Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Questions 25 - 28: Truman Arrives on the Scene

Postwar Baby Boom (cont.)



25.) The "pig passing through the python" referred to the expectation that the oversize postwar generation would strain and distort many aspects of American life. This generation caused drastically icnreased consumerism, from baby products in the 40s and 50s, to trendy clothes and rock music in the 60s, to jeans in the 70s, jobs in the 80s, and so on, followed by products for their own chidlren in the 90s, and, predictably, Social Security in the 21st Century.

Truman: The "Gutty" Man from Missouri



26.) Harry S. Truman was called "the average man's average man". While initially very timid, he soon gained confidence to the point fo dangerous cockiness, and became notoriously stubborn. he once palced a sign on his desk at the White House that said "The buck stops here."

Shaping the Postwar World



27.) U.S. behavior after World War II, in sharp contrast to that of after World War I, was taking the lead in creating the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, important to war-ravaged countries, and supplying most of their funding.



28.) On July 28, 1945, the Senate overhwlmingly apporved the United Nations Charter. The Security Council was led by the Big Five Powers: United States, Britain, the USSR, France, China, and the Assembly, which could be controlled by smaller countries.

To continue the discussion on how the Postwar World was shaped, visit George's Blog!

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

The Aftermath of War (Questions 17 - 22)



17.) The Esch-Cummins Transportation Act of 1920 encouraged private consolidation of the railraods and pledged the Interstate Commerce Commission to guarantee their profitability.



18.) The Merchant Marine Act of 1920 authorized the Shipping Board, which controlled about 1500 vessels, to dispose of much of the hastily built wartime fleet at 'bargain-basement' prices.



19.) Strategies used to break strikes in 1919 and 1922 included exploiting ethnic and racial divisions among steelworkers and branding the strikers as dangerous 'reds', and an injunction on 1922.



20.) In 1921, the Veterans Bureau was created, representing one of the few benefits enjoyed by a non-business group in this era.



21.) In Paris in 1919, Teddy Roosevelt Jr. founded the American Legion. It met to renew old hardships and let off steam in good natured horseplay, and became associated with patriotism, conservatism, and anti-radicalism.



22.) The Adjusted Compensation (Hold-up bonus) Act gave every former soldier a paid-up insurance policy due in 20 years, adding about $3.5 billion to the total cost of World War I.

To continue this journey through history, please visit Brenna's AP US Blog!

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

The Prohibition Experiment



Prohibition was officially authorized with the passage of the 18th Amendment in 1919 and implemented by Congress' Volstead Act, which "made the world safe for hypocrisy".

Prohibition was especially popular with the southerners, who wanted to keep alcohol away from blacks, and westerners, who wanted to put an end to the saloon vices including public drunkenness, postitiution, corruption and crime.



Strong opposition would come from the larger eastern cities, full of foreign-born old world immigrants who were used to their beer garderns and corner taverns. Yet, with prohibtion coming to stay, many indulged in one last wild fling before the extended "alcoholiday".



The law would not, however, overcome the tenacious American tradition of strong drink and the fact that the government had relatively nonexistent control over people's private lives. Simply put, the lawmakers could not legislate away a thirst.



Supporters of alcohol (wets) believed they could overturn the law if they violated it on a large enough scale... Even hypocritical legislators sometimes sneaked a private drink. The law was disliked by all tpes of peoples, from returning soldiers to grimy workers to flaming youth of the jazz age even to older citizens who engaged in "bar hunts".

Agencies meant to enforce the law were understaffed, underpaid and ineffective, as shown as scores of people, often innocent, were killed by the dry agents, arousing the public even further. Prohibition simply did not prohibit.



Corner saloons were replaced by "speakeasies", where one could speak softly through a window in the door before it was opened to staggering volumes of liquor being consumed. This alcohol was illegally supplied by rumrunners from the West Indies and from Canada.

While overall a failure, the noble experiment did have some good points:
-Bank savings inceased
-Absenteeism in industry decreased
-Less alcohol was consumed than in the days before prohibition

And yet, the ardent wet would still declare, "Prohibtion is better than no alcohol at all!"


Infomration taken from pages 732-733,736 of The American Pageant.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

The Fourteen Points Disarm Germany / Wilson Steps Down from Olympus: Questions 41 - 45



41.) Germany sought a peace based on the Fourteen Points.

42.) The United States' main contributions to the war effort had been foodstuffs, munitions, credits, oil for this first mechanized war, and manpower. The Germans were demoralized to the point of surrender by the prospect of endless US troop reserves.

43.) No other man besides Wilson had ever occupied so dizzy a pinnacle as moral leader of the world. Yet, he began to make a series of tragic fumbles.

44.) Wilson went to Europe as a diminished leader because he had staked his reputation on a democratic victory in the congressional elections of 1918, which backfired on him with a narrow republican majority. Unlike his fellows at the table, he did not command a legislative majority back home.

45.) Wilson infuriated Republicans by going in person to Paris (no pervious president had traveled to Europe) and by snubbing the senate in assembling his peace delegation and neglecting to include a single Republican senator in his official party.

For a continuation of the story of the peace treaty, visit Fort Nico's fortess of History!

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Progressive Era Conservation / Land Use Acts



Desert Land Act 1877 regulated the selling of arid land with the condition that the buyer would irrigate it.



Forest Reserve Act 1891 set aside public forests as national parks



Carey Act 1894 distributed federal land to the states on the condition that it would be irrigated and settled



Newlands Act 1902: Washington was authorized to collect money from the sale of land in the Western states and use the profits for the development of irrigation projects

As a whole, the progressives viewed the conservation of land as a necessary endeavor, although among them, their reasons varied somewhat (ie. the hunter and the animal-saver).

Progressive Era Foreign Policy Acts



Panama Canal Tolls Act of 1912 specially exepted American coast-to-coast shipping from tolls along the Panama Canal, heartily provoking the British. It was later repealed. (Issued during the Taft Adminsitration)



Jones Act of 1916 granted the Philippines territorial status and promised independence as soon as a stable government could be established (which would be in 1946). (Issued during the Wilson Administration).

New Federal Agencies



The Women's Bureau of 1920 and the Children's Bureau of 1912 were Department of Labor Wedges into the federal bureucracy giving female reformers a nationals tage for social investigation and advocacy.



Federal Trade Commission of 1914 (692)was another movement against the trusts by Wilson. This law empowered a presidentially appointed comission to turn a searchlight on industries engaged in interstate commerce.



Federal Reserve Act of 1913 was the most important piece of economic legislation between the Civil War and the New Deal. A new Federal Reserve Board, appointed by the president would oversee a nationwide system of 12 regional banks and was empowered to issue paper money. This would carry the U.S. through the financial crises of World War I.



Federal Farm Loan Act of 1916 (693) made credit available to farmers at low rates of interest, as complying with the ideas of the populists.

Protecting Workers


The La Folette Seamen's Act of 1915 eased the troubles of seamen when it required decent treatment and a living wage on American merchant ships. This provided necessary compensation for their work. Likewise....



...The Workingmen's Compensation Act of 1916 granted assistance to federal civil-service employees during periods of disability. this was yet another necessary benefit for the common man that was now provided for.

Amendments to the Constitution



16th Amendment, 1913: This amendment gave congress the right to impose and collect income taxes without any restriction or order (ie. by population), which would lead to more debate concerning the fairness or excessiveness of said taxes...



17th Amendment, 1913: This amendment stipulated that senators shall be elected by popular vote. This would prevent officials from being placed in power merely by being in the favor of another official.



18th Amendment, 1919: This amendment of prohibition forbade the sale or manufacture of intoxicating liquors. This would cause pleasure for most women (who sought its enactment) and major outrage for men, to the point that it would later be repealed.



19th Amedndment,1920: This amendment gave women their long-awaited right to vote. While skeptical at first, most would later agree this to be another step towards equality in America.

Anti-Trust


The Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890 forbade combinations in restraint of trade, without any distinction between "good" trusts and "bad" trusts. The problem was identified not be behavior, but by size. The law was generally ineffective, granting no specific authority, being full of loopholes. It did, though, get used to ur labor unions....




The Clayton Anti-Trust Act of 1914 lengthened the Sherman Act's lsit of business practices that were deemed objectionable, including price discrimination and itnelrocking directorates. It also conferred long-overdure benefits on labor, seekening to exempt labor and agricultural organizations from antitrust prosecution, while explicitly legalizing strikes and peaceful picketing.