1 / 40

The postwar years at home

The postwar years at home. 1945-1960. Postwar economy. The Years Following WWII. AFTER WWII. DURING WWII (you fill it in). What was life like? Military & economic superpower Prosperity Able to purchase: Homes Cars Other items they had once dreamed of owning. Economic Expansion.

kael
Télécharger la présentation

The postwar years at home

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. The postwar years at home 1945-1960

  2. Postwar economy

  3. The Years Following WWII AFTER WWII DURING WWII (you fill it in) • What was life like? • Military & economic superpower • Prosperity • Able to purchase: • Homes • Cars • Other items they had once dreamed of owning

  4. Economic Expansion • Greatest time of economic expansion • GNP • Per capita income • $1,526  $2,788 • Corporate expansion • General Motors (GM), Ford, Chrysler, General Electric (GE), & Westinghouse

  5. Franchises • Right to open a restaurant using a parent company’s brand name & system • Ray Kroc & Multimixers (milkshake machine) • Cali. brothers kept buying mixer • Kroc purchased 2 brothers’ idea of assembly-line food production (1954) • Acquired name of the brothers’ restaurant ………………………..DRUMROLL………………………………………….

  6. Franchise Cont. • The system worked so well, it was applied to: • Clothing stores • Automobile muffler shops • Why did it work? • Individual with only few thousand $ could own a small business NAME OTHER FRANCHISES

  7. Technology • Spurred industrial growth • New & improved products • Dishwasher • Gas-powered lawnmowers • TV • Computer • Nuclear Power • Advances in medicine http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Fwramn5U3M

  8. Television • Developed in ‘30s • 2/3 of families owned TV • Mickey Mouse Club • American Bandstand • I Love Lucy • Commercials = persuasive

  9. Work Force • Before WWII – “blue collar” workers • produce goods • People performed  machine performed • 1956 – white collar jobs • Office jobs • “When white-collar people get jobs, they sell not only their time and energy but their personalities as well.” –Sociologist C. Wright Mills • Those who still had blue-collar jobs: • Working conditions & wages • Unions won important gains

  10. Increasing Population & Suburbs • Baby boom  growing families  suburbs • 25 births per 1,000 people • Growing families move from aging cities  new houses in suburbs • Outskirts of an urban area • Developer William J. Levitt  Levittowns • Communities in suburbs • Built houses in weeks instead of months • Homes became affordable • GI Bill (Servicemen’s Readjustment Act 1944) • gave WWII vets low-interest mortgages to purchase their new homes WHY MIGHT SOME PEOPLE NOT LIKE SUBURBS?

  11. Malvina Reynolds – “Little Boxes” (click photo for song)

  12. Consumer Culture • Companies offer credit cards to loyal customers • Charge gas purchases when they were on the road • Americans willingly went into debt to purchase the products they wanted • American Express • BankAmericard (Visa)

  13. Mood of the ‘50s

  14. Youth • Americans went from valuing individuality  conformity • Youth Culture • “silent generation” • Little interest in world problems • Strong economy = students to go to school rather than leave to find a job • Parties, pranks, & joining fraternities & sororities • Products marketed toward youth

  15. Religion • Interest in religion  response in part to the cold-war struggle against communism • Find hope in wake of nuclear war • 1954 – “under God” to Pledge of Allegiance • 1956 – “In God We Trust”  WHERE DO WE SEE THIS? • Evangelists used radio and tv to carry their messages • End of ‘50s, 95% of all Americans felt linked to some religion Billy Graham

  16. Men & Women’s Roles • Men – go to school and find jobs to support wives & children • Public sphere away from home • Women – support husband, kept house, cook, raise children

  17. Men on the Role of Women • Dr. Benjamin Spock – The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care • Mothers - remain with children if she wanted them to grow up stable & secure • Adlai Stevenson – Democratic presidential candidate • 1952 & 1956 • “the assignment for you, as wives and mothers, you can do in the living room with a baby in your lap or in the kitchen with a can opener in your hand.” Video 

  18. Women’s Views • Frustrated with expectations • Wanted to earn their own $  buy the items that symbolized the “good life” • Automobiles • Electric appliances • 1950 – 22% of all married women had jobs • 1961 – 31%

  19. Challenges to Conformity • Some young people rejected values of parents • Films, books, and music were used to express thoughts • Rebel Without a Cause (film) • James Dean • The Catcher in the Rye (novel) • Rock & Roll • Grew out of rhythm & blues • Elvis Presley • Adults disliked him – feared he would cause immorality

  20. Challenges Cont. • Members of the “Beat Generation” – called beatniks • writers • Artists • Challenged traditional patterns of respectability • Shocked Americans with their open sexuality & use of illegal drugs

  21. Domestic politics & Policy

  22. True or False? • 1950s were a liberal time period – politically & culturally True False • In 1950, Dwight D. Eisenhower was president True False • President Harry Truman wanted to follow in FDR’s footsteps True False • WWII ended in 1950 True False • Truman was a Democrat & Eisenhower was a Republican True False

  23. Overview • 1950s were conservative time politically & culturally • Americans pressured gov’t to help maintain nation’s new prosperity • President Truman (Democrat) – 1st struggled with the problems of reconversion to a peacetime economy • President Eisenhower (Republican) – took low-key approach to presidency • Friendly & reassuring We have heard of him before. When?

  24. Truman • What is Truman’s claim to fame?

  25. Truman’s Domestic Policies • Scattered approach to governing • New proposals in every speech • Peacetime economy • Reconversion – social & economic transition from wartimepeace • Most soldiers home by 1946 • People went from rationing to wanting goods immediately • Wages failed to keep up with prices • People began to strike • Truman – workers fail to understand that big wage might hurt economy’s health

  26. Taft-Hartley Act • 1947 – passed by Congress • Allowed president to declare 80-day cooling-off period when strikes hit industries that affected national interest • Strikers had to return to work & gov’t examined situation • Union officials signed non-Communist oaths Truman vetoed TH Act but was still passed by Congress

  27. Truman’s Fair Deal • Supported FDR’s New Deal • Extended New Deal  Fair Deal • Gov’t needs to play an active role in economy • promotes full employment • Higher minimum wage • Compensation for workers without jobs • National health insurance • Control atomic energy

  28. Fair Deal Cont. • Congress opposed him • Only passing the Employment Act 1946 • Truman’s support dropped in polls • 1946 – Republicans win majority of both houses of Congress

  29. Election of 1948 • Truman runs again • Support within party is disintegrating • Democrats support Progressive Henry Wallace (1 of FDR’s VP) • Opponent of Truman was Republican Thomas E. Dewey Truman – “If you send another Republican Congress to Washington, you’re a bigger bunch of suckers than I think you are.”

  30. WHO IS THIS? WHO WON? ACTUALLY, TRUMAN WON. EXPLAIN THIS PICTURE.

  31. Dwight Eisenhower aka “Ike” • Former commander-in-chief of the Allied forces • President on Colombia University • Head of NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) • Talented diplomat • VP was Richard Nixon (later becomes president)

  32. The Checkers Speech • People want Eisenhower to dumb Nixon from the ticket • Newspapers accused Nixon of having special fund • “set up by rich Republican supporters” • He DID received a gift from a political supporter ………………………..a dog named Checkers……………. People changed their mind & wanted Nixon to still run  Video

  33. Ike as President • Served 2 terms • “I am not one of those desk-pounding types that likes to stick out his jaw and look like he is bossing the show.” • Critics claimed he lacked leadership • Defends himself – “Now, look, I happen to know a little about leadership. I’ve had to work with a lot of nations, for that matter, at odds with each other. And I tell you this: you do not lead by hitting people over the head…I’ll tell you what leadership is. It’s persuasion – and conciliation – and education – and patience. It’s long, slow tough work. That’s the only kind of leadership I know or believe in – or will practice.”

  34. Ike as President Cont. • Wanted to: • Slow growth of the federal gov’t • Limit the President’s power • authority of Congress & courts • Priorities included: • Cut spending • Reduce taxes • Balance budget • Favored: • Big business • Encouraged/supported corporate America Modern republicanism

  35. Ike as President Cont. • Attempted to balance budget • Backfired • Cuts in gov’t spending  economy slump  tax revenues drop  deficit grew larger • 3 economic recessions • Still helped maintain mood of stability & economic security • Minimum wage: $0.75  $1.00

  36. National Defense Education Act • 1958 • Improve science & mathematics instruction in schools so that the U.S. could meet the scientific & technical challenge from the USSR • Millions of $ in low-cost loans to college students • Reductions in repayments if they became teachers • Federal gov’t granted millions of $ to state schools for building science & foreign language facilities

More Related