America in the Roaring Twenties, 1919–1929
Roaring Twenties history — the Jazz Age, Harlem Renaissance, Prohibition, the 1929 stock market crash, and the complete narrative history of America in the 1920s, 1919-1929.
On the night of November 11, 1918, strangers embraced on Broadway and factory whistles blew across New York's boroughs as the Armistice ended the First World War. America had emerged as the world's dominant economic power — and then chose, emphatically, to turn inward. The decade that followed would be at once brilliant and ugly, creative and fearful, free and violently repressive. It was called, later and with some nostalgia, the Roaring Twenties. The roar was real. So was the silence underneath it.
This is the complete story of the Jazz Age — from the Red Summer of 1919, when race riots erupted in 26 cities and the Tulsa Race Massacre destroyed Black Wall Street, to Black Tuesday on October 29, 1929, when the Dow Jones fell and broker loan debt of $8.5 billion began its cascade collapse. Historian Arthur Whitfield Cavendish traces six parts across 24 chapters, following Warren Harding's Teapot Dome corruption, Al Capone's bootleg empire, Alain Locke's Harlem Renaissance, Charles Lindbergh's transatlantic flight, and Herbert Hoover's failed bid to halt the speculation that had pushed the Dow from 63.9 in 1921 to 381.17 in September 1929 — a 497% gain built on 10% margin accounts.
The Jazz Age created the mass media, the consumer economy, and a racial reckoning that took another generation to reach. Its prosperity was real; its foundations were not. Understanding both is essential to understanding the America that followed.
For readers of Erik Larson's THE DEVIL IN THE WHITE CITY and Isabel Wilkerson's THE WARMTH OF OTHER SUNS.
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