American Decades
The Noble Experiment
Cultural Conflict.
The Eighteenth Amendment, outlawing the sale of liquor, was the culmination of the campaigns of the Anti-Saloon League and the Women's Christian Temperance Union to dry up the United States. Forty-six states ratified the amendment, which went into effect in January 1920. The fight for Prohibition was a cultural conflict between white, native, Protestant Americans and new immigrants, as well as a conflict between women and men. Mainstream Protestants associated the saloon with the working-class and immigrant cultures they wished to bring in line with their own values. Women fought for Prohibition to protect their homes and families, recognizing that drunken husbands used up a family's income on liquor and often physically or sexually abused their wives and children.
A Fool's Errand.
Resistance to Prohibition had been fierce: 1919 New Jersey Democratic gubernatorial candidate Edward I. Edwards...
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1920's Lifestyles and Social Trends
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- The Affair With the Automobile
- The African American Experience
- Backlash
- The Birth Control Movement
- Boosterism
- Fads and Crazes
- Freudianism
- The Impact of Technology on Daily Life
- Masculinity and the Experience of Men
- The Noble Experiment
- Scientific Child Rearing
- Women Get the Vote
- Women Go to Work
- Youth Culture
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Lifestyles and Social Trends, 1920–1929
