At Philadelphia's 1876 Centennial celebration the industriousness, inventiveness, and bright hopes of the United States were on display along with Thomas Edison's light bulb. After enduring decades of factional politics and the pains of Civil War and Reconstruction, the nation was now ready to take its place on the world stage. In the 1880s, business titans such as John D. Rockefeller and J. Pierpont Morgan would lead America's economic charge as the country moved from its agrarian roots to becoming an industrial behemoth. Labor was needed to run factories, and immigrants from Europe filled the bill, swelling the size of cities and populating the prairies. Inevitably, the tug between management and labor grew into all-out fighting and America's union movement grew in importance.
Politically, presidents such as Teddy Roosevelt led the charge into world politics. The white fleet showed the might of the American military. Doughboys helped tip the balance of WWI in favor of the allies. Those GIs coming home would not be content to stay on the farm. They wanted to drive flivvers, dance with flappers, and drink frappes. Stocks rose along with hemlines. But soon hemlines would turn into breadlines. America was about to endure a very painful hangover. |
Call Toll Free 1-800-453-6227 Fax 206-381-5601