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luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) war war buying with credit – open shop Farmers’ Recession - Ch 16 Sec 2: A Growing Economy

Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

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Page 1: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

• luxury goods -

• Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s”

• National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies.

• Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) – war war

• buying with credit –

• open shop

• Farmers’ Recession -

Ch 16 Sec 2: A Growing Economy

Page 2: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

Intro 3

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Chapter ObjectivesSection 2: A Growing Economy

• Analyze how the growing importance of the automobile and other new industries improved the U.S. standard of living.

• Analyze the growing economic crisis in farming in the 1920s.

Page 3: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

• More disposable income made innovations affordable.

• From electric razors to frozen foods and household cleaning supplies to labor-saving appliances, Americans used their new income to make life easier.

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The Rise of New Industries (cont.)

(pages 514–518)(pages 514–518)

Page 4: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

Time Notebook 16

This feature is found on pages 504–505 of your textbook. Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information.

This feature is found on pages 504–505 of your textbook. Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information.

How did we live without… • push-button elevators • neon signs • oven thermostats • electric razors • tissues • spiral-bound notebooks • motels • dry ice • zippers

• pop-up toasters • flavored yogurt • car radios • adhesive tape • food disposals • water skiing • automatic potato peeler

• self-winding wristwatch

Page 5: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

• By 1919 the Post Office had expanded airmail service across the continent with the help of the railroad.

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The Rise of New Industries (cont.)

(pages 514–518)(pages 514–518)

Page 6: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

• In 1927 Charles Lindbergh, a former Mail Pilot, took a transatlantic solo flight, which gained support in the United States for the commercial flight.

• By the end of 1928, 48 airlines were serving 355 American cities.

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The Rise of New Industries (cont.)

(pages 514–518)(pages 514–518)

Page 7: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

Tons of ticker tape and shredded paper dropped on Charles Lindbergh in his parade in New York City

1,800

Number of marriage proposals that Lindberg received

10,000

Job offers received by Lindbergh

7,000

Number of letters received by Lindbergh

3.5 Million

Number of hours Charles Lindbergh spent in his nonstop flight from New York to Paris on May 20, 1927

33.5

Cost of cleaning up after the parade

$16,000

Page 8: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

Born in 1902, Charles Lindbergh grew up in Minnesota. After two years at the University of Wisconsin, he started flying as a stunt pilot. Lindbergh completed flight training to become an Army Air Service Reserve pilot. Later he flew mail between Chicago and St. Louis. An offer of $25,000 to become the first pilot to fly nonstop from New York to Paris inspired Lindbergh’s famous flight.

Page 9: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

Section 2-9

• In 1926 the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) established a permanent network of radio stations to distribute daily programming.

• In 1928 the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) set up coast-to-coast stations to compete with NBC.

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The Rise of New Industries (cont.)

(pages 514–518)(pages 514–518)

Page 10: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

Daily Focus Skills Transparency 2

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Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answer.

Page 11: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

The Consumer Society

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• Higher wages and shorter workdays led to an economic boom as Americans traded thrift for their new role as consumers.

• American attitudes about debt shifted, as they became confident that they could pay back what they owed at a later time allowing them to buy with credit.

(pages 518–519)(pages 518–519)

Page 12: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

The Consumer Society

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• Advertising was used to convince Americans that they needed new products.

• Ads linked products with qualities that were popular to the modern era, such as convenience, leisure, success, fashion, and style.

(pages 518–519)(pages 518–519)

Page 13: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

This feature is found on pages 504–505 of your textbook. This feature is found on pages 504–505 of your textbook.

Page 14: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

MAKING A COMEBACK. SANTA CLAUS, after falling into low favor in the last decade. Aiming at children, advertisers are marketing St. Nick heavily.

This feature is found on pages 504–505 of your textbook. This feature is found on pages 504–505 of your textbook.

Page 15: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

• By the early 1920s, many businesses hired professional managers and engineers.

• The large number of managers expanded the size of the middle class.

• In the 1920s, unions lost influence and membership.

• Employers promoted an open shop, a workplace where employees were not required to join a union.

The Consumer Society (cont.)

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(pages 518–519)(pages 518–519)

Page 16: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

• Welfare capitalism, where employees were able to purchase stock, participate in profit sharing, and receive benefits, made unions seem unnecessary.

The Consumer Society (cont.)

(pages 518–519)(pages 518–519)

Page 17: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

The Farm Crisis Returns

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• American farmers did not share in the prosperity of the 1920s.

• Instead, prices dropped dramatically while the cost to improve farmers’ technology increased.

(pages 519–520)(pages 519–520)

Page 18: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

The Farm Crisis Returns

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• During wartime, the government had encouraged farmers to produce more for food supplies needed in Europe.

• Farmers borrowed money at inflated prices to buy new land and new machinery to raise more crops.

(pages 519–520)(pages 519–520)

Page 19: Getting to California luxury goods - Charles Lindberg – Wilson’s” National Broadcasting Company (NBC) – included Allies. Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

Section 2-18

• Farmers prospered during the war.

• After the war, Europeans had little money to buy American farm products.

• After Congress raised tariffs, farmers could no longer sell products overseas, and prices fell.

• President Coolidge twice vetoed a bill to aid the farmers, fearing it would only make the situation worse.

• American farmers remained in a recession throughout the 1920s.

The Farm Crisis Returns (cont.)

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(pages 519–520)(pages 519–520)