Introduction The years after the First World War were a golden age for many Americans. The 1920s didn't just sing with the rhythms of jazz, or swing with the dancing of the Charleston; they roared with the confidence and optimism of a prosperous era.
For most of the decade, jobs were plentiful and paychecks grew steadily. Mass production and innovation helped make many items widely available and affordable. Automobiles became cheaper, faster, and more comfortable. Fledgling airlines began to carry a few passengers from city to city. Electric refrigerators and washing machines freed women from some household chores. Department stores and grocery chains expanded, offering a greater selection and lower prices than neighborhood markets.
As movies talked for the first time, radio brought instant news and entertainment into living rooms, spreading the word about the many things money could buy. A new industry, advertising, advised Americans that they needed toothpaste, mouthwash, and ready-made clothing.
Young women, energized from winning the long fight for the right to vote, traded their heavy, long dresses for short, slim styles. They cut their hair short like the boys', and dared to wear makeup. Many women began to handle their own money.
With all the attention on buying and consumer goods, businessmen became widely admired public figures. The powerful men who ran the nation's largest banks, car companies, and electric utilities became national celebrities.
Money became the sign of success -- though very few people were truly wealthy. Most working Americans made just a few thousand dollars a year and worked six days a week. But those who could save some money for a down payment and spare a few dollars more from each paycheck could buy one of Henry Ford's cars or a house in the suburbs on the partial-payment plan.
Amid all the affluence, the average man saw one way that he, too, could become rich. On Wall Street, a narrow little road in New York City, magical things were said to happen to money. Men told coworkers about it, women told their sisters, neighbors told neighbors. Those who could scrape together a few hundred dollars -- or even better, a few thousand dollars -- could buy stocks, pieces of paper that represented a small ownership in a company. For much of the 1920s, stocks soared in value. People clever enough to buy them could end up with more money than they ever imagined. Someone who had the foresight to buy $10,000 of General Motors stock in 1920 would have seen the investment grow to more than $1.5 million by 1929.
Unfortunately, few people had that kind of cash or insight -- or luck. Many investors never made money in the market, or at least not very much. And there weren't all that many stock investors to start with. Out of 121 million people, probably just 1.5 million to 3 million of them owned stocks -- just one or two out of every 100 Americans.
Still, as stock prices climbed higher and higher in 1928 and 1929, Americans were captivated by the idea of making money in such a fast and fantastic way. Newspapers listed daily stock prices. Radio broadcasts gave the day's stock-market highlights.
The fascination with wealth drew many more people than had ever before gambled their savings in such a risky and unpredictable place as the stock market. Their zeal was supported and encouraged by some of the nation's most respected leaders. As stock prices seemed to climb to the sky and beyond, these prominent men began to chase after wealth themselves. Executives who had spent their lives building solid reputations cut secret deals in pursuit of their own stock-market riches. Greed took hold.
Few seemed to care. The market was enchanted, part of an affluent and exciting time that seemed likely to continue forever. Politicians, professors, and businessmen proclaimed that this was a new era, where the old ups and downs no longer applied. Americans flourishing in the 1920s shared a feeling, said historian David M. Kennedy, "that they dwelt in a land and time of special promise."
Then came October 1929.
Copyright © 2002 by Karen Blumenthal