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Essential Question What was the impact of World War I on U.S. society? The War’s Impact Bolshevik Revolution Bolsheviks = communists who wanted to take control of Russia March 1917 – Czar Nicholas II left his throne Vladimir Lenin Leader of the Bolshevik Party Nov. 1917 – overthrew the Russian government Beginning of communist government Red Scare Fear that Communists were trying to start a revolution in the U.S. Many linked Communist activities with worker strikes and immigration A. Mitchell Palmer U.S. Attorney General Home bombed by revolutionaries He organized a series of raids on radical organizations J. Edgar Hoover Head of a new division within the Justice Department Became the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) End of Progressivism Election of 1920 Winner = Warren G. Harding (Republican) Platform = U.S. must return to “normalcy” as before the Progressive Era reforms A Clash of Values Return of Nativism Immigrants from southern and eastern Europe Competition for jobs with military men Many saw immigrants as a threat to U.S. stability and order Ku Klux Klan Voice in restricting immigration Targeted Catholics, Jews, immigrants Emergency Quota Act Signed by Harding in 1921 Limited immigration with quotas Henry Ford Goal? Make an automobile affordable for every household How? Assembly Line Prohibition January 1920 18th amendment – prohibition of alcohol Enforced by the Treasury Department Speakeasies Secret bars where people could purchase alcohol Bootlegging in rural America Run by organized crime (the mob) Al Capone Dominated organized crime in Chicago Mass Media Radio Movies Newspapers Magazines Aimed at a broad audience Mass Media Created a sense of shared national experience Quickly spread new ideas and attitudes African American Culture Harlem Renaissance Followed the Great Migration Cities became full of nightclubs and music One center became Harlem, NYC Harlem Renaissance Growth of African American arts Langston Hughes Became the voice of African American experience in the United States I, Too I, too, sing America. I am the darker brother. They send me to eat in the kitchen When company comes, But I laugh, And eat well, And grow strong. Tomorrow, I’ll be at the table When company comes. Nobody’ll dare Say to me, “Eat in the kitchen,” Then. Besides, They’ll see how beautiful I am And be ashamed --I, too, am America. Zora Neale Hurston First major stories featuring African American females in lead roles Louis Armstrong Early form of jazz Great cornet and trumpet soloist Duke Ellington Composer, pianist, bandleader Got his start at the Cotton Club (Harlem nightspot) Duke Ellington “Everything, and I repeat, everything, had to swing. And that was just it, those cats really had it; they had that soul. And you know you can’t just play some of this music without soul. Soul is very important.” Cotton Club Tin Pan Alley