Knowledge Organiser: America in 1920 — A Nation of Contradictions
Part of America in 1920 · GCSE GCSE History revision
This topic summary covers Knowledge Organiser: America in 1920 — A Nation of Contradictions within America in 1920 for GCSE History. Revise America in 1920 in America 1920-1973 for GCSE History with 10 exam-style questions and 8 flashcards. This topic appears regularly enough that it should still be part of a steady revision cycle. It is section 14 of 14 in this topic. Use this topic summary to connect the idea to the wider topic before moving on to questions and flashcards.
Topic position
Section 14 of 14
Practice
10 questions
Recall
8 flashcards
Knowledge Organiser: America in 1920 — A Nation of Contradictions
Key Terms
- Isolationism: Policy of staying out of other countries' affairs — shaped US foreign policy throughout 1920s
- Laissez-faire: Government policy of not interfering in the economy — central to Republican thinking
- Rugged individualism: Belief people should help themselves, not rely on government
- Federal republic: Power divided between national government and states — explains regional inequality
- Jim Crow laws: Southern laws legally enforcing racial segregation in all public spaces
- WASP: White Anglo-Saxon Protestant — the dominant group who felt their power threatened by immigrants and change
Key Dates
- 1914-18: WW1 — America supplies Allies, gets rich while Europe is devastated
- 1920: 19th Amendment — women win the vote (but many still face discrimination)
- 1920: Harding elected — Republican era of laissez-faire begins
- 1921: Emergency Quota Act — first major immigration restriction
- 1920s: 75+ lynchings per year — racial terror widespread in the South
Key People
- Warren Harding: Republican president 1921-23; champion of laissez-faire and isolationism
- Calvin Coolidge: Republican president 1923-29; "The business of America is business"
- Andrew Mellon: Treasury Secretary; cut top income tax rate from 73% to 25%
Must-Know Facts
- America produced 50% of world's manufactured goods by 1920
- Europe owed America $10 billion in war debts after WW1
- 11 million immigrants arrived 1900-1920
- 75+ lynchings per year in the South
- 106 million people across 48 states
- FIRW: Freedom (limited), Isolationism, Race, Wealth (unequal)
Cross-Topic Links
- → Topic 4 (Economic Boom): The wealth and industrial capacity America built during WW1 (Europe owed $10 billion) directly created the conditions that made the 1920s boom possible — without this foundation, WCRAM could not have worked.
- → Topic 6 (Wealth Inequality): The inequalities baked into 1920 — farmers already in debt, Black Americans facing Jim Crow, 60% below the poverty line — explain why the boom's benefits were so unevenly distributed throughout the decade.
- → Topic 9 (Intolerance): The WASP fear of "outsiders" that drove the KKK revival, immigration restrictions, and the Red Scare was rooted in the same anxieties visible in 1920 — the sense that rapid change was threatening the established social order.
- → Topic 16 (Segregation): Jim Crow laws and the 75+ annual lynchings visible in 1920 are the legal and social foundation on which the Civil Rights struggle of the 1950s–60s was fought — these conditions did not change without decades of organised resistance.
- → Topic 10 (Causes of Depression): Republican laissez-faire policies and the inequality of 1920 (60% below poverty line, overproduction already building) are the underlying causes of the Depression — the Crash was merely the trigger that exposed weaknesses already present.
Common Mistakes
- Assuming all Americans were prosperous in the 1920s: 60% of families lived below the poverty line — always distinguish between those who benefited from the boom and those who did not (farmers, Black Americans, recent immigrants).
- Forgetting laissez-faire as a policy: Republican policies of low taxes and minimal regulation were deliberate choices, not background facts — explain HOW they shaped American society in 1920.
- Treating Jim Crow as just "racism": Jim Crow was a legal system of enforced segregation backed by state law and violence — be specific about what it meant in practice (segregated schools, transport, disenfranchisement).
- Missing the WW1 connection: America's economic strength in 1920 came directly from being a creditor nation after WW1 ($10 billion owed by Europe) — always link the starting conditions to the war.
Revise this topic interactively on PrepWise — self-test mode, tap-to-reveal definitions, and Common Mistakes from examiners.
Try the interactive Knowledge Organiser — free →Keep building this topic
Read this section alongside the surrounding pages in America in 1920. That gives you the full topic sequence instead of a single isolated revision point.
Practice Questions for America in 1920
What percentage of the world's manufactured goods did America produce in 1920?
Which term describes the Republican belief that government should not interfere with business?
Quick Recall Flashcards
10 questions on America in 1920 — practise free
Instant marking, adaptive difficulty, and 8 spaced repetition flashcards. Free until your GCSEs.
Try PrepWise Free