We’re just a year away from the 2020s, and the future holds spectacular promises. Some are joking about bringing back the Jazz Age with great music and sassy-chic fashion… but are they joking? There’s something about the Roaring Twenties that people can’t help but adore. The fashion, the rebellion, the music, the dance – everything about the era was extravagant, even down to otherwise mundane situations. But what were the most mundane situations like in a place like Cleveland? Rest assured, you can virtually visit the era through photo collections of yesteryear.

  1. A peaceful picnic, 1920

Richard Walz/Avon Lake Collection Identifier: walzr008.jpg A woman sits at Avon Lake before a brilliantly set table. Picnicking was a popular activity in the Roaring Twenties, and there were many gorgeous parks in Greater Cleveland at which locals could enjoy some sunshine.

  1. A patriotic parade, 1920

Cleveland Memory Project/Cleveland Heights - University Heights Identifier: 2008008013x600W.jpg It was a gorgeous day on Sycamore Road when the Fourth of July procession began. Just as is true with today, community gatherings were an important part of city life in the 1920s.

  1. Crowds gather at League Park, 1922

Joseph E. Cole/Cleveland Press Collections Identifier: league001 Baseball was a beloved pastime in the 1920s, and it’s no wonder why! It was in this era that athletic superstars like Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig made their debut, and it was in 1920 that the Cleveland Indians won the World Series.

  1. Library staff members pose for a picture, 1925

Cleveland Memory Project/ Cleveland Heights - University Heights Public Library Identifier: 20110921ch021.jpg Pictured here are Mary E. Jackson, Mrs. E.C. Blaine, Marion Kirk, and Helen Keeler - all staff members at the Lee Road branch of the Cleveland Heights-University Heights Public Library. Women made up more than 21 percent of the working population at this time; a fact that would change quite significantly in the oncoming decades.

  1. Businesspeople on their way to work, 1925

Joseph E. Cole/Irish Americans of Cleveland Identifier: people017 Mr. and Mrs. John A. Coakley walk side-by-side through Cleveland, flaunting costly fashions. John was a wealthy manufacturer and philanthropist and he’d go on to help create the Automatic Sprinkler Co. of America.

  1. A ceremony in the Cultural Gardens, 1926

L. Van Oeye/Cleveland Cultural Gardens Collection Identifier: cplshak019 When the British Cultural Garden was dedicated in 1916, it started a trend centered around celebrating the diverse cultures that contribute to Cleveland life. In this photo, City Manager Hopkins and actress Ethel Barrymore lead a crowd into the garden ten years after its dedication for a tree planting ceremony.

  1. Patrolling policemen, 1926

Joseph E. Cole/Cleveland Press Collections Identifier: mlake002 Local police certainly had their hands full in the 1920s. Not only were they dealing with Prohibition (or looking the other way), but they also had to keep order at some of the most dramatic scenes in Cleveland history. The first buses were introduced to Cleveland in 1925, which doubtlessly caused new congestion problems in the streets. Maternal Health Association (now Planned Parenthood of Cleveland) opened its doors in 1928. The National Air Races attracted enormous crowds in 1929, and during that same year, the tragic Cleveland Clinic fire claimed many lives. These officers were certainly busy during the Jazz Age!

  1. Witnesses before the grand jury, 1927

Joseph E. Cole/Cleveland Press Collections Identifier: ircchear32c Cleveland has long made headlines for its challenges facing pollution, but locals took action against it in 1927. The individuals pictured here are participating in the trial involving the Industrial Fibre fumes nuisance, taking a stance against pollution long before it earned Cleveland the “Mistake on the Lake” nickname.

  1. Women’s gym class at Heights High School, 1928

Cleveland Memory Project/City of Cleveland Heights. Cleveland Heights Historical Center at Superior Schoolhouse Identifier: chuh200700853x600w.jpg Believe it or not, the 1920s was a groundbreaking era for women in sports. Before this decade, sports were not seen as a particularly ladylike activity. Even though comfortable uniforms had yet to come to fruition, these ladies were doubtlessly enjoying the opportunity to stretch and participate in popular sports.

  1. First responders tend to victims of the Cleveland Clinic Fire, 1929

Joseph E. Cole/Cleveland Press Collections Identifier: clinicdisaster23 1929 was a tumultuous year for the nation. The end of the decade was hit with the stock market crash and ushered in the Great Depression, but it was also that year that the Cleveland Clinic burned down and took 125 lives with it. As poorly stored x-rays wore down, they unleashed a flammable gas that ignited and produced flames that could not be quelled with water. The tragic event shocked the nation and led to safer storage standards for medical professionals.

The Roaring Twenties were certainly full of celebration and fun, but it was also an era of great change. Did you ever hear any family stories from this era when you were growing up?

Richard Walz/Avon Lake Collection Identifier: walzr008.jpg

A woman sits at Avon Lake before a brilliantly set table. Picnicking was a popular activity in the Roaring Twenties, and there were many gorgeous parks in Greater Cleveland at which locals could enjoy some sunshine.

Cleveland Memory Project/Cleveland Heights - University Heights Identifier: 2008008013x600W.jpg

It was a gorgeous day on Sycamore Road when the Fourth of July procession began. Just as is true with today, community gatherings were an important part of city life in the 1920s.

Joseph E. Cole/Cleveland Press Collections Identifier: league001

Baseball was a beloved pastime in the 1920s, and it’s no wonder why! It was in this era that athletic superstars like Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig made their debut, and it was in 1920 that the Cleveland Indians won the World Series.

Cleveland Memory Project/ Cleveland Heights - University Heights Public Library Identifier: 20110921ch021.jpg

Pictured here are Mary E. Jackson, Mrs. E.C. Blaine, Marion Kirk, and Helen Keeler - all staff members at the Lee Road branch of the Cleveland Heights-University Heights Public Library. Women made up more than 21 percent of the working population at this time; a fact that would change quite significantly in the oncoming decades.

Joseph E. Cole/Irish Americans of Cleveland Identifier: people017

Mr. and Mrs. John A. Coakley walk side-by-side through Cleveland, flaunting costly fashions. John was a wealthy manufacturer and philanthropist and he’d go on to help create the Automatic Sprinkler Co. of America.

L. Van Oeye/Cleveland Cultural Gardens Collection Identifier: cplshak019

When the British Cultural Garden was dedicated in 1916, it started a trend centered around celebrating the diverse cultures that contribute to Cleveland life. In this photo, City Manager Hopkins and actress Ethel Barrymore lead a crowd into the garden ten years after its dedication for a tree planting ceremony.

Joseph E. Cole/Cleveland Press Collections Identifier: mlake002

Local police certainly had their hands full in the 1920s. Not only were they dealing with Prohibition (or looking the other way), but they also had to keep order at some of the most dramatic scenes in Cleveland history. The first buses were introduced to Cleveland in 1925, which doubtlessly caused new congestion problems in the streets. Maternal Health Association (now Planned Parenthood of Cleveland) opened its doors in 1928. The National Air Races attracted enormous crowds in 1929, and during that same year, the tragic Cleveland Clinic fire claimed many lives. These officers were certainly busy during the Jazz Age!

Joseph E. Cole/Cleveland Press Collections Identifier: ircchear32c

Cleveland has long made headlines for its challenges facing pollution, but locals took action against it in 1927. The individuals pictured here are participating in the trial involving the Industrial Fibre fumes nuisance, taking a stance against pollution long before it earned Cleveland the “Mistake on the Lake” nickname.

Cleveland Memory Project/City of Cleveland Heights. Cleveland Heights Historical Center at Superior Schoolhouse Identifier: chuh200700853x600w.jpg

Believe it or not, the 1920s was a groundbreaking era for women in sports. Before this decade, sports were not seen as a particularly ladylike activity. Even though comfortable uniforms had yet to come to fruition, these ladies were doubtlessly enjoying the opportunity to stretch and participate in popular sports.

Joseph E. Cole/Cleveland Press Collections Identifier: clinicdisaster23

1929 was a tumultuous year for the nation. The end of the decade was hit with the stock market crash and ushered in the Great Depression, but it was also that year that the Cleveland Clinic burned down and took 125 lives with it. As poorly stored x-rays wore down, they unleashed a flammable gas that ignited and produced flames that could not be quelled with water. The tragic event shocked the nation and led to safer storage standards for medical professionals.

If you find yourself fascinated by local history, you’ll be delighted by these local sites that were once part of the Underground Railroad.

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