Title: THE POSTWAR BOOM
1THE POSTWAR BOOM
- THE AMERICAN DREAM IN THE 1950S
2Chapter 19.1 Essential Questions
- What economic and social problems faced Americans
after World War II? - How did the desire for stability lead to
political conservatism? - What were causes and effects of social unrest in
the postwar period? - How was Trumans domestic policy different from
Eisenhowers?
3SECTION 1 POSTWAR AMERICA
- After WWII, returning vets faced a severe housing
shortage - In response to the crisis, developers used
assembly-line methods to mass-produce houses - Developer William Levitt bragged that his company
could build a home in 16 minutes for 7,000 - Suburbs were born
With the help of low-interest loans from the GI
Bill, many veterans moved into suburbs
4REDEFINING THE FAMILY
- A return to traditional roles after the war was
the norm - Men were expected to work, while women were
expected to stay home and care for the children - Conflict emerged as many women wanted to stay in
the workforce - Divorce rates surged but were highly frowned upon
5REMARKABLE ECONOMIC RECOVERY
- Experts who predicted a postwar depression were
proved wrong as they failed to consider the 135
billion in savings Americans had accumulated from
defense work, service pay, and investments in war
bonds - Americans were ready to buy consumer goods
6DESPITE GROWTH, ISSUES PERSIST
- One persistent postwar issue involved labor
strikes - In 1946 alone, 4.5 million discontented workers,
including Steelworkers, coal miners and railroad
workers went on strike
7TRUMAN TOUGH ON STRIKERS
- Truman refused to let strikes cripple the nation
- He threatened to draft the striking workers and
then order them as soldiers to return to work - The strategy worked as strikers returned to their
jobs
8SOCIAL UNREST PERSISTS
- African Americans felt they deserved equal
rights, especially after hundreds of thousands
served in WWII - Truman took action in 1948 by desegregating the
armed forces - Additionally, Truman ordered an end to
discrimination in the hiring of governmental
employees
9THE 1948 ELECTION
Dewey
- The Democrats nominated President Truman in 1948
- The Republicans nominated New York Governor
Thomas Dewey - Polls showed Dewey held a comfortable lead going
into election day
10TRUMAN WINS IN A STUNNING UPSET
- Trumans Give em hell, Harry campaign worked
- Truman won a very close race against Dewey
Truman holds a now infamous Chicago Tribune
announcing (incorrectly) Deweys victory
11To protest Trumans emphasis on Civil Rights,
Southern Democrats, or Dixiecrats, opted to run
a third candidate, South Carolina Governor Strom
Thurmond
12Trumans Fair Deal
- Truman proposed an ambitious economic program- it
was supposed to be an extension of FDRs New
Deal - He proposed
- A nationwide system of compulsory health
insurance (can anyone say Obamacare?) (Def) - A crop-subsidy system for farmers (Def)
- Raising the minimum wage (P)
- Extending Social Security to more people (P)
- Initiating flood control and irrigation projects
(P) - Secured federal funding for low-income housing
13REPUBLICANS PLAN FOR 1952 ELECTION
- By 1951 Trumans approval rating sank to an
all-time low of just 23 - Why? Korean War, rising tide of McCarthyism, and
a general impression of ineffectiveness - Truman decides not to run again
The Republicans (right) were chomping at the bit
in the 52 election
14STEVENSON VS. IKE 1952 ELECTION
- The Democrats nominated intellectual Illinois
Governor Adlai Stevenson while the Republicans
nominated war hero Dwight David Eisenhower
Ike
Stevenson
15I LIKE IKE
- Eisenhower used the slogan, I Like Ike for his
presidential campaign - Republicans used Ikes strong military background
to emphasize his ability to combat Communism
worldwide
16IKES VP SLIP-UP
- One potential disaster for Ike was his running
mates alleged slush fund - Richard Nixon responded by going on T.V. and
delivering an emotional speech denying charges
but admitting to accepting one gift for his
children a dog named Checkers - The Checkers speech saved the ticket notice
again the power of TV!
Nixon and his dog Checkers
17IKE WINS 1952 ELECTION
18Ikes Hits and Misses
- Pressed hard to bring about a balanced budget and
tax cuts - Raised the minimum wage
- Extended Social Security and unemployment
benefits - Increased funding for public housing
- Backed the creation of the Interstate Highway
System
- Tried to avoid controversy.
- Was forced to intervene in the Little Rock (AR)
Central HS crisis - Brown v. Board of Education ruling took place in
1954 - Rosa Parks/Montgomery Bus Boycott in 1955
- Ike did not press for an end to segregation
19Ike Walks the Middle of the Road
- Ikes approach to politics- Dynamic
Conservatism (also known as modern
Republicanism) - He wanted government to be conservative when it
comes to money and liberal when it comes to human
beings.
20Ch.19.2 Essential Questions
- How did changes in business affect workers?
- What was the suburban lifestyle like in the
1950s? - What were the causes and effects in the
automobile industry boom? - Why was there an increase in consumerism in the
1950s?
21SECTION 2 THE AMERICAN DREAM IN THE FIFTIES
- After WWII ended, Americans turned their
attention to their families and jobs - New businesses and technology created
opportunities for many - By the end of the 1950s, Americans were enjoying
the highest standard of living in the world
Ozzie and Harriet reflected the perfect American
family
22THE ORGANIZATION AND THE ORGANIZATION MAN
- During the 1950s, businesses expanded rapidly
- More and more people held white-collar jobs -
clerical, management, or professional jobs - The fields of sales, advertising, insurance and
communications exploded
White Collar jobs expanded greatly in the 1950s
23SOCIAL CONFORMITY
- American workers found themselves becoming
standardized - Called the Organization Man, the modern worker
struggled with a loss of individualism - Businesses did not want creative thinkers, rebels
or anyone that would rock the boat
24Despite their success, some workers questioned
whether pursuing the American dream exacted too
high a price, as conformity replaced
individuality
25CONGLOMERATES EMERGE
- Conglomerates, major corporations that include a
number of smaller companies in unrelated fields,
emerged in the 1950s - One conglomerate, International Telephone and
Telegraph (ITT), bought rental car companies and
hotel chains
26FRANCHISES EMERGE
- Another strategy for business expansion was
franchising - A franchise is a company that offers similar
services in many locations - Fast food restaurants developed the first
franchises in America
McDonalds is one of the leading franchises in
the world
27THE SUBURBAN LIFESTYLE
- Most Americans worked in cities, but fewer and
fewer of them lived there - New highways and the affordability of cars and
gasoline made commuting possible - Of the 13 million homes built in the 1950s, 85
were built in suburbs - For many, the suburbs were the American Dream
The American Dream complete with a white picket
fence
28THE BABY BOOM
- During the late 1940s and through the early 1960s
the birthrate in the U.S. soared - At its height in 1957, a baby was born in America
every 7 seconds (over 4.3 million babies in 57
alone) - Baby boomers represent the largest generation in
the nations history
29What are the official years of the Baby Boom Generation?
1946 - 1964 saw a marked increase in the number of births in North America.
How did the birthrate rise and fall during the baby boom years in the US? How did the birthrate rise and fall during the baby boom years in the US?
1940 2,559,000 births per year
1946 3,311,000 births per year
1955 4,097,000 births per year
1957 4,300,000 births per year
1964 4,027,000 births per year
1974 3,160,000 births per year
30WHY SO MANY BABIES?
- Why did the baby boom occur when it did?
- Husbands returning from war
- Decreasing marriage age
- Desirability of large families
- Confidence in economy
- Advances in medicine
31WHAT IT WILL MEAN TO YOU
Your generation will be supporting an
increasingly aging American population
32ADVANCES IN MEDICINE AND CHILDCARE
- Advances in the treatment of childhood diseases
included drugs to combat typhoid fever and polio
(Jonas Salk)
Dr. Salk was instrumental in the eradication of
polio
33DR. SPOCK ADVISES PARENTS
- Many parents raised their children according to
the guidelines of pediatrician Dr. Benjamin Spock - He thought children should be allowed to express
themselves and parents should never physically
punish their kids
Dr. Spocks book sold 10 million copies in the
1950s
34IMPACT OF BABY BOOM
- As a result of the baby boom 10 million students
entered elementary schools in the 1950s - California built a new school every 7 days in the
late 50s - Toy sales reached an all-time high in 1958 when
1.25 billion in toys were sold
35Symbols of the Baby Boom in Suburbia 1950 1960
Hot Dog Production (millions of lbs) 750 1050
Potato Chip Production (millions of lbs) 320 532
Sales of lawn and porch furniture (millions of dollars) 53.6 145.2
Sales of power mowers (millions of dollars) 1.0 3.8
Sales of floor polishers (millions of dollars) 0.24 1.0
Sales of Encyclopaedia (millions of dollars) 72 300
Number of Children age 5-14 24.3 35.5
Number of baseball Little Leagues 776 5,700
36Fads of the Baby Boomers
Hula Hoops
Frozen Foods
Poodle Skirts and Saddle Shoes
Panty Raids
Barbie and GI Joe Dolls
Bikinis
Frisbees
Yo-yos
Ouija Boards
Dune Buggies
What celebrity deaths have most affected the Baby Boomers?
John F. Kennedy
Marilyn Monroe
Martin Luther King
John Lennon
37WOMENS ROLES IN THE 1950S
- During the 1950s, the role of homemaker and
mother was glorified in popular magazines, movies
and television
38WOMEN AT WORK
- Those women who did work were finding job
opportunities limited to fields such as nursing,
teaching and office support - Women earned far less than man for comparable jobs
39LEISURE IN THE 1950s
- Americans experienced shorter work weeks and more
vacation time than ever before - Leisure time activities became a multi-billion
dollar industry - Labor-saving devices added more spare time
Labor-saving devices provided more leisure time
for Americans
40POPULAR LEISURE ACTIVITES
- In 1953 alone Americans spent 30 billion on
leisure - Popular activities included fishing, bowling,
hunting and golf - Americans attended, or watched on T.V., football,
baseball and basketball games
Bowling remains one of the top leisure activities
in the U.S.
41THE AUTOMOBILE CULTURE
- After the rationing of WWII, inexpensive and
plentiful fuel and easy credit led many to buy
cars - By 1960, over 60 million Americans owned autos
42INTERSTATE HIGHWAY ACT 1956
- In 1956 Ike authorized a nationwide highway
network 41,000 miles of road linking America
43THE INTERSTATE HIGHWAY SYSTEM
- Automania spurred the construction of roads
linking major cities while connecting schools,
shopping centers and workplaces to residential
suburbs
44IMPACT OF THE HIGHWAY
- The Interstate Highway system resulted in
- More trucking
- Less railroad
- More suburbs, further away
Trucking is the 1 means of moving cargo in the
United States today
45HIGHWAYS HOMOGENIZE AMERICA
- Another effect of the highway system was that the
scenery of America began to look the same - Restaurants, motels, highway billboards, gas
stations, etc. all began to look similar - The nation had become homogenized
Anytown, USA
46Our new roads, with their ancillaries, the
motels, filling stations, and restaurants
advertising eats, have made it possible for you
to drive from Brooklyn to Los Angeles without a
change of diet, scenery, or culture. John
Keats, The Insolent Chariots 1958
47DOWNSIDE TO MOBILITY
- While the car industry boom stimulated
production, jobs, shopping centers, and the
restaurant industry, it also had negative effects - Noise
- Pollution
- Accidents
- Traffic Jams
- Stress
- Decline of public
- transportation
48RISE OF CONSUMERISM
- By the mid-1950s, nearly 60 of Americans were
members of the middle class - Consumerism (buying material goods) came to be
equated with success and status - Keeping up with the Joness
49NEW PRODUCTS
- One new product after another appeared in the
marketplace - Appliances, electronics, and other household
goods were especially popular - The first credit card (Diners Club) appeared in
1950 and American Express was introduced in 1958 - Personal debt increased nearly 3x in the 1950s
50THE ADVERTISING AGE
- The advertising industry capitalized on runaway
consumerism by encouraging more spending - Ads were everywhere
- Ad agencies increased their spending 50 during
the 1950s
Advertising is everywhere today in America
51Ch.19.3 Essential Questions
- How did television programs in the 1950s reflect
middle-class values? - How did the beat movement and
- rock n roll music clash with middle-class
values? - How did African-American entertainers help to
integrate the media in the 1950s?
52SECTION 3 POPULAR CULTURE
- A new era of mass media led by television emerged
in the 1950s - In 1948, only 9 of homes had T.V
- In 1950, 55 of homes had T.V.
- By 1960, 90 of American homes had T.V.
53THE GOLDEN AGE OF TELEVISION
- Mass media- the means of communication that reach
large audiences - The 1950s was known as the Golden Age of
Television - Comedies were the main attraction as Milton
Berle, Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz were very
popular
Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball starred in I Love Lucy
54TELEVISION EXPERIMENTS WITH VARIOUS FORMATS
- The FCC (Federal Communications Commission) did
its best to regulate television and radio - Television innovations like on-the-scene-news
reporting, interviews, westerns and sporting
events offered the viewer a variety of shows - Kids shows like The Howdy Doody Show and The
Mickey Mouse Club were extremely popular
55TV ADS, TV GUIDES AND TV DINNERS EXPAND
- TV advertising soared from 170 million in 1950
to nearly 2 billion in 1960 - TV Guide magazine quickly became the best selling
magazine - Frozen TV dinners were introduced in 1954 these
complete ready-to-heat meals on disposable
aluminum trays made it easy for people to eat
without missing their favorite shows
56A Downside to TV???
- Critics objected to its effects on children
(exposure to violence) - Women appeared in stereotypical roles
- Male characters outnumbered female by 3 to 1
- African-Americans and Latinos rarely appeared in
television programs at all - 1950s television portrayed an idealized white
America, with no references to poverty, diversity
or contemporary conflicts
57Would the Birth of Television Lead to the Death
of Radio and the Movies?
- Radio and movies survived because they adapted
and evolved. - Radio stations now offered news, weather, and
more importantly- rock n roll - Movie theatres also had some advantages over TV-
size, color, and sound
James Dean, a teenage idol, died at the age of
24 in a car accident.
58A SUBCULTURE EMERGES
- Although mass media and television were wildly
popular in the 1950s, dissenting voices emerged - The Beat Movement in literature, art and poetry
celebrated a nonconformist lifestyle and attitude - Rock n roll clashed with tidy suburban views of
life and was originally called race music.
59BEATNIKS FOLLOW OWN PATH
- Centered in San Francisco, L.A. and New Yorks
Greenwich Village, the Beat Movement expressed
social nonconformity - Followers, called beatniks, tended to shun work
and sought understanding through Zen Buddhism,
music, and sometimes drugs
Beatniks often performed poetry or music in
coffeehouses or bars
60MUSIC IN THE 1950s
- Musicians in the 1950s added electronic
instruments to traditional blues music, creating
rhythm and blues - Cleveland DJ Alan Freed was the first to play
this music in 1951 he called it rock and roll - First called race music- the early performers
were mostly black, but the audience was mostly
white
FREED
61ROCK N ROLL
- In the early and mid-fifties, Richard Penniman,
Chuck Berry, Bill Haley and the Comets, and
especially Elvis Presley brought rock and roll to
the forefront - The driving rhythm and lyrics featuring love,
cars,
and problems
of being
young ---
captivated
teenagers
across the
country
62THE KING OF ROCK AND ROLL
- Presleys rebellious style captured young
audiences - Girls screamed and fainted, and boys tried to
imitate him
63SECTION 4 THE OTHER AMERICA
- In 1962, nearly one out of every four Americans
was living below the poverty level - Most of these poor were the elderly, single
women and their children, and/or
minorities
64WHITE FLIGHT
- In the 1950s, millions of middle-class white
Americans left the cities for the suburbs - At the same time millions of African American
rural poor migrated to the cities - The so-called White Flight drained cities of
valuable resources, money and taxes
65Urban Renewal
- Most African Americans, Native Americans and
Latinos in the cities had to live in dirty,
crowded slums. - One proposed solution was urban renewal. The
National Housing Act of 1949 called for the
tearing down of rundown neighborhoods and
constructing low-income housing - Although the tearing down did occur, parking
lots, shopping centers, highways, parks and
factories were constructed on much of the cleared
land - Urban renewal simply became urban removal as
many people simply had to move from one ghetto to
another.
Dodger Stadium- An example of urban renewal
66Poverty Leads to Activism
- When the United States entered WWII, a shortage
of agricultural workers spurred the government to
initiate a program in which Mexican braceros, or
hired hands, were allowed into the U.S. to
harvest crops from 1942-1947 - They were expected to return to Mexico once their
employment ended but many remained in the U.S.
illegally to escape the poor economic conditions
in Mexico. - As a result, prejudice against Mexicans and
Mexican-Americans rose dramatically
67The Longoria Incident
- Felix Longoria was a Mexican-American WWII hero
who had been killed in the Philippines. - The only undertaker in his Texas hometown refused
to provide his family with funeral services - Outraged Mexican Americans stepped up their
efforts to stamp out discrimination by creating
the G.I. Forum and the Unity League of
California - Both were designed to register Mexican American
voters and to promote candidates who would
represent their interests.
68Native Americans Continue Their Struggle
- From 1887 to 1934, the government policy towards
Native Americans was one of Americanization and
assimilation. - In 1953 the federal government announced it would
give up its responsibility for Native American
tribes. - The new approach, known as the termination
policy eliminated federal economic support,
discontinued the reservation system, and
redistributed tribal lands to individual Native
Americans. - Native Americans were encouraged to resettle in
cities. - The policy was a dismal failure. Most couldnt
find jobs because of poor training and racial
prejudice. In 1963, the termination policy was
abandoned - The National Congress of American Indians was
formed to 1) Ensure civil rights for Native
Americans and 2) enable Indians on reservations
to retain their own customs