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Chapter 21 - The Roaring Life of the 1920s

Teacher: Steve Knight
Horizontales
A famous bootlegger who headed a criminal empire in Chicago during the 1920s.
A bizarre fad of the 1920s used as a publicity stunt to attract viewers to movie theaters.
The Scopes trial in 1925 was a fight over the right to teach this in public schools.
F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote this novel in the 1920s, which revealed the negative side of the period's gaiety and freedom.
This person served as a special prosecutor in the Scopes trial of 1925.
The dance craze of the 1920s that involved wild, flailing movements of the arms and legs.
Verticales
One of the free-thinking young women who embraced the new fashions and urban attitudes of the 1920s.
A flowering of black artistic creativity during the 1920s, centered in the Harlem community of New York City.
A person who smuggled alcoholic beverages into the US during Prohibition.
This person made the first nonstop solo flight across the Atlantic in 1927.
Although major magazines and newspapers reached big audiences, this became the most powerful communication medium to emerge in the 1920s.
A place where alcoholic drinks were sold and consumed illegally during Prohibition, especially in the 1920s.
A Jamaican immigrant who believed that black Americans should build a separate society and return to Africa. He was eventually convicted of mail fraud.
A Protestant religious movement grounded in the belief that all the stories and details in the Bible are literally true.
The Eighteenth Amendment which outlawed the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages.
A famous revivalist baseball player turned preacher who staged emotional revival meetings across the South.
The Harlem Renaissance's best-known poet, whose poems described the difficult lives of working-class black Americans.
F. Scott Fitzgerald coined the 1920s this term.