1 / 55

Chapter 27

Chapter 27. America at Midcentury 1952-1960. 1.) Did President Eisenhower practice the “ politics of moderation”? 2.) Did Eisenhower essentially continue or modify Truman ’ s containment policy? 3.) What were the objectives, successes, and failures of the 1950 ’ s civil-rights movement?

cgatson
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 27

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 27 America at Midcentury 1952-1960

  2. 1.) Did President Eisenhower practice the “politics of moderation”? • 2.) Did Eisenhower essentially continue or modify Truman’s containment policy? • 3.) What were the objectives, successes, and failures of the 1950’s civil-rights movement? • 4.) What impact did television and suburbanization have on American life in the 1950’s? Introduction

  3. 5.) Were the 1950s a decade of conservatism and conformity? • 6.) How did the discontent of some young people and minorities foreshadow the social ferment to come in the 1960s? Introduction

  4. The Eisenhower Presidency • “Dynamic Conservatism” • WWII commander of Allied forces in Western Europe • 1953 became Pres. • Used executive authority with restraint • Seldom took a public role in lawmaking • Delegated responsibility • He could be an active and “ruthless” politician

  5. “Dynamic conservatism” • “Modern Republicanism” • Staffed his administration with corporate executives • Business efficiency • Resisted right-wing pleas to dismantle the New and Fair Deals • Tried to restrain further growth of federal activities “Dynamic Conservatism”

  6. He did increase federal spending to combat economic recessions in 1953 and 1957 • Interstate Highway Act of 1956 • National Atlas website • Raised the minimum wage • Extended social-security coverage • Created the Dept. Of Health, Education, and Welfare • 1956 he was reelected Dynamic Conservatism

  7. Eisenhower did not speak out against McCarthy • 1954--McCarthy/Army hearings • Televised • He accused the army of protecting communist spies • Led to his downfall • Hearings video • The Senate censured him • Media and public ignored him The Downfall of Joseph McCarthy

  8. Brown v. Board of Education • 1954 • Racially segregated schools violated the 14th Amendment • Overturned Plessey v. Ferguson • Eisenhower did not back the Brown decision Jim Crow in Court

  9. Eisenhower regretted the appointment of Warren • This encouraged southern resistance • White Citizens Councils, KKK, Southern Manifesto all fought school integration • By 1956--no progress toward desegregation made in the South Jim Crown in Court

  10. Little Rock, AR Central High School • Sept. 1957 • Gov. Faubus ordered the blockade of the all-white Central High School • Eisenhower ordered the U.S. Army into Little Rock to enforce the desegregation • http://www.history.com/topics/black-history/civil-rights-movement/videos/little-rock-nine-rev The Laws of the Land

  11. By 1960--less than 1% of African-American students in the Deep South attended integrated schools • Eisenhower’s use of troops at Central High raised the hopes of African-Americans • 90% of northern whites approved The Laws of the Land

  12. Introduction • July 1953, Korean War armistice was signed • Korea was still divided at the 38th parallel The Cold War Continues

  13. Ike and Dulles • John Foster Dulles • Secretary of State • Advocated liberating the Eastern European countries from communism

  14. Insisted the West should risk war rather than back down • Eisenhower ignored Dulles’ advise • Ike continued the containment policy Ike and Dulles

  15. 1955 Geneva summit conference • Eisenhower tried to achieve “peaceful coexistence” with U.S.S.R. by meeting Soviet leaders • Produced no nuclear-arms control plan • But laid the ground work for future plans Ike and Dulles

  16. The U.S. relied increasingly on its nuclear weapons to deter Soviet aggression • MASSIVE RETALIATION • Dulles committed the United States to defending many Third World countries Ike and Dulles

  17. Eisenhower’s administration relied more and more on covert actions • Secure anticommunist regimes • Do so by: • Assassinations • Overthrow of govts. • Central Intelligence Agency was in charge of the covert actions CIA Covert Actions

  18. The Vietnam Domino • The CIA carried on its most extensive secret operations in Vietnam • Vietnamese overthrow the French • CIA blocked elections to unify the country • Pushed into power the dictator Ngo Dinh Diem

  19. Eisenhower claimed Diem had to remain in office to prevent Vietnam’s fall to the Communists • “domino theory” • If one country fell to Communism, then the surrounding countries would fall • Prevent this from happening in Asia The Vietnam Domino

  20. Troubles in the Third World • Anti-U.S. demonstrations in Latin America and Japan • Because of Eisenhower’s support for pro-Western dictators • Fidel Castro became the leader in Cuba in 1959

  21. Foreign Policy • Positives: • President Eisenhower ended the fighting in Korea • Initiated small steps toward relaxing Soviet-U.S. tensions • Negatives: • Sped up the nuclear-arms race • Expanded the Cold War • Gave the CIA the go-ahead to subvert foreign govts. that the U.S. disliked • Massive Retaliation The Eisenhower Legacy

  22. Domestic Legacy • Middle-of-the-road course that pleased neither right-wingers nor liberals • Liberals: • criticized his failure to denounce McCarthy and racism • Conservatives: • Faulted him for not repealing the New and Fair Deals The Eisenhower Legacy

  23. Eisenhower left office warning the nation about the growing influence of the “military-industrial complex” over American society The Eisenhower Legacy

  24. Introduction • 1950’s the U.S. enjoyed an unprecedented level of prosperity • By 1960--60% of American families owned homes and 75% had cars • There were 3 slight recessions though • Worry developed over a mounting national debt The Affluent Society

  25. Increased govt. expenditures accounted for the prosperity and the national debt • Some of the federal $$$ financed public works and other domestic programs • The majority about 10% of the GNP when into military buildup The New Industrial Society

  26. The govt. and large corporations also increased spending on scientific research • New technology fueled the growth of the technology industry • Increased automation • Increase in consumer products • Western states profited the most from govt. -financed research and development The New Industrial Society

  27. Little attention was paid to the environmental toll was taken by the expanded economic activity • Increase use of petroleum • “warming up the Earth” The New Industrial Society

  28. Development of computers was a key aspect of the postwar technological revolution • Mark I calculator in 1944 • Became a billion-dollar business • Transformed the U.S. economy and way of life The Age of Computers

  29. Most Americans ignored the dangers of these toxic substances to the environment • 1962 Rachel Carson wrote about the dangers in Silent Spring • In the late 1960s and 1970s states and federal govts. begin to ban the use of DDT The Costs of Bigness

  30. Consumerism increased • Rising purchasing power • Expanding credit • Advertising • 1950’s==58 million cars were purchased • Improved mobility • Contributed to increased highway fatalities, air pollution, and the movement of whites to suburbs Prosperity and the Suburbs

  31. Growth of suburbs • Govt. highway building • Loans • Tax credits • Allowed city dwellers to purchase homes in the suburbs • Construction industry built 2 million new home • 85% of them in suburbs • 20 million Americans moved to the suburbs • By 1960--suburban population of the U.S. equaled that of the central cities Prosperity and the Suburbs

  32. Movement of people from Northeast to the Sun Belt states • 1963--CA became the state with the largest population • By 1980--more Americans lived in the South and West than in the North and East • This would boost the # of conservatives and help the Republicans Prosperity and the Suburbs

  33. Togetherness and the Baby Boom • 1950s Americans married younger • Largest population growth in any decade • Increased birthrate • Medical advances cut infant mortality • By 1960, 1/3 of the population was under 14 years old • “Baby boomers” • Childcare became important • Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care • Dr. Benjamin Spock • Best seller • Women need to be stay-at-home moms Consensus and Conservatism

  34. Women were most content when they fulfilled their “natural” roles of wife, mother, and homemaker • Fewer men attend college than men • Almost 2/3s dropped out before graduating • Numbers of working women began to grow • 1/3 of labor force • Low-paying, dead-end positions Domesticity

  35. Renewed interest in religion • Popularity of films and books with religious themes • Growing church attendance • Inclusion of the “under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance • Inclusion of “In God We Trust” on currency Religion and Education

  36. The Culture of the Fifties • American fiction favored personal issues of alienated characters • Authors: • William Faulkner • Eudora Welty • James Baldwin • Philip Roth

  37. Hollywood films showed Americans as white and middle class • Ignored minorities and the poor • Women were shown as “cute helpmates” and “dumb blondes” • Movie-going declined • Television watching increased The Culture of the Fifties

  38. Television influenced the economy and culture • By 1960--90% of all households owned at least 1 TV • ABC, NBC, CBS monopolized the industry • $1.5 billion in advertising revenue • TV commercials influenced what people read, ate, and wore Television Culture

  39. TV also impacted politics • A politician’s TV image became extremely important • McCarthy’s negative image led to his downfall in the Army hearings • John F. Kennedy’s “telegenic” image helped him win the presidency in 1960 • TV greatly escalated the cost of campaigning • Encouraged the “60 second” sound bite Television Culture

  40. Poverty and Urban Blight • 1/5 of Americans lived below the poverty line • Elderly, migratory agricultural workers, Native Americans, Appalachian whites, African-Americans, and Hispanics • City slums • Low-cost public housing was needed • Housing Act of 1949 • Only built a small % of what it was supposed to build The Other America

  41. African-Americans’Struggle for Justice • Southern African-Americans entered nonviolent, direct action • 1955 Montgomery bus boycott • Rosa Parks • Martin Luther King, Jr.

  42. Southern Christian Leadership Conference • Organized by African-American ministers • Led by King • Campaign against discrimination African-Americans’ Struggle for Justice

  43. Mostly poor and discriminated against • By 1960--almost 1 million Puerto Ricans lived in East Harlem • Struggled with low-paying jobs, poor housing, inadequate school, inability to speak English, and a new culture Latinos and Latinas

  44. Poorest group in the U.S.A. • The govt. terminated all special federal services for Native Americans • Encouraged the breakup of the reservations • Transferred more than 500,000 acres of Native American land to white • Further impoverishment and demoralization of Native Americans Native Americans

  45. Seeds of Disquiet • Sputnik • Russia launched Sputnik in 1957 • Shook American confidence and complacency

  46. Sputnik • National Aeronautics and Space Administration • Created in 1961 • Launched missiles • Increased federal spending on education • Focus on engineering, science, and math

  47. A Different Beat • Many teenagers expressed mild cultural rebellion • Dress enthusiasm for rock and roll • Elvis Presley

More Related