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The Roar of the Twenties

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
The Roar of the Twenties
Abstract
The roar of the fabled 1920's reverberated across the Canada's western prairies in ways in ways that were uniquely Canadian and often uniquely western. Decades after its release in 1975, James Gray's trademark energetic prose pulsates with the essence of this flamboyant era when idealism ran rampant across the prairies. Gray captures the: Political frustrations of the farmers and the resulting turbulent Progressive movement and the resulting Wheat Pools Radical idealism of the One Big Union, born after the Winnipeg General Strike in 1919 Gambling fever that struck not only Western Canadians, but all North Americans, spawned by those who put their paychecks in football pools, horse races, and the spectacular ups and downs of the Winnipeg Grain Exchange Social and religious movements such as the birth of the United Church and the Ku Klux Klan. James Gray has written of an exciting and flamboyant era, a time never to be forgotten.
Place
Toronto
Publisher
Macmillan of Canada
Date
1975
# of Pages
358 pages, 16 unnumbered leaves of plates: illustrations
Language
English
ISBN
978-0-7705-1276-7
Accessed
6/16/23, 4:26 AM
Library Catalog
Open WorldCat
Extra
OCLC: 1692276
Notes

Contents: Going for broke -- Down on the farm -- After the strike was over [Winnipeg General Strike] -- The rich were rich -- A golden age for games -- The gospel of co-operation -- Back to the booze -- Remember the night they robbed the bank -- A blow for women's liberation -- Almost united -- The sting of the WASP -- The battle for the Winnipeg cenotaph -- Jimmy Gardiner v. the Ku Klux Klan -- Take my money, please -- The glow from hell's half-acre -- Downward to disaster.

Citation
Gray, J. H. (1975). The Roar of the Twenties. Macmillan of Canada. https://archive.org/details/roaroftwenties00gray/page/n1/mode/2up