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AP®︎/College US History
Course: AP®︎/College US History > Unit 7
Lesson 8: 1920s: cultural and political controversies1920s urbanization and immigration
By the 1920s, a majority of the US population lived in cities rather than in rural areas. In this video, Kim explores the economic opportunities cities offered to women, migrants, and immigrants, as well as the passage of new immigration restrictions.
Want to join the conversation?
- Why were some immigrants accepted and others were banned? It seems like they all could have been helpful.(2 votes)
- America has a long history, under which a strong and deep current of racism has always flowed.(7 votes)
- Is kkk still hunting people to this day(2 votes)
- Yes, it is. People of Color in several places live in fear of Klan activities.(5 votes)
- Why were Mexicans aloud,but not Asians when the more poor didn't like most immigrants at all?(2 votes)
- Because Asians that arrived were usually poor and took the jobs that poor people in the US took, while Mexicans were needed for working on farms. Still doesn't justify it though.(3 votes)
- Why was the Indian Citizenship Act passed? I find this interesting because this piece of legislation came about when racist ideals were prevalent and the bulk of legislation reflected them. Any help would be greatly appreciated!(2 votes)
- So formally it was passed to reward Indians for their service in the war, however, Coolidge passed it hoping to get Indians to assimilate to white society. Haha! I had the same question and these are my answers from research.(3 votes)
- It's a little concerning, still knowing that the K.K.K hasn't really vanished. Even now, in 2023, should we still be on guard?(1 vote)
- Yes, but not necessarily where you might expect. We have to be on guard against the racism in our own hearts and minds, The KKK types host and feed that racism and spew it out on the communities around them.(2 votes)
- International Immigrants and internal migrants could black men work the same jobs. Also, could black women work the same jobs as white women?(1 vote)
- While both races could be a teacher or a nurse, etc., segregation caused black women to have little respect, resources, and pay.(2 votes)
- How did American society change and stay the same in the 1920s?(1 vote)
- Why did the Mexicans get a job but not the Asians they could have both easily worked on the farms and did the same things as the Mexicans.(1 vote)
- It's typically easier for Mexicans to immigrate across a border than for Asians to immigrate across an ocean. Plus, the Chinese Exclusion Act and Immigration Act of 1924 severely limited immigration from Asia. I believe that (unlike now) Mexican workers (and Latin American immigrants in general) were viewed more favorably as seasonal immigrants and agricultural laborers.(1 vote)
- Why did the scales finally tip?(1 vote)
- After the war in Europe, American industry led the way in the world. Mechanization of agriculture freed land from growing "food for draft animals" and produced surpluses that drove down food prices in cities. Surplus agricultural laborers took up industrial work in cities and ports. People whose lives had been disrupted by war in Europe sought new life in America. There were lots of contributory factors.(1 vote)
- How can I practice/study for my tests and quizes on world war 1? Can you give me some instructions please?(1 vote)
Video transcript
- [Narrator] During the Gilded Age, the population of the
United States had started to shift sharply towards living in urban rather than rural environments. In 1900, 1/3 of the American
population lived in cities, drawn by the wide
availability of factory jobs. But by 1920, the scales finally tipped, and for the first time the majority of people in the United
States lived in cities. It was the beginning of a new modern era. We've talked in other videos about the economic opportunities
that the cities provided for both international
immigrants and internal migrants, like the half a million African Americans who left the South in the
years surrounding World War I in search of a better life in the North. Although factory jobs were subject to dangerous working
conditions and wages were low, for both immigrants and
Southern African Americans, the pay and the standard of living was usually an improvement on
their previous circumstances. The transition to life in
the modern industrial city also offered new opportunities for women. With the rise of big corporations doing business across
time zones and countries, there was an increasing
need for clerical workers, like secretaries and typists. White women began to take on these roles. And by the end of the 1920s, about 25% of women
worked outside the home. Women also began to fill the
ranks in employment categories that were beginning to be
defined as female professions, like nursing and teaching. And a growing number of women continued to work even after they were married. These kinds of clerical
jobs were generally closed to minority women whose options
for work outside the home were limited to domestic
service or agricultural labor, although some African American women began to train in segregated institutions for service in segregated institutions, for example, going to
black nursing schools in order to work in black hospitals. The mass production techniques
of the 1920s also meant that the price of consumer goods dropped so that average people could afford to buy appliances and even cars. People had enough disposable income to go to the theater
or to an amusement park or to a speakeasy
illegally selling alcohol. After the prim and proper Progressive Era and the trauma of World War I, many people embraced a carefree attitude of self-fulfillment through
leisure and consumption or, in other words, having
fun and buying stuff. But not everyone was thrilled with this new modern era
of diverse city living. During World War I, an
emphasis on 100% Americanism squelched dissenters who
protested against the draft or questioned U.S. involvement in the war. Then, after the Russian Revolution, labor strikes and a series of
bombings in 1919 led to fears that radical communists were
threatening the country. These incidents, combined with the flawed
racial pseudoscience of the day that cast all people
other than those descended from Northern and Western
Europeans as less evolved, led to a growing sense among
native-born, white Protestants that the country was becoming
less and less American. In 1915, the Ku Klux Klan
experienced a resurgence in the United States that
lasted for about 10 years. Unlike the Reconstruction Era KKK, in this time period, the Klan
had large membership numbers in northern and western cities, and they targeted Jews and Catholics, many of whom were recent immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe, in addition to African Americans. These fears led to the passage of new immigration
restrictions in the 1920s. In 1921, Congress passed
the Emergency Quota Act, which limited the number
of immigrants allowed from Europe to 350,000, or about a third of
pre-World War I levels. Then, in 1924, Congress limited
immigration even further with the Immigration Restriction Act. This act set quotas of immigrants who could arrive from each nation. The quotas heavily favored immigrants from Northern and Western Europe and slashed the numbers of Southern and Eastern European immigrants
down to as little as 1% of their pre-World War I yearly numbers. Africans from all countries were limited to just 1,000 immigrants per year, and Asians were completely
barred from entry. The law did not limit the
immigration of Mexicans whom western farmers relied
upon for seasonal labor. Interestingly, in 1924,
Congress also passed a law establishing that all Native Americans were now U.S. citizens, although
they often had difficulty accessing the rights of
citizenship from reservations. What do these quotas and efforts at defining the racial
makeup of the United States tell us about who was considered eligible to be part of the American
people in the 1920s? As we move forward into talking about the Great Depression and World War II, keep thinking about the ways
that citizenship is defined and how that definition changes over time.