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The Century: America's Time - 1920-1929: Boom To Bust

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    (dramatic music)
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    - [Man] The Japanese have
    attacked Pearl Harbor--
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    - [Crowd] Sieg Heil!
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    Sieg Heil!
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    - [Kennedy] Ask not what
    your country can do for you--
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    - [Reporter] President
    Kennedy has been shot.
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    - [Armstrong] One small step for man--
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    - We hold these truths to be self-evident,
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    that all men are created equal.
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    - [Reagan] Mr. Gorbachev,
    tear down this wall.
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    (dramatic music)
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    - [Peter] New York City's
    Great White Way, Broadway.
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    (upbeat music)
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    Throughout the 1920s, the
    nightlife here glittered.
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    Bands played and liquor flowed,
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    and everyone who was drinking
    it was breaking the law.
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    In the first month of the new decade,
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    the 18th Amendment became
    the law of the land,
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    and the sale and consumption
    of alcohol was now illegal.
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    (upbeat music)
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    - There was Prohibition, but oddly enough,
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    nobody paid any attention to it.
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    - We went to people's homes.
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    They served dreadful things
    called orange blossoms,
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    which was gin and orange juice.
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    Revolting.
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    And bad gin at that.
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    - [Peter] Liquor was now
    sold behind closed doors
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    in places called speakeasies.
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    Proprietors took the risks
    and reaped the profits.
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    - There's good money in them.
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    I was 15 years old.
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    I was riding around
    with a Nash convertible.
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    We had four speakeasies,
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    one by the Daily News,
    one by the Daily Mirror.
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    You had people, you let them in, okay.
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    A guy would explain who he was
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    and he'd show you ID or
    something and you let him in.
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    You got to know, it was
    like family after a while.
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    - Every corner had a saloon on it.
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    Of course, you know, they
    were never raided by,
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    the cops were a big part
    of the business too.
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    People wanted to drink.
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    It was a great game.
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    - [Peter] It became a dangerous game
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    for the high stakes players.
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    Battles between rival gangs
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    for control of illegal liquor territories
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    riddled American cities with
    mushrooming murder rates.
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    Prohibition's aim was to sweep
    liquor off the city streets.
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    Now, they were flooded
    with gangsters and guns.
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    - I used to carry two Persuaders myself.
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    You had to have him (chuckles) or else.
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    - Prohibition and the general disregard
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    which followed it was the
    perfect symbol for the '20s,
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    a decade which was
    about crossing the line,
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    smashing tradition, breaking boundaries.
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    As modern America came
    of age in the 1920s,
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    boundaries of all sorts,
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    technological, geographical,
    and social, were shattered.
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    The roar in the roaring '20s
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    was the birth scream of the modern.
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    America was now about to leave behind
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    the formative experience of its rural past
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    and embrace the promise
    of an urban future.
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    But progress would have its price,
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    a sudden wrenching departure
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    from the certainties of the
    traditional and the familiar
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    spread by an emerging mass
    media, movies and the radio.
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    Things that seem old and familiar mow
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    were just beginning to
    take shape in the 1920s.
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    (soft music)
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    At the dawn of the 1920s,
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    America was clearly entering a new era,
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    an era defined by a vast and
    complicated urban culture
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    that would dominate the
    rest of the 20th century.
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    After World War I,
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    there was an eagerness to embrace the new.
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    And it was in America's cities,
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    most dramatically in
    its biggest, New York,
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    where the modern age was born.
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    The very architecture of the city
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    spoke of America's new
    ascendancy and her aspirations.
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    - The skyscraper was an
    example of the new form
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    achieving a kind of
    thrilling scale and nobility.
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    More people worked there
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    than lived in the average
    small town in America.
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    - [Peter] A movement to the cities
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    that had started during
    World War I accelerated.
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    In 1920, for the first time,
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    more Americans lived in urban centers
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    than in country towns and villages.
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    - The pace was being set in the cities.
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    The city is irresistibly attractive.
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    It's really at a kind of
    high tide in this decade.
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    It's a force, a magnet.
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    - [Peter] The very names
    of New York streets
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    would become synonymous with
    progress and innovation.
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    Broadway would represent
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    the best and latest in
    American entertainment.
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    Madison Avenue would come to stand
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    for the bustling new
    business of advertising,
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    which was uniting the nation
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    in a set of shared fantasies and desires.
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    And Wall Street came to represent
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    the decade's expanding
    economic opportunities.
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    (frantic music)
    (men shouting)
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    Wall Street was where the action was.
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    People came from
    everywhere to get in on it.
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    - The reason I come to New
    York was there was nobody there
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    after they closed the mines
    in 1926 in Pennsylvania.
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    There was no money coming there.
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    This fella, Jerry, got me the first job.
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    And he said, "C'mon down to Wall Street.
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    "The streets are paved with gold."
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    - [Peter] It seemed that way too
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    on Park and Fifth Avenues,
    where the tycoons lived.
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    The number of millionaires in the 1920s
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    jumped 400% over the previous decade.
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    The '20s feeling of limitless horizons
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    was fueled by their lavish lifestyle.
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    - Our family had a house
    at 934 Fifth Avenue
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    when I was growing up.
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    We had a place in Tuxedo
    Park and a house in New York,
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    and then we used to come to
    South Hampton in the summer.
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    Everybody seemed to be having a good time.
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    - In those days, you got lots of help.
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    You had a cook, you had a kitchen maid,
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    and you had a laundress.
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    And then you had a parlor maid,
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    a chambermaid,
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    and mother's maid.
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    How many does that make?
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    Six, or I think there
    were eight, actually.
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    Terribly nice people.
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    - Almost everybody had a boat.
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    I recall in the '20s,
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    you would see a harbor filled with yachts.
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    I mean, really filled,
    almost gunnel to gunnel.
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    And we didn't refer to yachts as such
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    unless they were 100 feet or over.
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    There was a great deal of entertaining,
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    and it was all done in people's houses.
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    You see the dinner parties
    with 50, 60 people.
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    Always, after dinner,
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    there would be entertainment by guests.
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    George Gershwin was there with
    his orchestrator, Bill Daly.
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    They got up and played on two pianos.
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    Mother always had two grand pianos
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    in the big room downstairs.
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    (upbeat jazz music)
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    - [Peter] Gershwin, who
    wrote Rhapsody in Blue
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    and other anthems of the decades,
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    was profoundly influenced by the new music
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    he had heard called jazz.
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    The capital of jazz in the 1920s
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    was just a subway ride uptown, in Harlem.
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    It was in Harlem clubs that
    one could see the artists
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    at the forefront of this fresh
    and uniquely American music,
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    performers such as Louis Armstrong,
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    Bessie Smith,
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    and a dapper young man named
    Edward Kennedy Ellington.
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    His friends simply called him Duke.
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    - Duke was the essence of What
    black music was all about.
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    Everybody else was
    heading in that direction,
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    but Duke was there.
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    - The first time that I
    was seized by the music
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    was the first time I heard Duke Ellington
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    broadcast from the Cotton Club,
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    where Broadway, Hollywood,
    and Paris rubbed elbows.
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    People came from all
    over the United States
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    to experience what was going
    on in Harlem in the '20s.
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    - I was young then and out,
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    and we went up to Harlem at
    night to dance and everything.
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    We all saved up for months
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    to get the money to go out to a nightclub.
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    And of course, the music was wonderful.
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    - [Peter] Harlem was
    contributing more than music
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    to America's new urban culture.
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    The world above New York's 125th Street
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    was, in the 1920s, a hotbed
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    of political, social,
    and cultural activity.
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    It was later called
    the Harlem Renaissance.
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    - The Harlem Renaissance
    was one of those fancy terms
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    that white folks invent
    when they wanna take
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    a particular look at some
    aspect of black folks.
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    I don't think black
    folks run around saying
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    that we're gonna have us a renaissance
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    or something like that, but it
    was a holiday of the spirit.
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    - In Harlem was born this
    idea of the new Negro,
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    someone who stood up for the Negro,
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    who advertised his and her contributions
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    to American culture, who
    was proud to be black.
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    - Harlem was the end of the
    line, the promised land,
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    the place where all our
    fantasies came true.
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    If I had to choose between
    heavens and Harlem (chuckles),
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    Harlem, of course, would win every time.
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    (soft music)
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    - [Peter] While Harlem
    seemed a promised land
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    for black Americans, New
    York's Lower East Side
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    was, for European immigrants,
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    their gateway to the American dream.
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    - We were blessed because
    we were in America.
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    My father came from the Ukraine.
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    He went to work in New York
    city and worked in a factory
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    where they blocked hats, men's hats.
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    And he was making, you know,
    like nine or $10 a week,
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    working a six-day week.
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    And he would tell me
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    how he was able to buy lunch
    every day for 12 cents.
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    And the lunch consisted of
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    a herring, a big Schmaltz
    herring out of the barrel,
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    and my mouth waters now to think of it,
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    and a big roll with poppy
    seeds, and an onion.
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    And life was beautiful.
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    - This was perhaps the most mixed city,
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    racially, ethnically, in the country.
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    But cities all around the
    country had become more important
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    because change was centered in the cities,
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    business, industry, culture.
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    - Nothing was like rain in New York.
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    It's the magic of everything,
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    the world full of things to be explored.
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    That time was one of the
    feeling of adventure,
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    and your life is having a shape to it,
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    sort of a thread, like
    a narrative, or a story,
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    a feeling that anything may unfold.
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    - [Peter] The decade's startling changes
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    would soon spread from America's cities
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    to envelop the entire nation.
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    (soft music)
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    Far from the speakeasies
    and the dance halls
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    and the nightclubs, there was
    another America in the 1920s.
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    Here, people still lived
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    as their parents and grandparents had,
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    and they liked it that way.
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    - In the early 1920s, this
    was a quiet, easy life.
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    Neighbors would come over,
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    what we call the front porch visits.
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    And that's where there
    would be discussion,
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    maybe a little gossip.
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    - [Peter] Throughout the 1920s,
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    new technologies would
    transform daily life.
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    At the beginning of the decade,
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    most Americans lived without electricity.
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    When night fell,
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    only candles and lamps
    held off the darkness.
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    (pensive music)
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    America was electrified in the '20s.
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    Electric lights extended the day,
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    opened up new possibilities
    for work and play.
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    That surge of new power
    came first to the cities.
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    And by the decade's end,
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    the majority of American
    homes had electricity.
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    - You can't understand this century
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    without understanding the effect,
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    the impact of science and technology.
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    - My father's generation
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    is the one that really
    saw amazing changes,
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    but he was born in 1900
    in a world where the horse
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    was still the main means of getting about.
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    The car seemed to me more
    revolutionary in a way
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    than anything that's happened since.
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    It totally changed the kind
    of space we live in, really.
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    - [Peter] The car would give Americans
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    a sense of autonomy and freedom,
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    the freedom to escape their city or town,
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    to go away on a vacation,
    or simply on a day's outing.
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    By mid-decade, the government was spending
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    more than $1 billion
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    on the construction of
    highways, bridges, and tunnels,
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    the beginnings of a
    national infrastructure
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    which knit the country together.
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    - My father took my
    mother and me in the car
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    for the first ride through
    the Holland Tunnel.
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    This was opening night.
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    All the cars were lined up
    to go through the tunnel.
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    I was petrified.
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    I cringed.
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    Suppose the water leaks in.
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    How did they build the
    tunnel under the water?
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    Where's the water?
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    And I imagined, as we were
    riding through the tunnel,
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    that I heard the waves overhead.
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    Out on the so-called
    highways of those days,
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    outside of New York,
    we saw the billboards.
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    - [Peter] Roadways were soon dotted
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    with a new phenomenon,
    roadside advertising.
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    - They were big and colorful
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    and beautiful, I thought.
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    - [Peter] Advertising helped transform
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    not just the physical
    landscape, but the cultural one.
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    Along with advertising came the expansion
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    of a brand new consumer concept, credit.
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    The inhibition against
    debt came tumbling down
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    as everything from cars to
    clothes could be bought on time.
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    Buy now, pay later became
    the order of the day.
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    By 1927, 75% of all household
    goods were bought on credit.
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    And in the last years of the decade,
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    the item desired most was the radio.
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    - [Radio Announcer] In just a moment.
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    But first, we'd love to
    ask you to let us know
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    if this broadcast is reaching you.
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    - [Peter] From its
    scratchy beginnings in 1920
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    as a mere hobby, radio would
    become a nationwide phenomenon
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    as important as the car.
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    Young radio enthusiast,
    Albert Sindlinger was there
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    at the birth of modern radio.
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    In 1920, the night station, KDKA,
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    broadcasting from a factory
    rooftop in Pittsburgh,
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    transmitted the results of
    the presidential election.
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    - [Radio Announcer] The Republican ticket
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    of Harding and Coolidge
    is running well ahead--
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    - One of the gentlemen was
    reading the election returns.
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    He got sick.
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    So for about 45, 35 or 45
    minutes, I read election returns.
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    Nobody had any comprehension
    of the significance
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    of what was going on.
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    But don't forget,
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    there were only a couple
    of hundred listeners.
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    Within six months, every store in America,
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    even grocery stores
    were selling radio sets.
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    - Suddenly, all Americans were
    listening to the same things
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    and laughing at the same jokes.
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    There was a kind of
    communal exercise here,
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    and very much a
    strengthening of your notion
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    of what it was to be an American.
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    - Along with and sometimes propelled
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    by the great technological
    leap in the 1920s,
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    social patterns in place for
    decades also began to shift.
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    Nowhere was this more obvious
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    than with the changes
    for the American women.
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    An expanding job market
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    had given more and more women careers
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    and the disposable income
    to do with what they wished.
  • 20:10 - 20:12
    Throughout the 1920s, women would assert
  • 20:12 - 20:15
    a newfound freedom and independence,
  • 20:15 - 20:19
    and nothing symbolized it
    more than the 19th Amendment.
  • 20:19 - 20:23
    In 1920, after 81 years of agitation,
  • 20:23 - 20:26
    women won the right to vote.
  • 20:26 - 20:29
    (upbeat music)
  • 20:32 - 20:37
    - A woman's lot had changed
    in almost every way.
  • 20:37 - 20:41
    She thought that she had the
    right to live for herself
  • 20:41 - 20:44
    rather than for her family, for others,
  • 20:44 - 20:47
    as women were always supposed to.
  • 20:47 - 20:48
    She went to bars.
  • 20:48 - 20:50
    She went to after-hours clubs.
  • 20:50 - 20:53
    She went to wild parties.
  • 20:53 - 20:55
    She had much shorter hair.
  • 20:55 - 20:58
    She wore much more makeup.
  • 21:00 - 21:02
    You go from having young women
  • 21:02 - 21:04
    whose dresses reached to their ankles
  • 21:04 - 21:06
    to flesh flashed everywhere.
  • 21:10 - 21:12
    And a lot of '20s culture
  • 21:12 - 21:15
    is about the fun of smashing prohibitions.
  • 21:20 - 21:21
    - [Peter] The more daring women of the day
  • 21:21 - 21:23
    were known as flappers and vamps.
  • 21:25 - 21:26
    - Sure I remember flappers.
  • 21:26 - 21:28
    They were all over the place.
  • 21:28 - 21:32
    They were older than me,
    but you know, you look at,
  • 21:32 - 21:33
    when you look at the flappers
  • 21:33 - 21:36
    through the eyes of a
    young guy, wow, whoa.
  • 21:39 - 21:43
    - I think a flapper was
    the type of young woman
  • 21:43 - 21:47
    who just wanted to see
    how far she could go
  • 21:47 - 21:50
    and then would stop because
    she'd be afraid to go too far.
  • 21:50 - 21:53
    And a vamp didn't care how far she went.
  • 22:03 - 22:06
    - [Peter] The shattering
    ways of 1920s city life
  • 22:06 - 22:10
    were spread by the media to rural America,
  • 22:11 - 22:12
    places where the changes
  • 22:12 - 22:15
    were not always so easy to get used to.
  • 22:18 - 22:19
    - Smoking,
  • 22:20 - 22:24
    or drinking, being loose
    with talk, using profanity,
  • 22:24 - 22:29
    this sifted down from the cities,
    from New York and Chicago.
  • 22:30 - 22:34
    And this finally had a unwanted place
  • 22:35 - 22:37
    in our rural community.
  • 22:38 - 22:41
    Here was a girl who'd come home from,
  • 22:41 - 22:44
    she'd been working in Chicago.
  • 22:44 - 22:46
    She comes home with short dresses on.
  • 22:46 - 22:48
    Well, they were not wearing short dresses.
  • 22:48 - 22:51
    They were going to church with hats on
  • 22:51 - 22:52
    and with white gloves on.
  • 22:53 - 22:56
    They were decidedly concerned
  • 22:56 - 22:59
    about what the future
    generation is gonna bring.
  • 23:07 - 23:09
    - This company was founded
    on a respect for God
  • 23:09 - 23:11
    and a sense of righteousness
  • 23:11 - 23:13
    and keeping with the Sabbath day.
  • 23:13 - 23:15
    And people brought their children up
  • 23:15 - 23:18
    on the discipline and on
    reading the scripture.
  • 23:19 - 23:21
    And all of those things
    were part of the things
  • 23:21 - 23:22
    that bound us together in America.
  • 23:24 - 23:26
    - The people were solid,
  • 23:27 - 23:31
    with church going and very
    little crime and so on.
  • 23:42 - 23:44
    - [Peter] As the cities
    grew in size and influence,
  • 23:44 - 23:48
    many people in small town
    America found them threatening,
  • 23:48 - 23:52
    a breeding ground for new
    and often alien ideas.
  • 23:56 - 23:58
    In one small American town,
  • 23:58 - 24:01
    the forces of traditional
    religion and modern science
  • 24:01 - 24:05
    would clash in a battle
    heard around the world.
  • 24:05 - 24:07
    Here in Dayton, Tennessee,
  • 24:07 - 24:11
    in the summer of 1925,
    one of the century's
  • 24:11 - 24:14
    most famous courtroom
    battles would take place.
  • 24:15 - 24:17
    John T. Scopes stood accused
  • 24:17 - 24:20
    of teaching Darwin's theory of evolution,
  • 24:20 - 24:23
    that man and ape
    shared a common ancestor.
  • 24:23 - 24:26
    That was against the law in Tennessee.
  • 24:28 - 24:30
    The Scopes trial attracted
  • 24:30 - 24:32
    the best legal brains of the time.
  • 24:33 - 24:37
    William Jennings Bryan, three
    times presidential candidate
  • 24:37 - 24:40
    and a Christian fundamentalist
    himself, came to prosecute.
  • 24:43 - 24:47
    Clarence Darrow, the celebrated
    Chicago trial lawyer,
  • 24:47 - 24:48
    came to defend Scopes.
  • 24:53 - 24:55
    Outside, as the trial progressed
  • 24:55 - 24:59
    in the scorching summer heat,
    Dayton had itself a carnival.
  • 25:02 - 25:06
    - People would bring
    in trained chimpanzees
  • 25:06 - 25:08
    dressed in suits and ties,
  • 25:09 - 25:12
    and they'd lead 'em up
    and down the streets.
  • 25:14 - 25:16
    - Read your Bible was everywhere in town,
  • 25:16 - 25:18
    posted up the street,
    across the street, banners.
  • 25:20 - 25:22
    And you walk maybe 100 yards this way
  • 25:22 - 25:25
    and you'd have a street preacher.
  • 25:25 - 25:27
    I didn't know what he was preaching about.
  • 25:28 - 25:31
    And you never saw the same people twice.
  • 25:31 - 25:32
    You go to the same place next,
  • 25:32 - 25:34
    the next day, there'd be some other people
  • 25:34 - 25:36
    from some other parts of
    the United States there.
  • 25:36 - 25:38
    But it was a lot of hoopla.
  • 25:39 - 25:40
    I enjoyed it.
  • 25:42 - 25:44
    - The Scopes trial became emblematic.
  • 25:44 - 25:47
    Everybody had to make up their mind.
  • 25:47 - 25:49
    People who've never been to Tennessee,
  • 25:49 - 25:50
    couldn't even find Tennessee,
  • 25:51 - 25:53
    had to think about this question,
  • 25:54 - 25:57
    do I believe in modern science?
  • 26:01 - 26:03
    - [Peter] At times, it
    seemed that the whole world
  • 26:03 - 26:04
    had converged on Dayton.
  • 26:06 - 26:07
    - The aisles were filled,
  • 26:07 - 26:10
    and the walls were lined
    with newspaper people
  • 26:11 - 26:14
    from England, from Spain, from France.
  • 26:15 - 26:18
    We had so many newspaper people there
  • 26:18 - 26:20
    that you couldn't stir 'em with a stick.
  • 26:24 - 26:25
    - When all the hoopla ended,
  • 26:25 - 26:30
    John T. Scopes was found
    guilty and fined $100,
  • 26:30 - 26:32
    a ruling later overturned
    on a technicality.
  • 26:33 - 26:36
    What Scopes represented in
    what the world came to witness
  • 26:36 - 26:39
    was a colossal clash of ideals.
  • 26:39 - 26:42
    The cool reason of
    science seemed to threaten
  • 26:42 - 26:45
    the deep and abiding roots of religion.
  • 26:45 - 26:48
    It was one thing to replace
    the family mule with a Model T,
  • 26:48 - 26:50
    but quite another to trade
    Matthew, Mark, and John
  • 26:50 - 26:53
    for Einstein, Freud, and Darwin.
  • 26:53 - 26:57
    For many people, these
    were confusing times.
  • 26:57 - 26:59
    And what may have been the most unsettling
  • 26:59 - 27:02
    about the pace of change in the 1920s
  • 27:02 - 27:03
    was that people really wanted
  • 27:03 - 27:05
    both the benefits of the future
  • 27:05 - 27:08
    and the familiar comforts of the past.
  • 27:14 - 27:16
    - They want the fruits of modernity.
  • 27:17 - 27:20
    They want the automobiles,
    electricity, radio.
  • 27:21 - 27:24
    And at the same time, they
    want it to remain 1850,
  • 27:24 - 27:26
    and they know they cannot have both.
  • 27:26 - 27:29
    And this creates psychological tension
  • 27:29 - 27:31
    within American society
  • 27:32 - 27:34
    that is then looking for somewhere to go.
  • 27:35 - 27:38
    And it goes into hatred
    towards immigrants,
  • 27:38 - 27:41
    hatred towards people
    who are simply different.
  • 27:41 - 27:45
    It goes into intolerance,
    and into the Ku Klux Klan.
  • 27:45 - 27:48
    (ominous music)
  • 27:49 - 27:51
    - [Peter] Ku Klux Klan membership
  • 27:51 - 27:54
    soared to four million in the 1920s.
  • 27:56 - 28:01
    - Almost everybody that was
    a good citizen of the South
  • 28:01 - 28:02
    was a member of the Klan.
  • 28:03 - 28:05
    I think they were encouraging morality
  • 28:06 - 28:08
    by turning the light
  • 28:08 - 28:12
    on immorality and deceit and unfairness.
  • 28:12 - 28:15
    - It created a great deal of,
  • 28:15 - 28:19
    I'd say consternation
    and debate and so on.
  • 28:21 - 28:24
    They were not just opposed to the blacks,
  • 28:24 - 28:27
    but they were opposed to
    the Catholics and the Jews
  • 28:27 - 28:31
    or anybody else who came
    from somewhere else.
  • 28:33 - 28:36
    Going to people's houses,
    and calling them out,
  • 28:36 - 28:37
    and insulting them, and whipping them,
  • 28:37 - 28:39
    and things of that kind.
  • 28:42 - 28:45
    This was not just particular
    to the South or to the Alabama.
  • 28:45 - 28:46
    It was nationwide.
  • 28:50 - 28:52
    - [Peter] The clan was actively recruiting
  • 28:52 - 28:55
    in many northern states.
  • 28:55 - 28:57
    - My father was asked
  • 28:57 - 29:00
    if he would like to join the Ku Klux Klan.
  • 29:02 - 29:03
    He grabbed the guy by the collar
  • 29:03 - 29:05
    and threw him down the stairs.
  • 29:06 - 29:10
    Three nights later, almost
    directly across the street,
  • 29:10 - 29:13
    there was a large cross burning.
  • 29:15 - 29:17
    I still can see it in my mind.
  • 29:17 - 29:20
    It was a dreadful, horrifying experience.
  • 29:22 - 29:23
    My mother said,
  • 29:23 - 29:26
    "it's just as though they're
    guarding the gates of hell."
  • 29:29 - 29:31
    - And those white people who catered to us
  • 29:31 - 29:33
    and were in sympathy with
    us, they caught hell too.
  • 29:35 - 29:37
    - [Peter] James Cameron
    was living in Indiana
  • 29:37 - 29:38
    when he and two childhood friends
  • 29:38 - 29:41
    were seized by a Klan-inspired mob,
  • 29:41 - 29:46
    enraged by reports of the rape
    and murder of a white couple.
  • 29:49 - 29:51
    - The men there out in the crowd
  • 29:51 - 29:54
    had their robes and hood on too.
  • 29:55 - 29:56
    And then the leaders said,
  • 29:56 - 29:58
    "Take all these niggers out and hang 'em."
  • 29:58 - 30:01
    - [Peter] His two friends were lynched.
  • 30:01 - 30:04
    James Cameron barely
    escaped with his life.
  • 30:04 - 30:06
    - They put a rope around my neck
  • 30:06 - 30:09
    and they throw the
    other end over the tree.
  • 30:09 - 30:12
    And I kept crying and hollering,
    "I haven't done anything."
  • 30:13 - 30:15
    But before they could hang me up,
  • 30:15 - 30:17
    a voice said, "Take this boy back.
  • 30:17 - 30:20
    "He had nothing to do with
    any killing or raping."
  • 30:22 - 30:25
    I looked up to heaven and
    I said, "Lord, have mercy."
  • 30:29 - 30:30
    - [Peter] Throughout the decade,
  • 30:30 - 30:34
    an estimated 200 people
    were lynched by the Klan.
  • 30:34 - 30:37
    This organization claiming to uphold
  • 30:37 - 30:39
    the values and virtues of the past
  • 30:39 - 30:42
    became so powerful in the 1920s
  • 30:42 - 30:46
    that it seized political
    control in seven states.
  • 30:46 - 30:51
    And in 1927, Klansmen
    marched 50,000 strong
  • 30:51 - 30:53
    down the streets of the nation's capital.
  • 30:54 - 30:57
    Clearly, the forces of '20s modernity
  • 30:57 - 30:59
    had stirred a bitter resistance.
  • 31:03 - 31:05
    - [Announcer] Then the
    Manassa Mauler lashed out
  • 31:05 - 31:09
    in his old ferocious style,
    every punch deadly cunning.
  • 31:11 - 31:13
    - [Peter] In a decade
    fraught with so many changes,
  • 31:13 - 31:18
    people in the 1920 seemed
    hungry for old-fashioned heroes,
  • 31:18 - 31:21
    and an explosion in spectator
    sports provided them.
  • 31:23 - 31:25
    Sports giants became household names,
  • 31:25 - 31:28
    their every move followed by radio
  • 31:28 - 31:30
    and an eager tabloid press.
  • 31:30 - 31:34
    One name was known in more
    households than any other.
  • 31:36 - 31:39
    - In our family, we were
    never baseball oriented,
  • 31:39 - 31:41
    but I would have had to be deaf
  • 31:41 - 31:43
    not to have heard about Babe Ruth.
  • 31:45 - 31:46
    (crowd cheers)
  • 31:46 - 31:50
    - George Herman Ruth, the Babe,
    reshaped America's pastime.
  • 31:51 - 31:53
    In an era of big events,
  • 31:53 - 31:56
    he excelled at the game's
    biggest excitement, the home run.
  • 31:56 - 32:00
    He hit 60 of them in a
    single season in 1927,
  • 32:00 - 32:03
    a record that would
    stand for four decades.
  • 32:03 - 32:07
    Fans drove from miles around to see him.
  • 32:10 - 32:11
    - We used to get in a truck, seven of us,
  • 32:11 - 32:14
    put hay in the truck and just sit on it.
  • 32:14 - 32:16
    And in three and a half hours,
  • 32:16 - 32:18
    we head from Scranton
    to the Yankee Stadium.
  • 32:20 - 32:24
    It was 35 cents to see
    the Babe, Lou Gehrig,
  • 32:25 - 32:26
    all the Yankee players.
  • 32:28 - 32:31
    - Babe Ruth was a hero.
  • 32:33 - 32:35
    Lou Gehrig was always my hero.
  • 32:37 - 32:39
    It seems like everybody
    back then was a hero.
  • 32:42 - 32:44
    We'd write to get autographs.
  • 32:44 - 32:46
    They graciously sent us pictures,
  • 32:46 - 32:49
    three-cent postage stamp
    to get your picture back.
  • 32:49 - 32:51
    A really nice time to live.
  • 32:53 - 32:55
    It felt good to be an American.
  • 32:59 - 33:02
    (engine whirs)
  • 33:03 - 33:04
    - [Peter] The public's fascination
  • 33:04 - 33:07
    with flying in the 1920 seemed fitting
  • 33:07 - 33:11
    for a time when even gravity
    couldn't hold down progress
  • 33:11 - 33:14
    and when every boundary seemed
    just waiting to be broken.
  • 33:16 - 33:19
    - Once I got up about a thousand feet,
  • 33:19 - 33:21
    it was like I was home.
  • 33:22 - 33:24
    And that's the only way
    I can describe it to you.
  • 33:24 - 33:25
    I was home.
  • 33:27 - 33:29
    I never wanted to be any place else.
  • 33:34 - 33:38
    - [Peter] In 1927, one pilot
    would put aviation and himself
  • 33:38 - 33:41
    on every front page in the world.
  • 33:43 - 33:46
    On a misty may morning
    outside New York City,
  • 33:46 - 33:49
    a plane called the Spirit of St. Louis
  • 33:49 - 33:52
    was ready to take off for Paris.
  • 33:52 - 33:56
    No one had ever flown solo
    across the Atlantic before.
  • 33:56 - 34:00
    Six others had tried, failed, and died.
  • 34:01 - 34:04
    Ready to take the chance this
    time was Charles Lindbergh,
  • 34:04 - 34:07
    the six-foot-two son of a former
    congressman from Minnesota.
  • 34:10 - 34:12
    Thousands of people came
    to watch him take off.
  • 34:19 - 34:20
    Once he was out of sight,
  • 34:20 - 34:24
    it seemed as if all
    America held its breath.
  • 34:26 - 34:30
    - In Yankee Stadium, they had
    framed minutes of silence,
  • 34:30 - 34:31
    praying for him.
  • 34:31 - 34:33
    Everybody in the company
    was praying for him.
  • 34:37 - 34:40
    - [Peter] Flying the
    fuel-heavy single-engine plane
  • 34:40 - 34:44
    was a battle against
    weather, hunger, and fatigue.
  • 34:46 - 34:48
    For the entire 33-and-a-half-hour flight,
  • 34:48 - 34:50
    the Western world wondered
  • 34:50 - 34:52
    about the fate of that tiny plane
  • 34:52 - 34:54
    somewhere over the vast Atlantic.
  • 34:59 - 35:01
    - It was a Saturday night.
  • 35:02 - 35:06
    They hadn't heard from
    him for a long time.
  • 35:06 - 35:09
    And I was walking up 125th
    Street and someone shouted,
  • 35:09 - 35:10
    "They found him.
  • 35:11 - 35:13
    "He was flying over Ireland."
  • 35:13 - 35:18
    And within an hour or
    so, he landed in Paris.
  • 35:23 - 35:24
    - [Peter] 100,000 Parisians were there
  • 35:24 - 35:26
    to welcome the shy young pilot.
  • 35:26 - 35:28
    Lucky Lindy emerged from his plane
  • 35:28 - 35:31
    carrying only a razor and a passport.
  • 35:35 - 35:39
    His flight had represented
    the best of an era,
  • 35:39 - 35:41
    a mastery of modern technology
  • 35:41 - 35:44
    joined with old-fashioned
    values of courage,
  • 35:44 - 35:47
    individualism, and hard-won achievement.
  • 35:52 - 35:53
    - When Lindbergh came back,
  • 35:53 - 35:56
    it was as though he walked on the water.
  • 35:56 - 35:58
    The public couldn't get enough of him.
  • 35:59 - 36:00
    He was the star.
  • 36:02 - 36:05
    There wasn't a woman in America
    that wasn't crazy about him.
  • 36:11 - 36:12
    - He was a hero.
  • 36:12 - 36:13
    He was a nice guy.
  • 36:13 - 36:14
    He was new.
  • 36:14 - 36:15
    He was young.
  • 36:15 - 36:19
    He was kind of gawky, but
    that was what they wanted.
  • 36:20 - 36:22
    - [Peter] The parade for
    Lindbergh down Broadway
  • 36:22 - 36:24
    was the biggest national celebration
  • 36:24 - 36:26
    since the end of World War I.
  • 36:32 - 36:35
    - Everybody became Lindbergh.
  • 36:35 - 36:38
    They became the person that
    he was and represented.
  • 36:38 - 36:39
    It was great.
  • 36:40 - 36:42
    He made a big impression on me.
  • 36:43 - 36:46
    - It was very exciting for all of us
  • 36:46 - 36:50
    because we realized that a
    young man could do great things.
  • 37:02 - 37:03
    - [Peter] After Lindbergh's triumph,
  • 37:03 - 37:05
    there remained only one continent
  • 37:05 - 37:09
    for the airplane to conquer, Antarctica.
  • 37:10 - 37:12
    The frozen and forbidding landscape
  • 37:12 - 37:14
    at the bottom of the
    world was the boundary
  • 37:14 - 37:18
    one of the centuries great
    explorers, Admiral Richard Byrd,
  • 37:18 - 37:19
    set out to break.
  • 37:19 - 37:22
    His goal was to fly over the South Pole.
  • 37:22 - 37:25
    His expedition was flooded with
    young and eager volunteers,
  • 37:25 - 37:28
    all of them wanting to be heroes.
  • 37:29 - 37:31
    - Admiral Byrd was gonna select,
  • 37:31 - 37:35
    I forget how many Boy
    Scouts to go to the pole.
  • 37:35 - 37:37
    Now, I was about 12 at that time,
  • 37:37 - 37:40
    and I was nominated as
    one of the guys to go.
  • 37:41 - 37:42
    Now, this was a big thing.
  • 37:42 - 37:43
    It was in all the papers.
  • 37:45 - 37:47
    When I came home, I says,
    "Ma, what do you think?
  • 37:47 - 37:50
    "I'm gonna go to the North
    Pole with Admiral Byrd!"
  • 37:50 - 37:51
    She says, "You can't go!"
  • 37:51 - 37:52
    I says, "Why?"
  • 37:52 - 37:54
    She says, "You'll catch
    your death of cold."
  • 37:56 - 37:57
    I never went.
  • 37:57 - 37:58
    My cousin went instead.
  • 37:59 - 38:03
    Imagine that.
  • 38:03 - 38:08
    There were 120 men connected
    with the Byrd expedition.
  • 38:10 - 38:12
    - [Peter] 20-year-old Harvard
    student, Norman Vaughan
  • 38:12 - 38:15
    dropped out of school trained for a year,
  • 38:15 - 38:16
    and was finally selected
  • 38:16 - 38:18
    to go on the adventure of a lifetime.
  • 38:21 - 38:23
    - We stepped on land
  • 38:23 - 38:26
    that had never been
    seen or touched before,
  • 38:27 - 38:31
    and that just excited me beyond words.
  • 38:31 - 38:32
    Absolutely a new frontier.
  • 38:35 - 38:36
    - [Peter] The expedition's home base
  • 38:36 - 38:38
    was called Little America.
  • 38:38 - 38:41
    Its two-year mission was to
    conduct geological research
  • 38:41 - 38:44
    and prepare for Byrd's
    record-breaking attempt.
  • 38:44 - 38:47
    - [Norman] We were
    responsible for getting out
  • 38:47 - 38:52
    onto the interior of
    Antarctica, as far as we could,
  • 38:52 - 38:57
    to be there for Admiral
    Byrd's rescue expedition
  • 38:57 - 38:59
    should he have had a forced landing.
  • 39:00 - 39:03
    (somber music)
  • 39:20 - 39:24
    - [Peter] Just after midnight
    on November the 29th, 1929,
  • 39:24 - 39:27
    Admiral Byrd's aircraft flew 500 feet
  • 39:27 - 39:29
    above the geographic South Pole.
  • 39:30 - 39:33
    He dropped a stone wrapped
    in an American flag.
  • 39:35 - 39:37
    Americans and their airplane
  • 39:37 - 39:39
    had reached the ends of the Earth.
  • 39:52 - 39:56
    By the end of the 1920s,
    anything seemed possible.
  • 40:04 - 40:08
    - The most extraordinary thing
    about the decade of the '20s
  • 40:08 - 40:13
    was a pandemic air of optimism,
  • 40:14 - 40:18
    a feeling that the future of
    the country was unlimited.
  • 40:20 - 40:25
    One of the great jazz songs
    of the day was Blue Skies,
  • 40:27 - 40:29
    only but blue skies do I see.
  • 40:34 - 40:36
    - [Peter] The President
    promised blue skies
  • 40:36 - 40:38
    in the country's future.
  • 40:38 - 40:40
    At his inauguration in 1929,
  • 40:40 - 40:43
    Herbert Hoover repeated the
    common wisdom of the day
  • 40:43 - 40:45
    that Americans were on
    their way to riches.
  • 40:47 - 40:50
    If proof was needed, all one had to do
  • 40:50 - 40:54
    was look at the bubbling pool
    of wealth, the stock market.
  • 40:55 - 40:57
    - The butcher, the baker,
    the candlestick maker,
  • 40:57 - 41:00
    everybody, oddly enough,
    was in the stock market.
  • 41:01 - 41:04
    One of our chauffeurs was in the market.
  • 41:04 - 41:08
    If he can be in the market,
    anybody can be in the market.
  • 41:10 - 41:12
    - There were no
    regulations, as we have now.
  • 41:13 - 41:16
    People got away with murder all the time.
  • 41:16 - 41:17
    The government didn't bother them.
  • 41:17 - 41:19
    So they were all making money.
  • 41:19 - 41:21
    They were doing very well.
  • 41:22 - 41:26
    - [Peter] A boom in buying
    had driven up stock prices.
  • 41:26 - 41:28
    Suddenly, in October of 1929,
  • 41:28 - 41:33
    investors started cashing
    in their overpriced stock.
  • 41:33 - 41:34
    A panic of selling started.
  • 41:38 - 41:42
    - On October 29, 1929,
  • 41:42 - 41:45
    it was obvious from the opening bell
  • 41:45 - 41:49
    that things were wildly amiss.
  • 41:50 - 41:52
    - At 9:30,
  • 41:53 - 41:56
    there was a rumble on the floor.
  • 41:58 - 42:00
    One of the pageboys said, "Hey, Mike,
  • 42:00 - 42:02
    "look at the sell orders
    coming out of those phones."
  • 42:05 - 42:08
    - The wheels really started to come off.
  • 42:09 - 42:12
    The stock market went into a free fall.
  • 42:12 - 42:17
    Crowds gathered in the street
    outside of the exchange.
  • 42:18 - 42:23
    - At three o'clock, the
    bell rang, and that was it.
  • 42:23 - 42:26
    (bell rings)
  • 42:27 - 42:30
    - [Peter] More than $30
    billion in paper value
  • 42:30 - 42:35
    simply vanished that day as
    the stock market crashed.
  • 42:35 - 42:37
    - The famous word, the crash.
  • 42:38 - 42:40
    Overnight, it was like bombs fell.
  • 42:47 - 42:50
    - [Peter] The '20s bubble had burst,
  • 42:50 - 42:52
    and with it, the decade's optimism.
  • 42:57 - 42:59
    - People lost every penny that they had.
  • 43:01 - 43:03
    Nobody had any pensions.
  • 43:04 - 43:09
    There was no Medicare and
    Medicaid, social security.
  • 43:10 - 43:13
    If people lost their money, that was it.
  • 43:13 - 43:15
    They were down and out.
  • 43:17 - 43:21
    - People jumped off the
    George Washington Bridge,
  • 43:21 - 43:24
    which had only just then,
    not long ago been built,
  • 43:24 - 43:25
    people we knew!
  • 43:27 - 43:30
    My father was wiped out!
  • 43:31 - 43:35
    He never, psychologically,
    he never recovered.
  • 43:37 - 43:39
    - The 29th, I lost $1 million.
  • 43:41 - 43:42
    What do you do?
  • 43:42 - 43:43
    It's the same story.
  • 43:43 - 43:45
    Wash your face and
    hands and comb your hair
  • 43:45 - 43:46
    and start all over again.
  • 43:49 - 43:51
    - But as people would find
    out in the decade to come,
  • 43:51 - 43:56
    a decade as different from
    the '20s as night is from day,
  • 43:56 - 43:58
    starting over was not gonna be so easy
  • 44:02 - 44:04
    America, along with much of the world,
  • 44:04 - 44:06
    faced the Great Depression.
  • 44:06 - 44:10
    That's on the next episode of
    The Century: America's Time.
  • 44:10 - 44:11
    I'm Peter Jennings.
  • 44:11 - 44:12
    Thank you for joining us.
  • 44:13 - 44:16
    (dramatic music)
Title:
The Century: America's Time - 1920-1929: Boom To Bust
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
46:14

English subtitles

Revisions