Rural And Urban Tension In The 1920's

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The urban rural tension of the 1920’s had to do with the voting numbers in elections, the wage gap between unskilled factory workers and skilled farm workers, and urban people put science as their source of reason over religion. The difference in values and lifestyle of those who lived in rural areas versus those who lived in the city was becoming more different every year, which caused a lot of tension. There were many different reasons and complications that led the tensions to get to the point at which they did, but the three reasons I listed in my thesis are the main reasons, that I thought of, that had the greatest contributions to these tensions. Voting, when it came down to the numbers, was a major reason why rural and urban tension grew to the point at which it did. Urban areas reached the point where they took up over 50% of America’s people, therefore, it took up most of America’s votes. This angered the rural people because the people who …show more content…

This is because their was agricultural decline during this time and there was an economic boom and demand for factory products, which led unskilled factory workers, who were usually foreigners, to earn more money than agricultural workers. This also made the nativist, rural people, mad because immigrants were earning more than them by doing simple work in a factory for eight hours, while they were out working in the fields, while getting paid small amounts. This led the rural people to become scared for the future because the foundation of their economy was going south. Immigrants, at this time, were often despised by the white anglo-saxon protestant population of this country, which made immigrants victims of statements such as “they’re taking jobs from the American people.” The immigrants getting payed more than the white farmers made the farmers feel

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