20 Whole Chapter American Life Changes
20 Whole Chapter American Life Changes
20 Whole Chapter American Life Changes
The flapper craze took hold mainly in American cities, but in many
ways the flappers represented the rift between cities and rural areas.
Effects of Urbanization
• Beginning around
1910, Harlem,
New York,
became a favorite
destination for
black Americans
migrating from
the South.
• This major
relocation of
African Americans
is known as the
Great Migration.
• Southern life was difficult for
African Americans, many of Why Move?
whom worked as
sharecroppers or in other low-
paying jobs and often faced
racial violence.
• Many African Americans
looked to the North to find
freedom and economic
opportunities, and during
World War I the demand for
equipment and supplies
offered African Americans
factory jobs in the North.
• African American newspapers
spread the word of
opportunities in northern
cities, and African Americans
streamed into cities such as
Chicago and Detroit.
African Americans after World War I
Tensions
• Many found opportunities in the
North but also racism.
• Racial tensions were especially
severe after World War I, when a
shortage of jobs created a rift
between whites and African
American workers.
• This tension created a wave of
racial violence in the summer of
1919.
• The deadliest riot occurred in
Chicago, Illinois, when a dispute
at a public beach led to rioting
that left 38 people dead and
nearly 300 injured.
• Racially motivated riots occurred
in about two dozen other cities in
1919.
Life in Harlem
• New York City was one of the northern cities
many African Americans moved to during
the Great Migration, and by the early 1920s,
about 200,000 African Americans lived in the
city.
• Most of these people lived in a neighborhood
known as Harlem, which became the
unofficial capital of African American culture
and activism in the United States.
• A key figure in Harlem’s rise was W.E.B. Du
Bois, a well-educated, Massachusetts-born
African American leader.
• In 1909 Du Bois helped found the National
Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP) in New York City.
• Du Bois also served as editor of a magazine
called The Crisis, a major outlet for African
American writing and poetry, which helped
promote the African American arts
movement.
Garvey’s Rise
• Formed the Universal Negro
Improvement Association
(UNIA), which promoted self-
reliance for African Americans
without white involvement.
• Garvey wanted American blacks
to go back to Africa to create a
new empire.
• Garvey wanted African
Americans to have economic
success. His Black Star Line
promoted trade among Africans
around the world.
• About 2 million mostly poor
African Americans joined UNIA.
A Renaissance in Harlem
• Harlem in the 1920s was home to tens of thousands of African Americans, many
from the South, who felt a strong sense of racial pride and identity in this new
place.
• This spirit attracted a historic influx of talented African American writers, thinkers,
musicians, and artists, resulting in the Harlem Renaissance.
Performers Musicians
• Paul Robeson came to New York to • Harlem was a vital center for
practice law but won fame onstage, jazz, a musical blend of several
performing in movies and stage different forms from the Lower
productions like Othello. South with new innovations in
sound.
• Robeson also played in the
groundbreaking 1921 musical Shuffle • Much of jazz was improvised, or
Along, which had an all-black cast. composed on the spot.
• Josephine Baker was also in that • Louis Armstrong was a leading
show, and she went on to a performer on the Harlem jazz
remarkable career as a singer and scene.
dancer in the U.S. and in Europe,
• Other performers included
where black performers were more
Bessie Smith, Cab Calloway,
accepted.
and composers Duke Ellington
and Fats Waller.
Did we accomplish our Goals?
By the end of the 1920s, Americans bought 100 million movie tickets a
week, though the entire U.S. population was about 123 million people.
• The great popularity of movies in the 1920s
gave rise to a new kind of celebrity—the
movie star.
Film Star Heroes
• One of the brightest stars of the 1920s was
Charlie Chaplin, a comedian whose
signature character was a tramp in a derby
hat and ragged clothes.
• Rudolph Valentino, a dashing leading man
of romantic films, was such a big star that
his unexpected death in 1926 drew tens of
thousands of women to the funeral home
where his body lay.
• Clara Bow was a movie star nicknamed the
“It Girl.”
• Mary Pickford was considered “America’s
Sweetheart” and was married to Douglas
Fairbanks Jr., a major star of action films.
• Their home, called “Pickfair,” was in
Hollywood, the center of the motion picture
industry.
Pilot Heroes of the Twenties
Charles Lindbergh
• Charles Lindbergh was a daredevil pilot who practiced his skills as an airline
pilot, a dangerous, life-threatening job at the time.
• Lindbergh heard about a $25,000 prize for the first aviator to fly a nonstop
transatlantic flight, or a flight across the Atlantic Ocean, and wanted to win.
• He rejected the idea that he needed a large plane with many engines, and
developed a very light single-engine craft with room for only one pilot.
• On May 21, 1927, Lindbergh succeeded by touching down in Paris, France
after a thirty-three-and-a-half-hour flight from New York.
• Lindbergh earned the name “Lucky Lindy” and became the most beloved
American hero of the time.
Amelia Earhart
• A little over a year after Lindbergh’s flight, Amelia Earhart became the first
woman to fly across the Atlantic, returning to the U.S. as a hero.
• She went on to set numerous speed and distance records as a pilot.
• In 1937 she was most of the way through a record-breaking flight around
the world when she disappeared over the Pacific Ocean.
Sports Heroes
Radio helped inflame the public passion for sports, and millions
of Americans tuned in to broadcasts of ballgames and prize
fights featuring their favorite athletes.
• The great economic and social changes of the 1920s offered novelists a
rich source of materials.
• F. Scott Fitzgerald helped create the flapper image, coined the term
the “Jazz Age,” and explored the lives of the wealthy in The Great
Gatsby and other novels and stories.
• Sinclair Lewis wrote about the emptiness of middle-class life
– Wrote The Jungle