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Difficulties After WWI (The 1920s pt. 1)

Difficulties After WWI (The 1920s pt. 1)

Assessment

Presentation

History

9th Grade

Hard

Created by

Jacob Riggs

FREE Resource

11 Slides • 0 Questions

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​Difficulties after World War I

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  • President Wilson eagerly sought American approval of the Treaty of Versailles, with its League of Nations

  • Some feared that membership in the League would draw the U.S. into future wars

    • This fear and general lack of concern for foreign affairs brought a return to isolationism

    • Americans desired a return to normal business

Isolationism and Disarmament

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Isolationism and Disarmament

  • Presidential election of 1920

    • Republican candidate Warren G. Harding emphasized a "Return to Normalcy" and wins the election

  • Disarmament became popular after WWI

    • Reduction in the size of a nation's military and its weapons

  • At the Washington Naval Conference of 1921-1922, 9 nations met and agreed to destroy dozens of naval vessel and to limit the size of future navies

    • This agreement said nothing about the size of the armies

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Isolationism and Disarmament

  • Warren G. Harding died in 1923, and Vice President Calvin Coolidge became president

  • In 1928, under Coolidge, the Kellog-Briand Pact was signed

    • Made in 1928 outlawing war as a means of settling international disputes; signed by many nations

    • Virtually worthless

    • No means of enforcement

    • Signing nations agreed war was allowed in cases of self-defense

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  • Fear of Communism grew when more Americans relaized Communists intended to take control of other countries

  • The term Red Scare refers to the time when there was increased public concern about communism within America

    • The first occurred after WWI

    • The second occurred after WWII

The Red Scare

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The Red Scare

  • 1919 -- Russian leaders organized the Third International

    • Founded by Vladimir Lenin with the purpose of calling for worlwide revolution and to export communism

    • One of the goals was to create a struggle between common workers and property-owning capitalists

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The Red Scare

  • April 1919

    • Bombs mailed to 30 businessman and government officials

  • September 1920

    • More than 30 killed from bomb explosion in front of the New York Stock Exchange

    • Fearing these were Communist attacks, Attorney General Palmer increased government investigations (The Million Dollar Question)

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The Red Scare

  • Fear of communism increased Americans' resentment of immigrants

  • 1921 -- Nicola Sacco & Bartolomeo Vanzetti Case

    • Two Italian immigrants tried on suspicion of murdering two shoe company employees in a payroll robbery

    • Facts are still disputed; the trial divided the nation

    • Both men were found guilty and executed

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  • After the war, the U.S. experienced economic downturn

    • The high demand during war kept businesses afloat, not so much after

Economic Downturn

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Economic Downturn

  • As war industries closed, there were not enough jobs available for soldiers returning home

  • During the war, African Americans and immigrants held a substantial number of jobs in cities

  • Many Americans resented those two groups for holding jobs that returning soldiers now wanted

  • Congress passed new laws that set quotas (fixed numbers) for how many immigrants could enter the US

    • These laws were intended to stop the heavy flow of immigrants, especially those from the Roman Catholic countries of southern and eastern Europe

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​Difficulties after World War I

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