The number of pages within the document is: 15
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Margaret Summersell
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2019-02-20 20:30:26.401065
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The Fort Payne C.C.C. CampbyLeah Rawls Atkins Dr. Leah Rawls Atkins Center Arts and Humanities ÒPebble HillÓAuburn University, AL 36849 On March 4, 1929, when Republican Herbert Hoover was inaugurated President of the United States, the Jazz Age economic boom of the 1920s was in full force. F. Scott Fitzgerald called it Òan age of miracles…of art, …of excess,…of satire…..the wildest of all generations.Ó 1 The Age was one of the automobile, of radio, of prohibition and speakeasies, and of flappers who danced the Charleston, cut their hair, shortened their skirts, and smoked cigarettes in public. Fueled by new industries and new products, the American economy roared along with little hint that success and prosperity were not permanent. Only the South and the debt-blanketed farm belt which suffered from the fall of farm prices after World War I, marred the ambience of well-being, and only a few voices dared to warn of disaster as the spiraling ÒBull MarketÓ marched upward. The crash came suddenly when the English, trying to lure European capital 1 F. Scott Fitzgerald, ÒEchoes of the Jazz Age,Ó Scribner!s Magazine 90: (November 1931): 5.
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