American Decades
People in the News
In 1922 Charles Atlas (born Angelos Sicilano) was named "America's Most Perfectly Developed Man" in a Madison Square Garden physical culture exhibition, launching his popular mail-order body-building course.
In 1920 Mary Ritter Beard, a suffrage activist and pioneering historian of women, published A Short History of the Labor Movement. Her later works included On Understanding Women (1931), and Women As a Force in History (1946).
Gertrude Bonnin, a Native American who preferred the Indian name Zitkala-Sa—, worked tirelessly for Indian rights. In 1921, after she moved to Washington, D.C., she conducted a survey of conditions of Native Americans for the Indian Welfare Commission and thereafter worked for years for improvements in health and education and for the conservation of Indian lands.
In 1922 seventeen-year-old Clara Bow, who, during the 1920s, became a...
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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
