American Decades
People in the News
Bernard Baruch, who made a fortune through stock-market speculation and who became famous during World War I as chairman of the War Industries Board, was an adviser to Presidents Harding, Coolidge, and Hoover during the 1920s.
Former newspaperman Stuart Chase, a widely quoted "economist," told the press in the fall of 1929, "We have probably three more years of prosperity ahead of us before we enter the tail-spin which has occurred in the eleventh year of the four great periods of commercial prosperity."
Charles G. Dawes, financier, banker, and vice president of the United States (1925-1929) under Calvin Coolidge, was noted for his quips about the uselessness of the office, but his most famous statement was that what the country needed was a good five-cent cigar.
In 1926 Harvey S. Firestone leased a one-million-acre rubber plantation in Liberia to provide his Firestone Tire and Rubber Company...
[The entire page is 906 words long]
1920's Business and the Economy
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Carriers: Transportation
- Construction and Building
- Farms and Farmers
- Finance and Banking
- Government and Business
- Industry: The Aircraft
- Industry: The Automobile
- Industry: Radio and Broadcasting
- Labor: Workers and Unions
- The Modern Corporation
- Retail Trade and Marketing
- Speculation in Land: The Florida Boom and Crash
- The Stock Market: Boom
- The Stock Market: Crash
- The Stock Market: Effects of the Crash
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Business and the Economy, 1920–1929
