Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Time Capsule Tuesday

 Since it's the end of a year, I thought I'd take a look back on what was going on in America at the end of 1920.  100 years ago.

December 29, 1920 was a Wednesday.

In the United States, the most popular baby name is Mary.  This name was given to 70,980 baby girls.  For the boys, it is John. This name was recorded 56,913 times in the year 1920.

The generation born between 1910-1925 is called the Greatest Generation.  People of this generation grew up in the midst of the Great Depression, then went on to fight in World War II.

The President of the United States was Woodrow Wilson.  The Vice President was Thomas R Marshall.

The decade of the 1920s is known as the Jazz Age and "The Roaring Twenties." It featured economic prosperity and carefree living for many.  The decade began with a roar.

The 1920s was a decade of change, when many Americans owned cars, radios, and telephones for the first time. The cars brought the need for good roads. The radio brought the world closer to home. The telephone connected family and friends. Some rural farmers were leaving their farms in order to receive a regular paycheck in the factories. Unions were on the rise. Women shortened, or "bobbed," their hair, flappers danced and wore short, fancy dresses, and men shaved off their beards.  

In 1920 the average life span in the U.S. was about 54 years, whereas today it's about 77.  In 1920 the average time a student spent in school each year was 75 days; today it's about 180 days.

The Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was passed in 1920, creating the era of Prohibition. The amendment forbade the manufacture, sale, or transportation of alcoholic beverages.  Many people ignored the ban, however.

The 1920s began with the last American troops returning from Europe after World War I. They were coming back to their families, friends, and jobs. Most of the soldiers had never been far from home before the war, and their experiences had changed their perspective of life around them.  After seeing Europe, they wanted some of the finer things in life for themselves and their families. World War I had left Europe on the decline and America on the rise.

Two events in 1920 kicked off an era of change in America.  The Nineteenth Amendment was passed, giving women the right to vote. And the first commercially licensed radio broadcast was heard from KDKA in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  

1920 Prices

Bread:  $0.11/loaf

Milk: $0.58/gal

Eggs:  $0.39/dozen

Car: $345

Gas: $0.30/gal

House: $6,296

Stamp: $0.02/each

Average Income: $1,130/year


Top Songs for 1920:

The Love Boat by Gene Buck

Margie by Benny Davis

Whose Baby Are You? by Anne Caldwell

La Veeda by Nat Vincent

Avalon by Al Jolson       

 


Japanese Sandman by Raymond Egan

Mah Lindy Lou by Lily Strickland

Whispering by Malvin Schoenberger


Top Books in 1920:

The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton

The Frontier in American History by Frederick Jackson Turner

Main Street by Sinclair Lewis


Top Movies of 1920:

Outside the Law directed by Tod Browning

The Mark of Zorro directed by Fred Niblo and starring Douglas Fairbanks

The Last of the Mohicans directed by Clarence Brown and Maurice Tourneur and starring Barbara Bedford.


People Born on December 29:

1800 - Charles Goodyear, Inventor

1808 - Andrew Johnson, Raleigh, North Carolina, 17th President (1865-69) (Unionist)

1936 or 1937 - Mary Tyler Moore, Brooklyn, New York, Actress (Mary Tyler Moore, Ordinary People)


Source:  Ncpedia.org, 1920: a Decade of Change, by Barrett A. Silverstein, ncpedia.org/history/20th-Century/1920s# 

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