Great War & Jazz Age
(1914-1928)

Foreign affairs (relationships with
other countries) took up a great deal of President Woodrow Wilson's
attention. In Europe, there was the outbreak of World War I, also
known as the Great War, in 1914, and in Mexico, there was the
Mexican Revolution. Although at first Americans did not want to get
involved, they supported the Allies in their fight against the
Central Powers.
Finally, the U.S. entered the war
in 1917. The war concluded in 1918 and the Treaty of Versailles was
signed in 1919. The Allied Powers of the U.S., Great Britain, Japan,
Italy, Russia, France, Belgium, Serbia and Montenegro had been
victorious.
Back at home, young people were
tired of the war. Women exercised their newly found freedom (having
won the right to vote in 1920) and many whites took up an interest
in African American culture. Harlem nightclubs thrived, spotlighting
numerous artists such as jazz musicians Louis Armstrong and Duke
Ellington.
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