1920's Customs

  • Gas Stations

    Gas Stations
    Gas stations began being built, giving plenty of people jobs not only at the gas stations but in the oil fields as well.
  • The National American Federation of Teachers

    The National American Federation of Teachers
    Founded so that large corporations could pay taxes for schools and advocacy for teachers.
  • Baby Boom!

    Baby Boom!
    Because of the return of the World War I troops, many people decided to have children which led to higher elementary enrollments in the 1920's.
  • Red Scare

    Red Scare
    Following WWI, many feared the intervention of communism in the education system. The schools would have their administration sign oaths to ensure they would not resort to communism.
  • California State Federation of Teachers

    Small teacher unions created the CSFT to enhance American values through the public education system. They were anti-immigration.
  • 1919 World Series Scandal

    1919 World Series Scandal
    The Black Sox Scandal of 1919 occurred when accusations of a “fix” was on during the first inning of the game. Eight members of the White Sox team, Eddie Cicotte, Claude Williams, Joe Jackson, Happy Felsch, Chick Gandil, Swede Risberg, Buck Weaver, and Fred McMullin, were accused of being in on the fix.
  • 1919 World Series Game

    1919 World Series Game
    The game in question was the Fall Classic against the Cincinnati Reds. The White Sox members were tipped off before the game and suspensions were in the air until 1920 when the confessions came out from the members that the game was fixed.
  • How the Name Came to Be

    How the Name Came to Be
    All of the players involved were banned from the sport and given the nickname of “Black Sox”. To this day, they are banned from the Baseball Hall of Fame.
  • 1919 World Series Aftermath Quote

    1919 World Series Aftermath Quote
    "Regardless of the verdict of juries, no player that throws a ball game, no player that entertains proposals or promises to throw a game, no player that sits in a conference with a bunch of crooked players and gamblers where the ways and means of throwing games are discussed, and does not promptly tell his club about it, will ever play professional baseball." - Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis
  • Progressive Movement

    Progressive Movement
    Education started to focus on the development of the children.
  • Manufacturing

    Manufacturing
    Manufacturing became popular due to the rising automotive industry.
  • Motels

    Motels
    Motels were originally made for campers to pitch their tents and stay for the night.
  • Men's Careers

    Men's Careers
    Men typically worked as farmers, doctors or lawyers.
  • Women's Careers

    Women's Careers
    Women typically worked a teachers, nurses, and librarians. Some worked in the textile-mills and on the farms.
  • Ford Hires Women

    Ford Hires Women
    The mass-manufacturing company, Ford, began hiring cheap, unskilled workers (women), to save money by paying them at extremely low wages.
  • Women Take Over

    Women Take Over
    Women began taking over occupations that were traditionally men's such as factory workers.
  • Child Labor

    Child Labor
    The majority of youth helped in their family farms or worked as messengers, apprentices or in factories.
  • Women in College

    Women in College
    The number of women attending college increased by 47%. There was almost an equal number of females and males attending college at this time.
  • Technology and Transportation in the 1920s

    Technology and Transportation in the 1920s
    In the 1920s, railroads developed new programs for tourists.
  • Pullman Cars (1920s)

    Pullman Cars (1920s)
    Comfortable Pullman cars for spending the night in and better food service in dining cars were put into use to help make traveling more bearable.
  • Streetcars (1920s)

    Streetcars (1920s)
    Streetcars for a ride to the destined hotel or resort became more widely used as at that time, few towns and cities had streetcar systems.
  • Highways (1920s)

    Highways (1920s)
    In North Carolina during the 1920s, the creation of all-weather highways brought together regions and helped those who lived in towns and cities travel.
  • Palmer Raids

    Palmer Raids
    Movement to deport or arrest radical leftists. They were seen as a threat to society.
  • College of Education

    College of Education
    The School of Education becomes the College of Education.
  • Art Deco Style

    Art Deco Style
    The influence of Art Decoratifs and the emerging Modernist movement
  • Chemise Dress

    Chemise Dress
    The chemise or shift dress, was to become the dominant line for day and evening wear.
  • Women's Hosiery

    Women's Hosiery
    Exposure of women’s legs made interest in women’s hosiery, and stocking sales went through the roof.
  • Colder Fashion

    Colder Fashion
    During the colder days, women would wear a wrap-over coat or jacket/cardigan with a blouse and a pleated skirt and of course the cloche hat.
  • Summer Fashion

    Summer Fashion
    Summer afternoons the common choice was a basic shift dress (now often sleeveless) with a decolletage often as low as an evening dress.
  • Women Shoes

    Women Shoes
    T-straps, Ankle Straps, and Pumps.
  • Undergarments

    Undergarments
    Long-line elasticated smooth corsets replaced the old laced affairs
  • Lips

    Lips
    Helena Rubinstein and Elizabeth Arden becoming household names and brands like Maybelline, Tangee and Coty being used by ladies.
  • Evening Makeup

    Evening Makeup
    The cupids bow lips, heavily rouged cheeks and kohl shadowed eyes
  • Beauty Guides

     Beauty Guides
    Featured regularly in magazines and the 1920s beauty guides were new ‘American-style-beauty as evoked by Hollywood was the ‘image idéale’ to be achieved
  • 19th Amendment

    19th Amendment
    After a long struggle to be able to pass this amendment, it is finally ratified! Women are now allowed to vote and no U.S. citizen shall be denied the right to do so.
  • Women's Fashion

    Women's Fashion
    Far more to women’s fashion in the 1920’s than the iconic Flapper look of bobbed hair, long necklaces, cloche hats, flapper slang and dancing to the ‘Charleston’ ! The amazing and creative styles in dress, hair, swimwear, shoes were huge!
  • 1921 Model T Fords

    1921 Model T Fords
    1921, Model T Fords were the most popular, due to their their reasonable price and reliability.
  • 1st Introduced to Congress

    1st Introduced to Congress
    First proposed by the National Woman's political party in 1923, the Equal Rights Amendment was to provide for the legal equality of the sexes and prohibit discrimination on the basis of sex.
  • Master's Degree

    Master's Degree
    The College offers master's degree programs in General and Agricultural Education.
  • 1st Female Governor of U.S.

    1st Female Governor of U.S.
    In Wyoming, Nellie Tayloe Ross becomes the first woman elected as a governor in the United States.
  • The First Women’s World’s Fair

    The First Women’s World’s Fair
    The World Exposition of Women’s Progress opens in Chicago
  • SAT

    SAT
    The Scholastic Aptitude Test is first administered. It is based on the Army Alpha test.
  • Ford Dress

    Ford Dress
    The ‘Ford Dress’ by Vogues editor (a suggestion that it would become as popular as the Ford car) Its flattering silhouette suited just about any shape of a woman
  • Movie With Sound!

    Movie With Sound!
    The Jazz Singer, the first movie with sound, is released!!!
  • Women and Colorful Rings

    Women and Colorful Rings
    Women compete for the first time in Olympic field events.
  • Child Development

    Child Development
    The College of Education offers courses in Child Development
  • The Child's Conception of the World

    The Child's Conception of the World
    Jean Piaget's The Child's Conception of the World is published. His theory of cognitive development becomes an important influence in American developmental psychology and education.
  • "The Jazz Age"

    "The Jazz Age"
    The number of musicians started to rise to provide a way for an escape during the great depression.
  • And It Crashed

    And It Crashed
    The stock market crashes, marking the beginning of the Great Depression.
  • Alvarez vs. the Board of Trustees of the Lemon Grove

     Alvarez vs. the Board of Trustees of the Lemon Grove
    Alvarez vs. the Board of Trustees of the Lemon Grove (California) School District becomes the first successful school desegregation court case in the United States, as the local court forbids the school district from placing Mexican-American children in a separate "Americanization" school.