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Chapter 10: The Jazz Age
Chapter 10: The Jazz Age Flashcards (All Sections)
59
History
9th Grade
12/19/2011

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Term
The automobile
Definition
American life was revolutionized by their popularity, and they were one part of a rising standard of living that Americans experienced during the 1920s.
Term
Mass Production
Definition
Producing large quantities of goods using machinery and often an assembly line caused industry to experience increased supply and reduced costs. What was this type of production called?
Term
The 8 hour work day, the 5 day work week, and paid vacations
Definition
What were some of the changes resulting from the economies of scale brought on by mass production?
Term
Henry Ford
Definition
The carmaker that first adopted the moving assembly line.
Term
The moving assembly line
Definition
First adopted by carmaker Henry Ford, this divided operations into simple tasks and cut unnecessary motion to a minimum.
Term
The Model T
Definition
What was the product that Henry Ford manufactured using the moving assembly line? It was an automobile built by the Ford Motor Company from 1908 to 1927.
Term
Lower the cost per car and thereby increase the volume of sales
Definition
What was Henry Ford's business philosophy?
Term
General Motors and Chrysler
Definition
By the 1920s what other car manufacturers were competing with Ford?
Term
Doubled workers' pay to $5 per day, and reduced the length of the work day to 8 hours
Definition
How did carmaker Henry Ford increase worker loyalty and undercut union organizers?
Term
Rising disposable income
Definition
What economic factor led to the introduction of many new products during the 1920s?
Term
Disposable income
Definition
What is the term for the amount of income a person keeps after paying their taxes?
Term
Electric razors, facial tissues, frozen foods, home hair color, cleaning products, electrical appliances, mouthwash, deodorant, cosmetics and perfumes
Definition
What were some of the new products that became very popular during the 1920s due to manufacturers eager to benefit from Americans' rising disposable income?
Term
Orville and Wilbur Wright (The Wright Brothers)
Definition
Who made the first manned powered flight in history?
Term
1903
Definition
In what year did the Wright Brothers make their historic first manned powered flight?
Term
The airline industry
Definition
What industry developed rapidly following the Wright Brothers' first manned powered flight in 1903?
Term
Ailerons, surfaces attached to wings that can be tilted to steer the plane.
Definition
For what invention is aviation pioneer and American inventor Glenn Curtiss best known?
Term
Glenn Curtiss, director of experiments at the Aerial Experiement Association, and inventor of the aileron
Definition
Who led the rapid innovation in the airline industry in the early 1900s, including building and selling the first airplanes in the United States, that made possible the airline industry that emerged in the 1920s?
Term
1918
Definition
When was the first airmail service introduced?
Term
A former airmail pilot named Charles Lindbergh
Definition
Who becamse famous by successfully making an unprecedented transatlantic flight in 1927?
Term
Edwin Armstrong
Definition
Who, in 1913, invented a special circuit that made it practical to transmit sound via long-range radio, leading to the growth of the radio industry within just a few years?
Term
The National Broadcasting Company
Definition
What does NBC stand for?
Term
The Columbia Broadcasting System
Definition
What does CBS stand for?
Term
NBC, the National Broadcasting Company, which was formed in 1926.
Definition
What was the first company to set up a network of radio stations and broadcast daily radio programs?
Term
CBS, the Columbia Broadcasting System, which was formed in 1928
Definition
What was the first radio network to rival NBC?
Term
48 airlines serving 355 American cities
Definition
By 1928, how many airlines existed?
Term
The growth of credit, the term for individual borrowing
Definition
For individuals, what was one of the most notable aspects of the economic boom of the 1920s?
Term
Advertising
Definition
What became a booming industry in the 1920s as manufacturers sought ways to attract consumers?
Term
Modern organizational structures, including divisions such as sales, marketing, and accounting, that reported to managers
Definition
What had many industries begun to create by the early 1920s in order to free the executives from the need to run the business day-to-day?
Term
Professional Managers, and Engineers
Definition
The managerial revolution, and companies' increased reliance on technology, created high demand for what two types of workers, whose high wages expanded the middle class?
Term
Welfare capitalism
Definition
What term refers to companies allowing workers to buy company stock, participate in profit sharing, and receive medical care and pensions?
Term
labor unions
Definition
What organizations, designed to help workers collectively bargain with employers for good pay and working conditions, lost both influence and membership during the 1920s as workers benefited from rising wages and the benefits of welfare capitalism?
Term
The "open shop," a workplace where workers were not required to join a labor union.
Definition
What did employers promote as a way to discourage workers from joining labor unions?
Term
African Americans, Native Americans, recent immigrants, people living in the deep South
Definition
What were four key groups of Americans that were left out of the economic boom of the 1920s?
Term
Nativism
Definition
The term for a belief that one's native land needs to be protected against immigrants
Term
Immigrants
Definition
The fear and prejudice that many Americans felt toward Germans and communists during and after World War I expanded to include all of what group of Americans?
Term
The Sacco-Vanzetti case
Definition
What controversial criminal case reflected the prejudices and fears about immigrants and anti-Americanism?
Term
The "new" Ku Klux Klan or "KKK"
Definition
What organization, which used threats and violence to intimidate African-Americans, and now Catholics, Jews, immigrants and other groups it called "un-American" was formed in Georgia in 1915 by William J. Simmons?
Term
Immigration policies
Definition
What U.S. policies were changed in response to postwar recession and nativism?
Term
"Keep America American"
Definition
What was the slogan of nativists?
Term
The Emergency Quota Act in 1921 and the National Origins Act in 1924
Definition
What two key laws restricted immigration?
Term
The National Origins Act of 1924
Definition
What set immigration quotas based on the ehtnic composition of the country more than 30 years earlier, thereby deliberately restricting further immigration of southern and eastern Europeans?
Term
Natives of the Western Hemisphere (essentially, North and South America)
Definition
The National Origins Act of 1924 restricted immigration from Europe, but did not restrict immigration by which groups?
Term
Mexican immigrants, nearly 700,000 of which had migrated to the United States by the end of the 1920s.
Definition
Which immigrant group filled the need for cheap labor that rose after European immigration was restricted by the National Origins Act of 1924?
Term
Motion pictures (Hollywood movies)
Definition
In addition to radio programs, what other form of popular entertainment experienced a golden age that began during the 1920s?
Term
The release of the first "talking" picture - The Jazz Singer -- in 1927
Definition
What event marked the beginning of the Golden Age of Hollywood?
Term
Entertainment programs broadcast over the radio
Definition
In addition to motion pictures, what type of popular entertainment grew a large following during "The Jazz Age" ?
Term
Mass media
Definition
The term for a medium of communication intended to reach a wide audience.
Term
Baseball and boxing
Definition
What were two forms of professional sports that reached new heights of popularity in the 1920s due in larger part to the influence of motion pictures and radio?
Term
Babe Ruth (baseball), Jack Dempsey (boxing), Red Grange (college football), Bobby Jones (golf), Bob Tilden and Helen Wills (tennis), Gertrude Ederle (swimming)
Definition
Who were some of the famous sports personalities of the 1920s?
Term
The Great Migration
Definition
What was the name given to the movement of African Americans from the rural South to the industrial cities of the North during World War I and the 1920s?
Term
The Harlem Renaissance
Definition
What became the name for the flowering of African American arts?
Term
Harlem
Definition
In what neighborhood of New York City did African American artistic development, racial pride and political organization thrive?
Term
Claude McKay, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Countee Cullen, Alain Locke, Dorothy West, Nella Larson
Definition
Who were some of the famous writers from the Harlem Renaissance?
Term
Louis Armstrong
Definition
Who was the New Orleans native who moved to Chicago in 1922 and introduced an improvisational early form of Jazz?
Term
Jazz
Definition
What form of music, characterized by improvisation and imaginative soloing, was first popularized in the 1920s?
Term
Duke Ellington
Definition
Who was the influential composer, pianist and bandleader that created his own sound, a blend of improvisation and orchestration using different combinations of instruments, that was inspired countless jazz musicians?
Term
The Cotton Club
Definition
What was the name of the most famous nightclub in Harlem, which featured nearly all African-American performers including Duke Ellington, but only admitted white customers to enjoy the shows?
Term
Bessie Smith
Definition
Who was the African-American woman singer whose blues music was said to "symbolize soul" ?
Term
Josephine Baker
Definition
Who was considered perhaps the most daring African-American performer of the era, because she left America and adopted France as her new homoe, and often appeared practically nude on stage when she performed?
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