Racism and Intolerance in America During the 1920s

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Racism and Intolerance in America During the 1920s

In the 1920s, it was widely believed around the world that the USA was

a land of freedom and prosperity, in which an individual could escape

from the poverty that plagued many parts of the world and build a

better life for themselves and their family. In theory, America was a

melting pot - immigrants would come into the country and lose their

cultural identity to all fall under one label - American. However, the

reality of life in America was quite different. Members of similar

backgrounds tended to live together in certain areas of big cities,

where there would be extreme poverty - an example of this is Harlem in

New York. These would generally be people of eastern European or Asian

descent and from Hispanic countries. Bitterness would be directed

towards these groups from supposedly more "established" immigrants

groups, such as western Europeans, as many believed that America's

"true" identity as a race of white Anglo-Saxons was being diminished.

The war increased these feelings, and the Bolshevik Revolution brought

anxiety about being swamped by immigrants who would bring communist

and anarchist - supposedly "un-American" - ideas into the country.

These people were generalised under the title "Reds".3600 strikes

involving 400,000 workers took place in 1919 which began the Red Scare

that carried on until 1921, in which members of the American public

were led to believe that "Reds" were trying to ruin their way of life.

A Seattle strike in 1919 led by the Industrial Workers of the World

(IWW), nicknamed "the Wobblies" seemed to be evidence of a communist

plot. Coal miners, steel-wo...

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...nd the prosecution was

headed by fundamentalist, William Jennings Bryan. Scopes was found

guilty of breaking the law and fined $100, but the focused on

presenting the argument for the theory of evolutions and was regarded

as a victory for the modernists and a blow to the fundamentalists.

Darrow succeeded in undermining the beliefs of this group by asking

questions such as "Did Eve really come from Adam's rib?" to which

Bryan replied "Yes".

In conclusion, we can say that there was a serious degree of racism

and intolerance in America, but it would be unfair and inaccurate to

say that all American were racist. Such major periods as the Black

Renaissance and events like the Monkey Trial mean that the 1920s can

be viewed as a turning point in American history and in the public's

attitudes to ethnic people in America.

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