built it.

Page 19: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

* Employment and the standard of living increased.

•People focused on consumer goods.

•Ex) radios, washing machines, telephones, fridge, and cars

· Rising incomes and labor saving devices, such as washing machines, gave families more free time, women’s job at home easier.

Page 20: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

· businesses used advertising to convince consumers that they would be happier if they bought their product.

Advertising

· luxury became necessities.

Page 21: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford
Page 22: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

· installment plan or buying on credit.

• purchase items people couldn’t afford

Buying goods on Credit

· increased the demand for goods,

while consumer debt increased.

Page 23: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford
Page 26: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

A man stands next to a still looking at the contents of a glass. The photo was taken by the Treasury Department sometime between 1921 and 1932.

Page 27: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

· Bootleggers smuggled in liquor by gangsters

Prohibition failed- violation widespread

Page 28: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

· Speakeasies, or illegal bars,

What is the origin of the term speakeasy?

Bartender's would often tell patrons to keep it down and "speak easy".

Page 30: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford
Page 31: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

U.S. Officials Destroying Liquor at the Brownsville Customs House, December 20, 1920.

Page 32: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford
Page 33: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

• Al Capone, The Godfather- created a bootlegging empire ($100 million a year)• Took control of Chicago liquor business by killing off his competition

Organized Crime

Page 34: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

· The Twenty-first Amendment repealed Amendment 18 (Alcohol became legal again)

Page 35: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Charles Lindbergh• made the first nonstop

solo trans-Atlantic flight.• Spirit of St. Louis

• NYC - Paris• 33 ½ hours later – (no

auto pilot)• $25,000 prize

• 2yr old Son Charley kidnapped in 1932• $50,000 ransom• murdered

Page 36: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Amelia Earhart

• 1932: First female to fly solo across the Atlantic

• 1935: First person to fly from California to Hawaii

• 1937: Attempt to fly around the world– 2/3 completed and went

missing, presumed dead.

Page 37: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Flappers

• Emancipated young women

• Embraced new fashion• Short hair• Short skirts• Wear lipsticks• Smokes• Drinks• Disobedient• Risk takers

Page 38: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Babe Ruth- baseball

World Series champion 7 times American League home run

champion 12 times RBI Champion 6 times On-base percentage Champion

10 times Slugging Average Champion 13

times First major league to hit 700

home runs First to hit 60 home run in one

season-establishing a record.

Page 39: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

· Millions of Americans began to attend the movies regularly. Examples) Rudolph Valentino (below) and Charlie Chapman (right)

Page 40: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Changes: Women in the

1920s

The Flapper: Double Standard:

Work: Family:

Write 4 complete sentences that describes the changes women had in the 1920s

Page 41: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Immigration Restriction > Cartoon on the Literacy Test

Page 42: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Immigration Restriction > Cartoon on the Quota Act of 1921

Page 43: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Scopes Trial > Cartoon comparing Bolsheviks and Scientists, 1925

Page 44: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Scopes Trial > Bryan and Darrow

Page 45: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Scopes Trial > Bryan as Don Quixote

Page 46: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Scopes Trial > Darrow as a Street Player

Page 47: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Scopes Trial > Monkeys Vote on Evolution

Page 48: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

The following industries grew as a result of the booming car industry:

construction (roads and bridges)

steelrubber

glass

paint

oil

housing (as the suburbs grew)

Page 49: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Chapter 20 Section 2

• Workbook• B. #1-16• C/ #1-6

Page 50: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

· Radios also became very popular during the 1920’s as families gathered around the radio to listen to music, comedies, and mysteries.

Before television, radio was the dominant home entertainment medium.

Page 51: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Listen to Amos and Andy radio shows from 1929.

Page 52: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford
Page 53: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Chapter 21

Page 54: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

A Booming Economy: The 1920’s

Income increases

People purchase more goods

Companies earn higher profits

Companies expand and hire more people

“Boom Cycle”

Page 55: U.S. History (CH 20) Ford

Quiz Ch 20

1. Name the 30th President

2. Term for each person assigned a specific task

3. Term for part that can be change with an identical parts

4. He mass produced automobiles

5. Name the 29th President

6. Companies introduced buying on credit to people called

7. Event where Secretary of Interior leased US Navy oil reserve to private companies

8. Name two impact of automobile

9. What did businesses used to convinced people to buy their products

10.Name of the Secretary of Interior that took a bribe