The United States by 1920: the impact of the First World War Flashcards
Introduction:
American intervention in the First World War fundamentally changed the course of the conflict. What had been an unbreakable deadlock at the end of 1916 - a war nobody knew how to win but nobody knew how to stop - was transformed into a decisive Allied victory by November 1918. The war also changed the United States, both at home and abroad. A huge army was enlisted by conscription. Often referred to by Americans as ‘the draft’, it was introduced for the first time in the United States by the Selective Service Act of 191. For the first time, American troops fought overseas as part of an alliance with other powers. The war caused, or sped up, significant social change
The world economic power:
American intervention not only produced a decisive outcome to the war, but it also led to a fundamental change in the entire world economy. In the late nineteenth century the United States had been a debtor nation, borrowing from Europe to finance US economic growth. But from 1917 the United States became a creditor nation, making loans worth billions of dollars to other countries, to fight the war and to repair the massive losses caused by it. The new world economy was based on a web of debt that was totally dependent upon American financial resources
The American economy at war:
Between 1914 and 1917, US neutrality had beneficial effects on the American economy. The dislocation of European food supplies meant that American agriculture boomed; farmers could get high prices for everything they produced. The huge demands of modern industrialised warfare meant that Britain and France depended heavily on the United States for war supplies, as well as loans to pay for them. The United States was an important economic force in a rather one-sided form of neutrality. When the United States entered the war, however, the economy struggled to cope. There was a lot of confusion and inefficiency before the war economy was fully established
A massive infrastructure was needed for the bases where the new mass army would be housed, trained, and equipped. The federal government had to establish new organisations to regulate the war economy: Liberty Loans to raise funds; a War Industries Board to coordinate war production; a Food and Fuel Act to set up a Food Administration and a Fuel Administration to regulate and ration resources; and a War Revenue Act for increased federal spending. Nationalisation of the railroads was required to control transportation
This process was slow and uncertain at first, but it produced a formidable war machine and stimulated economic growth. Exports rose, the steel industry boomed, and there was full employment. When the war ended, however, there was a painful adjustment back to peacetime conditions. The process of demobilisation did not go smoothly. The slowdown of the economy due to the halting of war production led to intense social and ethnic divisions in 1919-20. There was a brief economic recession that persisted into 1921
But the war greatly strengthened American economic dominance. The First World War had destroyed the Russian, German and Ottoman empires, and had pushed Britain and France to the edge of bankruptcy. The United States was the world’s new economic giant
Organising America’s War Effort (chronology)
The United States and the post-war peace:
Economic dominance was not the only reason the United States was destined to take the lead in shaping the post-war world. The prestige of American democracy had been enhanced by the war. This prestige was symbolised by the image and ideals of President Woodrow Wilson, who was the dominant personality of the Peace Conference that opened in Paris in January 1919. All over Europe and around the world, people believed that ‘Wilsonian idealism’ would make a better world after the ‘war to end all wars’
There were strong reasons for the high hopes the world placed on Wilson in 1919. America seemed a shining example of Republican democracy. It was free of any guilt for starting the war. Its new economic and military potential put the US first among the great powers. Its anti-colonial history emphasised the idea of ‘clean hands’ and moral superiority. Addressing Congress in July 1919, Wilson announced: ‘The stage is set, our destiny is revealed. This destiny has come about by no plan of our own conceiving but by the hand of God’
The post-war Peace Conference:
The Peace Conference that opened in Paris in 1919 set out to establish a post-war peace settlement based on the ‘Fourteen Points’ that Wilson had proposed in January 1918. It was not easy for Wilson to convert these ideals into reality and there were many complex issues. There were clashes of opinion with the other members of the ‘Big Four’ peace-makers: Clemenceau (France), Lloyd George (Britain) and Orlando (Italy), who had different priorities from Wilson. It was difficult to put self-determination into practice. Wilson had promised, for example, to support full independence for the Armenian and Kurdish peoples, but neither promise could be fulfilled because of opposition from other powers
Yet Wilson and the peace-makers did not fail completely. Five treaties were signed with Germany, Austria, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Turkey. New nations were founded, new borders were mapped out, and the League of Nations was established. But there was widespread disillusionment, among both winners and losers
Wilson also faced growing political difficulties at home. There were social divisions and economic problems. Almost 50,000 American soldiers had been killed in action. Even more had been killed by the terrible ‘Spanish flu’ pandemic of 1918-19. American casualties were small compared with other nations, but they were enough to sway public and political opinion against ‘Europe’s war’. When Wilson came home from Paris he faced a difficult task in ‘selling’ the treaty, and the League of Nations, to the American people
Wilsonian idealism:
Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points were an expression of ‘Wilsonian idealism’. The post-war peace was to be based on self-determination, allowing peoples and nations to decide their own destinies outside the control of the old empires, and on collective security, with peace protected by international agreements instead of national armies and wars. One of Wilson’s key proposals was for a League of Nations to make collective security effective
Social and ethnic divisions:
Outwardly, the United States came together in patriotic unity to fight the First World War. Newspapers, popular music, and public meetings expressed mass support for ‘our boys’ fighting ‘over there’. The shared experiences of war, both for the troops and for people at home, brought people together and increased national self-confidence. But the war also put stresses and strains on American society, and existing social divisions were intensified
A new hostility to ‘unreliable foreign elements’ emerged. There was fear of revolution and a backlash against socialism. The ‘culture war’ between Wets and Drys came to a head. The war changed and improved the position of African-Americans but also revealed the extent of prejudice and discrimination. The years of victory from 1918 to 1920 were also years of uncertainty and social upheavals
The enemy within:
The outbreak of war in 1914 interrupted the flow of immigrants coming to America from Europe and began a period of social consolidation. When the United States entered the war, questions were raised about the loyalties of the diverse nationalities of recent immigrant communities. The ideas of ‘nativist’ American citizens became more prominent: one example of this was the resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan from 1915
After the United States entered the war there was a surge of patriotism, often deliberately encouraged by the government. There were demands to test the loyalty of new citizens, to root out ‘aliens’, to guard against the dangers from spies and the ‘enemy within’. Wilson demanded new powers to keep the nation safe from subversion. In June 1917 the Espionage Act was passed. Wilson’s postmaster-general, Albert Burleson, instructed all postmasters to keep a close watch on suspicious mail
In May 1918, the Espionage Act was extended by the Sedition Act. More than 1,500 prosecutions were carried out, two-thirds of them resulting in convictions. One of those jailed under the Espionage Act was the socialist leader, Eugene Debs. Another high-profile individual regarded with suspicion was the radical feminist, anarchist, and pacifist, Emma Goldman, who was one of 249 Russian ‘subversives’ deported to Russia on USS Buford, known to the popular press as the ‘Red Ark’ in December 1919. An approving cartoon at the time depicted the departing ship with the caption: “it is better to give than to receive”. A disapproving cartoon showed the Statue of Liberty being deported as an enemy alien
Many Americans protested against the erosion of civil liberties, but the tide of opinion was running strongly in favour of patriotic nationalism and anti-immigrant feeling. In October 1918 a new Immigration Act was passed, strengthening the existing controls against ‘undesirable’ immigrants, especially those suspected of being anarchists. The changed mood against immigrants had lasting effects. In 1921 the Emergency Quota Act placed drastic limits on the numbers of immigrants allowed to enter the United States. This act was revised and extended by a new Immigration Act in 1924
Emma Goldman (1869-1940):
Emma Goldman was born into a Jewish family in Lithuania (then in the Russian Empire) that emigrated to New York. She joined the anarchist movement in 1889 and was imprisoned several times. Her lover, Alexander Berkman, was jailed for 22 years for attempted murder. In 1917, Goldman was jailed for urging men to refuse being drafted into the army. She was deported after her release and went into exile
Socialism and ‘Red Scares’:
American entry into the war coincided with the Russian Revolution, which overthrew the autocratic rule (complete control) of the Tsars. This led to a democratic Provisional Government in Russia and made the alliance between Britain, France, Russia, and the United States a ‘fight for democracy’. But then, in October-November 1917, the Bolsheviks seized power in Russia and proclaimed the beginning of the Communist world revolution. In 1918-19 Communist revolutions broke out in Berlin, Munich, and Hungary. Fear of Communism being spread by immigrants from Central and Eastern Europe aroused deep suspicions in the United States. This led to the Red Scare, an intense backlash against all kinds of ‘socialism’ and revolution
The ‘Red Scare’ of 1918-20 was the storm of public and political opinion demanding action to root out Communists and ‘subversives’; the symbols of Communism were the Red Flag and the Red Star, and Communists were often referred to as ‘Reds’
Opposition to the norm in America:
Fear of revolution in America encompassed many other forms of opposition: anarchists who carried out acts of terrorism; pacifists opposed to war on moral grounds; people who joined the American Communist Party; and militant trade unions, especially the International Workers of the World (IWW). There was particular suspicion of German Americans (suspected of supporting the enemy) and recent immigrants from Russia and Eastern Europe (suspected of being anarchists or ‘subversives’)
Strike action:
The First World War led to widespread industrial unrest and social upheaval. There was high inflation. The rapid demobilisation of the armed forces caused serious problems in the jobs market and a rise in trade union militancy. During 1919 there was a wave of strikes involving more than 4 million workers. In Seattle, 60,000 workers joined the general strike led by the IWW in February 1919. In the Boston Police Strike in September 1919, 75% of the police officers, mostly Irish Americans, went on strike; one of their demands was the right to join a trade union, the American Federation of Labor (AFL). In Pittsburgh and Chicago, a ‘Great Steel Strike’ against US Steel began in September 1919 and lasted three months
Efforts by business and government to counter the strikes frequently led to major outbreaks of violence. US Steel cracked down hard on the Great Steel Strike and almost destroyed the AFL. Six strikers were killed in a ‘massacre’ at Centralia in Washington State. The alarm caused by industrial unrest was intensified by disturbances caused by racial tensions. There were more than 20 race riots during 1919, the worst of them in Chicago
Public opinion mostly supported the authorities. The Massachusetts state governor, Calvin Coolidge, became wildly popular for breaking the Boston Police Strike; this helped him to become the Republican vice-presidential candidate in 1920. Mayor Ole Hanson of Seattle became a national hero for his tough stance against the General Strike. Most prominent of all those who fought against the ‘Red threat’ was the US Attorney General, Mitchell Palmer
Palmer saw that taking tough action against the ‘Red Scare’ could help his political career, but he was also genuinely convinced that the threat from socialism and anarchists was real. These fears were heightened by a wave of bombings in April and May 1919. 36 bombs were sent in packages to many public figures, including Mayor Hanson in Seattle. A bomb exploded at Palmer’s house, killing the man who planted the bomb. There was a public outcry. Then the big strikes in the autumn of 1919 prompted the Palmer Raids
A. Mitchell Palmer (1872-1936):
Sometimes known as the ‘Fighting Quaker, Palmer was a Progressive Democrat with political ambitions. He was a Congressman from 1909 to 1915. He had sought the presidential nomination in 1912 and fancied his chances of succeeding Wilson as president in 1920. Wilson made him Attorney General in March 1919. He retired from politics in 1921
The Palmer raids:
In November 1919, agents under the orders of Palmer’s Justice Department raided the offices of ‘radical organisations’ in 12 cities across America.
Documents were seized and suspects were arrested. In December, 249 ‘radicals’ were deported back to Europe. The Palmer raids continued in January 1920, with action in 33 cities to close down all known communist party offices. The raids were coordinated by the youthful Assistant Director of the Bureau of Investigation, J. Edgar Hoover. The raids led to similar actions at state and local level. Many cities passed ‘red flag’ laws to ban left-wing insignia. Vigilante gangs operated against union activists in Washington State and California
However, the Red Scare lost momentum during 1920. There were protests against the violation of peoples rights. The Supreme Court ruled that evidence collected during the Palmer raids was illegal and could not be used in prosecutions. The Governor of New York, Al Smith, mounted a campaign to reverse the expulsion of socialists from the state legislature. When Mitchell Palmer tried to revive the Red Scare by predicting that communist revolution would break out across America on May Day 1920, no such revolution happened. Palmer lost credibility and the Red Scare blew itself out