+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Republican Decade

Republican Decade

Date post: 25-Feb-2016
Category:
Upload: licia
View: 35 times
Download: 2 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Republican Decade. Fighting the Recession. After WWI, 2 million soldiers were looking for work Factories were closing because they were no longer getting orders for wartime goods from European nations. Republicans Rule the 1920s. Warren G. Harding 1921-1923 (died in office). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
33
Republican Decade
Transcript
Page 1: Republican  Decade

Republican Decade

Page 2: Republican  Decade

Fighting the RecessionAfter WWI, 2

million soldiers were looking for work

Factories were closing because they were no longer getting orders for wartime goods from European nations

Page 3: Republican  Decade

Republicans Rule the 1920s“HARD”-”COOL”-”HOOV

”All the presidents of

the 1920s were Republican

The names of the 3 presidents are Harding, Coolidge, and Hoover

Warren G. Harding 1921-1923 (died in office)

Calvin Coolidge 1923-1929

Herbert Hoover 1929-1933

Page 4: Republican  Decade

“A Return to Normalcy”This became

Warren G. Harding’s campaign slogan when he accidentally messed up the word, “Normality”

Americans loved it and elected him

Page 5: Republican  Decade

Warren G. HardingTwenty-Ninth President

(1921-1923)Born: November 2, 1865

in Marion, OHDid not approve of the

League of NationsWon election with 60%

of the national vote.Successfully cut taxes

and designed budgetScandalous

administration and ineffective governor

Died: August 2, 1923

Page 6: Republican  Decade

Presidential election of 1920

"Less government in business and more business in government."

Page 7: Republican  Decade

What did Harding’s administration do?It cut taxes, especially for the

richIt stripped the federal budget of

its wartime girth.Set higher restrictions on

immigration. Limiting annual # of immigrants that America would allow.

Supported anti-lynching legislation

Page 8: Republican  Decade

Voyage of UnderstandingPerhaps in an effort

to break away from his cronies.

Set out across the United States stopping to give speeches along the way.

Never-ending game of Bridge.

Page 9: Republican  Decade

Harding’s Death Brings Doom to his Reputation

Within months of Harding’s death his reputation was attacked.

His scandalous friends began to emerge.

Page 10: Republican  Decade

President Harding’s Corrupt Cabinet

Harry M. Daugherty -involved with other men that involved a rigged sale of some government property. One person went to jail and another committed suicide.

Thomas W. Miller – Harding appointed to the position of Alien Property Custodian and practiced fraud and went to jail.

Page 11: Republican  Decade

The Teapot Dome ScandalSecretary of the

Interior, Albert Fall accepted a bribe to lease government land to oil executives

One of these areas was called “Teapot Dome” in Wyoming

Fall was sent to prison

Page 12: Republican  Decade

Charles ForbesOne of Harding’s old buddiesHead of the Veteran’s BureauStole millions of dollars from the

bureau

“I can take care of my enemies all right, but my…friends, they’re the ones that keep me walking the floors at night!” –Hoover

After a bunch of betrayals, Harding died of a heart attack in August, 1923

Page 13: Republican  Decade

Vice President Calvin Coolidge Becomes President“Silent Cal” spoke

and spent little (Harding loved to throw parties and give long speeches)

He forced Corrupt officials

to resign

Page 14: Republican  Decade

Calvin CoolidgeThirtieth President

(1923-1929)Born: July 4, 1872

Plymouth Notch, Vermont

Became President when Warren G. Harding died

Isolationist foreign policy

Favored tax cuts and limited aid to farmers

Died: January 5, 1933

Page 15: Republican  Decade

1924 Re-ElectionHe was re-elected in 1924 with

the slogan “Keep Cool With Coolidge”

Page 16: Republican  Decade

From War Goods to Consumer GoodsCoolidge cut

regulations on businesses

Americans’ incomes rose

People began to buy refrigerators, radios, vacuums, and other appliances

Businesses began to advertise their products

Page 17: Republican  Decade

“Coolidge Prosperity”“The business of

America is business. The man who builds a factory builds a temple. The man who works there worships there.”◦Calvin Coolidge

What does President Calvin Coolidge believe American Prosperity rests on?

Page 18: Republican  Decade

Buying on CreditInstallment Buying= Buying on

Credit (Buy now, pay later)Demands for goods jumped, but

so did Americans’ debt“If we want anything, all we have to do is go

and buy it on credit. So that leaves us without any economic problems whatsoever, except that perhaps some day to have to pay for them.”

–Comedian Will Rogers

Page 19: Republican  Decade

Soaring Stock MarketBy the late 1920s, more

people were investing in the stock market

People became rich overnight

Bull Market: Period of rapidly increasing stock prices

Prices of stocks rose more quickly than the value of the companies themselves

Page 20: Republican  Decade

American Foreign Policy in the 1920sMost all Americans (including Harding

and Coolidge) wanted to remain “isolationist”

HOWEVER:1. The U.S. still needed to protect

economic interests in Mexico2. The U.S. gave $10 million in aid to

Russia during a famine3. The U.S. still signed the “Kellogg-

Briand Pact” with 61 other nations (which outlawed war)

Page 21: Republican  Decade

“Hopeful that, encouraged by their example, all the other nations of the world will join in this humane endeavor and by adhering to the present Treaty as soon as it comes into force bring their peoples within the scope of its beneficent provisions, thus uniting the civilized nations of the world in a common renunciation of war as an instrument of their national policy”

-Section of the Kellogg-Briand Pacthttp://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/imt/kbpact.htm

Page 22: Republican  Decade

Herbert Hoover had gained fame for setting up the food programs during WWI. He believed in the government taking a “hands off’ approach to dealing with the economic problems of the time.

•Thirty-first President (1929-1933)•Born: August 10, 1874 in West Branch, Iowa.•Laissez-faire: French term meaning hands off approach.

Page 23: Republican  Decade

Herbert Clark Hoover Herbert Hoover was born in

West Branch, Iowa in 1874.

He was a member of the inaugural class at Stanford University where he studied geology.

Hoover’s wife, the former Lou Henry, was athletic and brilliant. She was the first woman to graduate from Stanford and met Herbert in the geology lab.

Lou Hoover spoke five languages, assisted her husband in his geology and engineering work, often translating his articles and books.

Page 24: Republican  Decade

Hoovers’ Mining Career Herbert made a specialty of

turning around struggling operations with organization and technology

His wife helped translate his work and bridge the cultural gaps in foreign nations. Their work made them wealthy.

They were forced to flee China for a time during the Boxer Rebellion, an insurrection aimed at purging the nation of western influence.

While in London, at the outbreak of the First World War, the Hoovers organized an impromptu organization to evacuate expatriated and vacationing Americans from Europe.

Page 25: Republican  Decade

Belgium During WWI, Germany invaded Belgium

on the way France.

Britain and France placed a blockade on the Central Powers which kept them from importing food.

Germany no longer had enough food for its own population, let alone occupied countries such as Belgium.

Hoover, living in London, organized his entire mining firm as a relief operation for Belgium.

Hoover negotiated with the Allied nations to allow the relief ships through the blockade and negotiated with the Germans to not attack the ships with submarines.

What was the plan called?

Page 26: Republican  Decade

Secretary of Commerce With Hoover was invited to

serve in the cabinet as Secretary of Commerce of Republican President Warren G. Harding.

While many members of the Harding cabinet were implicated in controversies and scandals, Hoover remained unscathed and, thus, retained his post under Calvin Coolidge.

By the 1920’s the American economy was transformed, industry and commerce, rather than agriculture, now provided the backbone of the American economy.

As Commerce Secretary, Hoover was in the middle of the economic transformation, leading to the impression, that Herbert Hoover was everywhere.

Page 27: Republican  Decade

“Hooverizing” Woodrow Wilson placed Hoover in charge of agricultural production for the American war effort.

Hoover was immediately successful.

In addition to rationalizing the American production system, Hoover convinced Americans that it was patriotic to go without in war time.

Cutting back became known as “Hooverizing,” rationing was one way that World War I affected people on the home front.

Seeking to manage domestic consumption in order to feed the U.S. Army and to assist Allied armies and civilians., the U.S. Food Administration declared “Food Will Win the War.”

Page 28: Republican  Decade

“They will be fed!” Following the war, Hoover

turned the United States Food Administration into a relief organization for the devastated populations, including the defeated Central Powers, in Europe.

American aid fed two million people per day in Poland alone.

When a critic accused Hoover of helping the Bolsheviks by providing food aid to the Soviet Union, Hoover responded in the following speech, “Twenty million people are starving. Whatever their politics, they will be fed.”

Page 29: Republican  Decade

1928 ElectionHoover V. Alfred Smith (Catholic)

"A chicken in every pot and a car in every garage."

Page 30: Republican  Decade

Hoover’s PresidencyHoover believed

unnecessary government threatened prosperity and the spirit of the American people.

Foreign Affairs. Hoover cited the maintenance of peace as his prime objective in his administration's foreign policy. He was willing to cooperate with, but not join, the League of Nations.

Several months into his presidency………..

Page 31: Republican  Decade

October 29, 1929

Page 32: Republican  Decade

Who do you think was the better president during the 20’s?A. HardingB. CoolidgeC. Hoover

Page 33: Republican  Decade

Harding

Hoover

Coolidge

All 3 similar characteristicsHarding

& Hoover Similarities

Coolidge and Hoover Similarities

Characteristics of

HardingCharacteristi

cs of Coolidge

Characteristics of Hoover

Harding and

Coolidge Similarities


Recommended