Roaring 20s and Great Depression

  • Roaring 20s

    Roaring 20s
    The 1920s were an age of dramatic social and political change.For the first time, more Americans lived in cities than on farms. The nation’s total wealth more than doubled between 1920 and 1929, and this economic growth swept many Americans into an affluent but unfamiliar “consumer society..” People from coast to coast bought the same goods (thanks to nationwide advertising and the spread of chain stores), listened to the same music, did the same dances and even used the same slang!
  • Sacco and Vanzetti Trail Starts

    Sacco and Vanzetti Trail Starts
    A paymaster and a security guardare killed during a mid-afternoon armed robbery of a shoe company in South Braintree, Massachusetts. Out of this rather unremarkable crime grew one of the most famous trials in American history and a landmark case in forensic crime detection.
  • Ratification of the 19th Amendment

    Ratified on August 18, 1920, the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution granted American women the right to vote—a right known as woman suffrage. At the time the U.S. was founded, its female citizens did not share all of the same rights as men, including the right to vote. It was not until 1848 that the movement for women’s rights launched on a national level with a convention in Seneca Falls, New York, organized by abolitionists Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902) and Lucretia Mott (1793-1880).
  • Yankee Stadium Opens

    Yankee Stadium Opens
    Tickets Guest can print out/pick up advance tickets or purchase tickets to future games at self-service advance ticket kiosks located inside Yankee Stadium on the Main Level behind home plate. Self-service kiosks are also located in the Yankee Stadium Ticket Office, adjacent to Gate 4. A valid credit card is required.
  • The Great Gatsby Puplished

    The Great Gatsby Puplished
    If you're looking at that list and thinking, Sweet!, you're in luck. Published in 1925, The Great Gatsby is set in New York City and Long Island during the Prohibition era (remember, the Prohibition era was a time in which alcohol was illegal, no matter how old you were – yowsa). Flappers? It's got them. Parties? You bet? Cool cars? Absolutely—but more on that in a minute.
  • Scopes Monkey Trail Begins

    Scopes Monkey Trail Begins
    In Dayton, Tennessee, the so-called “Monkey Trial” begins with John Thomas Scopes, a young high school science teacher, accused of teaching evolution in violation of a Tennessee state law.
  • Grand Ole Starts On WSM

    Grand Ole Starts On WSM
    Beginning just a few weeks after WSM first hit the airwaves in 1925, the Grand Ole Opry is not only the show that made country music famous, it’s the most famous show in country music.
  • Lindbergh Crosses the Atlantic

    Lindbergh Crosses the Atlantic
    Charles A. Lindbergh landed his plane the Spirit of St. Louis near Paris, Franc, completing the first solo airplane flight across the Atlantic Ocean. Lindbergh was just 25 years old when he completed the trip.
  • The Jazz Singer

    The Jazz Singer
    Warner Bros.' and director Alan Crosland's The Jazz Singer (1927) is an historic milestone film and cinematic landmark. [Most people associate this film with the advent of sound pictures, although Don Juan (1926), a John Barrymore silent film, also had a synchronized musical score performed by the New York Philharmonic and sound effects using Vitaphone's system.] It should be made clear that this film was not the first sound film, nor the first 'talkie' film or the first movie musical.
  • Steamboat Willie Premired

    Steamboat Willie Premired
    Steamboat Willie is a 1928 American animated short film directed by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks. It was produced in black-and-white by Walt Disney Studios and was released by Celebrity Productions. The cartoon is considered the debut of Mickey Mouse[2] and his girlfriend Minnie, although both the characters appeared several months earlier in a test screening of Plane Crazy.
  • Black Tuesday

    Black Tuesday
    The Great Depression (1929-39) was the deepest and longest-lasting economic downturn in the history of the Western industrialized world. In the United States, the Great Depression began soon after the stock market crash of October 1929, which sent Wall Street into a panic and wiped out millions of investors. Over the next several years, consumer spending and investment dropped, causing steep declines in industrial output and rising levels of unemployment as failing companies laid off workers.