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USA 1919 - 1941

The American Dream

The Roaring Twenties

The Boom

Ku Klux Klan

Prohibition

Isolationism 1

Isolationism 2 - more depth

Henry Ford

The Wall Street Crash

Causes of the depression

The New Deal

 

Racism in America: The Ku Klux Klan

The immigration policy at the time discriminated against people because of their colour/nationality. There was a fear among American W.A.S.P.s that Catholics and Jews would swamp them, if immigration was not checked. In certain parts of the USA they feared the Negroes. The Ku Klux Klan began in the South after the civil War. Poor whites resented the freeing of Negro slaves and were determined to keep them in their place, i.e. inferior. Negroes who were considered "uppity" were tarred and feathered or even lynched. There was strict segregation (separation of the races) .On buses and in cinemas Negroes had to sit in their own areas, which were not as comfortable. They were not even allowed to sit in the same restaurant or go to the same schools as whites. (Have you seen or read "To kill a mockingbird"?) By 1925 there were 5 million members of the Ku Klux Klan and it was spreading to the north-eastern cities, e.g. Chicago, Cleveland, New York etc. This was because Negroes were moving there to find jobs and a better standard of living than in the South. They found them, but still encountered widespread discrimination, though obviously not as bad as 'it had been in the South.

Things to ask yourself

What is the Ku Klux Klan?
Which groups did they oppose in America in the 1920's and why?

In this unit:

 

Recommended Books related to the History of the United States

   

 

SchoolsHistory.org.uk highly recommends these sites:

Schoolhistory.co.uk - fantastic range of interactive games, revision materials and links.
ActiveHistory.co.uk - outstanding use of ICT to engage pupils.
Thinkinghistory.co.uk - a brilliant range of learning activities from Ian Dawson
JohnDClare.net - simply the best for Modern World GCSE students
Historyboxes.com - make your lessons 'real' with artefacts and living history provided by experts
Schoolshistory.com - same author as this site, just put together in a slightly different way!