the harding presidency

38
THE HARDING PRESIDENCY Mr. Bermudez

Upload: caesar

Post on 05-Jan-2016

39 views

Category:

Documents


5 download

DESCRIPTION

The Harding Presidency. Mr. Bermudez. Daily Question. When you get back from a vacation, how do you feel? Are you glad to get back to your normal routines?. Main Idea. Harding appealed to America’s desire for peace after the war, but resulted in scandal. Why It Matters Today?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Harding Presidency

THE HARDING PRESIDENCY

Mr. Bermudez

Page 2: The Harding Presidency

Daily Question

When you get back from a vacation, how do you feel? Are you glad to get back to your normal routines?

Page 3: The Harding Presidency

Main Idea

Harding appealed to America’s desire for peace after the war, but resulted in scandal

Page 4: The Harding Presidency

Why It Matters Today?

Government must protect against scandal and corruption to merit public trust.

Page 5: The Harding Presidency
Page 6: The Harding Presidency

Warren G. Harding

1921 “return to normalcy”

Appeared presidential

Poor judgment

Page 7: The Harding Presidency

Harding Struggles for Peace

Post WWI problems: Arms control War debts Reconstruction of war-torn Europe

Page 8: The Harding Presidency

Washington Naval ConferenceSec. of State Charles E. Hughes5 major naval powers: U.S., Great Britain, Japan, France, Italy

No new warships for 10 years1st time countries agree to disarm

Page 9: The Harding Presidency
Page 10: The Harding Presidency

Kellogg-Briand Pact

15 nations signRenounces war as a national policy

Treaty had no means of enforcement

Page 11: The Harding Presidency

War reparations

Allies to pay back $10 billion in loans

2 ways: Selling goods to the U.S. Collect reparations from Germany

Page 12: The Harding Presidency

Fordney-McCumber Tariff

60% tax increase on importsProtects U.S. business from foreign competition

Impossible for Britain and France to sell goods and make good on loan payments

Page 13: The Harding Presidency

Germany

Suffering from terrible inflation

Defaults on payments and French march in

Page 14: The Harding Presidency

The Dawes Plan

War is imminentBanker Charles Dawes has solutionU.S. investors loan Germany $2.5 billion

Germany pays G.B. and FranceG.B. and France pay the U.S.The U.S. repays itself

Page 15: The Harding Presidency
Page 16: The Harding Presidency

Scandal Hits Harding’s Administration

Favors limiting government in business affairs and social reform

Ohio gang are poker-playing cronies who take advantage of their public offices to increase their personal wealth

Page 17: The Harding Presidency

Harding’s Personal Conduct

A gambler… A hypocrite... “I cannot hope to be one of the great presidents, but perhaps I may be remembered as one of the best loved” … WGH

Page 18: The Harding Presidency

The Teapot Dome Scandal

Oil-rich public lands reserved for the U.S. NavyTeapot Dome WyomingElk Hills, California

Sec of the Interior, Albert B. Fall

Transfers reserves from navy to his department

Page 19: The Harding Presidency

The Teapot Dome Scandal

Fall leases land to two private oil companies

Receives $400,000 1st cabinet member convicted of a felony while holding office

Page 20: The Harding Presidency
Page 21: The Harding Presidency
Page 22: The Harding Presidency

Harding’s Death

Died of a heart attack in San Francisco, CA in 1923

Mrs. Harding refused an autopsy...

Rumors circulate...

Page 23: The Harding Presidency

Calvin Coolidge

Took office on August 3, 1923

Continued Harding’s laissez-faire

Business boomed, wages rose, former luxuries became necessities and people had more leisure time

Page 24: The Harding Presidency

Consumer Economy

1920’s consumer economy – depends on ppl spending money

Stock prices go up The symbol was

the Ford automobile – the Model “T” – “Tin Lizzie”

Page 25: The Harding Presidency

The Impact of the Automobile

Visible Changes Paved roads Houses have

driveways and a carport/garage

Gas stations, repair shops, public garages, motels, shopping centers

First automatic traffic signals

Holland Tunnel opened in 1927

Page 26: The Harding Presidency

The Impact of the Automobile

Rural families can go “into town” easily

Families can go on vacations in faraway places

Women/young ppl become more independent

urban sprawl

Page 27: The Harding Presidency

The Impact of the Automobile

Auto industry symbolized success of free enterprise system- Capitalism

80% of cars owned in the world were in the U.S

Page 28: The Harding Presidency

The Young Airplane Industry

Gov. used to deliver mail Henry Ford’s tri – motor plane could carry 10 passengers

The single – engine Vega could carry 6 passengers

Page 29: The Harding Presidency

America’s Standard of Living Soars 1920’s were very “pro- business”

Pres. Hoover wants taxes low + business profits high

1920 – 1929 very prosperous years for America

Americans owned 40% of the world’s wealth

Annual income: 522 to 705 that’s 35%

Page 30: The Harding Presidency

Electrical Convenience

Gas powers economic boom

Electricity transforms nation

Power spreads to suburbs

Electric appliances made the lives of housewives easier and freed them for other community and leisure activities

Page 31: The Harding Presidency

The Dawn of Modern Advertising Advertisers stopped limiting

themselves to just providing facts about the product.

Advertisers hired psychologists to study how to appeal to buyers

Page 32: The Harding Presidency

“Light a Lucky and you’ll

never miss sweets that make you fat”

Constance Talmadge,

Charming Motion Picture Star

Page 33: The Harding Presidency

Advertisements meant to make people think they NEEDED the product

Items people formerly considered luxuries, now seemed necessities

Page 34: The Harding Presidency

A Superficial Prosperity

1920s people felt that prosperity would last forever.

As productivity increased, businesses expanded in size and attitude

Some companies merged, creating larger businesses

Page 35: The Harding Presidency

Chain stores that sold groceries, drugs, shoes and clothes sprouted everywhere

Five and dime stores, like Woolworths spread rapidly

Page 36: The Harding Presidency

Not all businesses were successful.

Iron and railroad industries

Mining and farming concerns suffered losses

Page 37: The Harding Presidency

Buying Goods on Credit

Another solution to luring customers – easy credit (the Installment Plan).

Economists worried that installment buying may be a sign of careless and superficial prosperity

Page 38: The Harding Presidency

Most Americans focused their attention on the present with little concern for the future