1 / 30

The Postwar Boom

The Postwar Boom. Chapter 19. The Postwar Boom. Postwar America The American Dream in the Fifties Popular Culture The Other America. GI Bill of Rights. Summer of 46’ – 10 million men & women return home GI Bill of Rights – Servicemen’s Readjustment Act

marina
Télécharger la présentation

The Postwar Boom

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 Boom Chapter 19

  2. The Postwar Boom • Postwar America • The American Dream in the Fifties • Popular Culture • The Other America

  3. GI Bill of Rights • Summer of 46’ – 10 million men & women return home • GI Bill of Rights – Servicemen’s Readjustment Act • Returning veterans receive financial aid ( low-interest loans, no down payments) for • College • Trade School • Start business or farm • Buy a home • Unemployment benefits

  4. Redefining the Family • Tension between men and women and their roles • This contributed to rise in divorce rates • Many women did not want to give up their independence • More than 1 million war marriages ended in divorce

  5. Economic Readjustment • Converted from wartime to peacetime economy • Unemployment increased • Veterans & laid-off workers • 3 million seeking work • OPA – ended control on max. price of goods • Price of goods skyrocket • Increased 25% • Many workers earned less now than during war • What problems did Americans face after war? • Doesn’t stay like this for too long…

  6. Economic Recovery • Americans suddenly had money to spend, automobiles to houses • American economy boomed! • Demand for goods and services exceed supply and increase production • “The Affluent Society”

  7. Housing Crisis • William Levitt and Henry Kaiser – create assembly line methods to mass-produce houses • Suburbs = homes in small residential communities surrounding cities • People move from places like Detroit to places like Troy • By 1960 – 1/3 of Americans lived in suburbs • “Cookie Cutter” houses – all look the same – Levittown • More people can afford homes

  8. Harry Truman – “The Buck Stops Here” • Viewed as honorable, down-to-earth, and self-confident. • Truman had to address strikes – 4.5 million • Truman supports Civil Rights • Created President’s Commission on Civil Rights – Requests for…. • Federal anti-lynching law • Ban on poll tax as voting requirement • Permanent civil rights commission • DENIED BY CONGRESS • July 1948 – issued executive order for integration of the armed forces

  9. 1948 Election • Truman elected – Democratic party • Dixiecrats – group formed who protested Truman’s emphasis on civil rights (Southern Democrats) • Fair Deal – • proposal for nationwide health insurance • Promote full employment • Increase minimum wage • Does not run for re-election due to all time low rating. • Both Democrats and Republicans oppose to Fair Deal

  10. 1952 – I like Ike • Eisenhower wins on promise to end Korean War • Nixon’s “Checkers” Speech • “Modern Republicanism” • Conservative policies – cut spending, reduce taxes, balance budget • Liberal approach to meeting peoples needs • Raised minimum wage , extended social security and unemployment benefits, increased funding for public housing • Supported Civil Rights • Civil Rights Act of 1957 • Civil Rights Act of 1960 • Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka • 1957 Supreme Court Ruling that public schools must be racially integrated.

  11. Working for the “Man” • Factory work more automated – machines • Growth in “white collar” jobs • 1940 – 45% • 1960 – 56% • Better working conditions but • Heavy pressure to conform • “Company man” or “Organization Man” • Described how new large organizations created “company people” • Disadvantage – conformity replaced individuality! • Unions continue to push for “blue collar” workers rights

  12. Working for the “Man” • Conglomerates – major corporation including smaller companies in unrelated industries • Security against failure • Franchise businesses begin to develop • Offered similar products/services in multiple locations • McDonald’s – Ray Kroc

  13. Baby Boom • 1957 – 1 baby born every 7 seconds

  14. Baby Boom • Population explosion • Baby Boom generation is born – 1940’s to 1960’s • 1957 – 4,308,000 babies born • Largest generation in nations history • Why? • Reunion of husbands and wives after war • Decreasing marriage age • Desire for large families • Advances in medicine • Confidence in economic prosperity • Baby Boom led to rapid growth in schools • Toy sales reach $1.25 billion

  15. Advances • Medicine… • Dr. Jonas Salk – developed a vaccine for polio • Killed 20,000 kids annually • Dr. Benjamin Spock – “Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care” • Says mothers should stay home with children • Women’s Roles… • Role of home-maker and mother glorified in TV, movies, & magazines • On the contrary…some felt their roles were boring, felt isolated, unfulfilled • Betty Friedan – “The Feminine Mystique”

  16. Leisure in the Fifties • Time saving devices • Washing machines, clothes dryers, dishwashers, power lawn mowers • This allowed for more time for leisure activities • Americans spent more than $30 billion on leisure goods and activities • Fishing, bowling, hunting, boating, golfing, baseball games, reading, etc

  17. The Automobile Culture • Americans buying cars break record numbers • 6.7 million in 1950 to 7.9 million in 1955 • Suburban living – • People needed to drive to their jobs in the cities • Churches, synagogues, doctors’ and dentists not in waking distance • Stores, gas stations, shopping malls, drive-ins spring up • Automakers introduce new car design every year • New Highways are built • Interstate Highway Act 1956 – cost $32 billion • Unified country • More Americans vacationed, road trips to national parks, lakes, mountains and more • Problems.. • Noise and exhaust pollution • Automobile accidents claiming lives • Traffic jam = stress • Damaging roads

  18. Interstate Highway System

  19. The Culture of the Car 1958 Pink Cadillac 1959 Chevy Corvette

  20. Consumerism – buying material goods • New products in the marketplace • House appliances, blenders, freezers • Leisure – TVs, tape recorders, record players, swimming pools • Planned obsolescence - marketing strategy, purposely manufactured products to become obsolete – to wear out or become outdated • People wanted up to date items – “keeping up with the Joneses” • Credit Cards: Diners Club 1950, Amex 1958 • Installment plans • Consumer debt increased from $73 billion to $179 billion • TV advertising becomes HUGE!

  21. Mass Media • Mass media – communication reaching large audiences • TV developed the fastest • Primary source of entertainment and information • By 1960 – 90% of Americans had TV sets • Black and white • Brought families together • Federal Communications Commission (FCC) – govt agency that regulates and licenses TV, telephone, radio, and other communications • Radio & Movies – both survive with the TV set taking over. • Movie goers decreased by nearly half, but still had its advantages • Radio turned to local programming of news

  22. “Father Knows Best” “I Love Lucy” “Leave it to Beaver”

  23. The Beat Movement • Who: Beatniks ( followers of the movement • Where: San Francisco, Los Angeles, and New York City’s Greenwich Village • What: Expressed social and literary nonconformity of artists, poets, and writers • “Beat” originally meant weary • Came to refer to musical beat later • Beatniks counter-culture • Did not like regular work • Little structure • Expressed themselves through poetry, music, and literature • Jack Kerouac wrote a novel describing Beatnik culture entitled On the Road • Beatniks, Elvis, Beatles are seen as rebellion against conservatism

  24. Rock ‘n’ Roll’s Beginning • Alan Freed, a disc jockey in Cleveland, Ohio started to play music in 1951 that was a mixture of rhythm and blues, country, and pop • He called this music • Rock ‘n’ Roll • Music for both African Americans and white people

  25. What was Rock ‘n’ Roll all about? • Heavy Rhythm • Simple melodies • Lyrics that discussed • Love • Heartache • Cars • Problems of being young Jazz – style of music composed by use of improvisation

  26. Adults view on Rock ‘n’ Roll • Thought it would… • Produce a decline in morals • Increase delinquency • Create deviant citizens

  27. Rock ‘n’ Roll Artists • Elvis Presley • King of Rock ‘n’ Roll • Original dance style • Famous for songs like • “Don’t be Cruel” • “Hound Dog” • “Jailhouse Rock” • “Can’t Help Falling In Love” • Richard Penniman • “Little Richard” • Chuck Berry • Jerry Lee Lewis • Bill Haley

  28. The Other America • Millions of white Americans left the cities for the suburbs • Meantime, rural poor migrated to inner cities • 5 million African Americans moved into urban areas • Cities lost people, businesses, property, and income taxes • Poverty grew rapidly and suburban Americans were unaware

  29. Urban Renewal or Urban Removal? • Urban renewal was a proposed solution to the housing problem in inner cities • Solution – tear out rundown neighborhoods and reconstruct low-income housing • Only half way successful • Areas were torn down, but instead… • Factories, shopping centers, parking lots and parks were built on some of the new clear land. Most affected were African Americans, Native Americans, and Latinos – lived in dirty crowded slums

  30. Termination Policy • Eliminated federal economic support • Discontinued the reservation system • Distributed tribal lands among individual Native Americans • Bureau of Indian Affairs helped to relocation Native Americans resettle in cities • Policy was a depressing FAILURE • Unable to find jobs • Poor training • Racial prejudice • No access to medical care • Policy abandoned in 1963

More Related