Transcript Chapter 26

Chapter 26
Postwar Confidence
and Anxiety
1945-1960
Section 1
An Economic Boom
U.S. after WWII
• August 1945 – 12 million Americans
in military
• No longer a need for military
implements
• Millions of defense workers lost
jobs
• Wartime industries had to convert
to meet peacetime needs
• Fear of joblessness & a return to
depression
Demobilization
• Process of bringing
home troops from former
war situation
• Pres. Truman began by
the end of 1945
GI Bill of Rights
• Congressional act granting
veterans benefits including: a
year of unemployment
payments to those unable to
find jobs ($20.00/week);
financial aid to those
attending college; loans to
build homes & businesses;
veteran’s hospitals
Baby boom
• Intense population
increase following WWII
(1946-1964)
Economic Changes
• Skyrocketing prices – too
much money to spend on too
few goods
• Business cycle increased –
demand increased;
businesses hired more &
produced more; people
bought more
• U.S. produced about 50%
of world’s total output
leading to higher standard
of living than anywhere in
the world
• Increased productivity
(rate at which goods are
produced or services
performed) – due to
technology improvements
• Korean War brought a
continued commitment
to defense spending by
the gov’t
Taft-Hartley Act
• Outlawed the closed shop
– a workplace in which
only union members can
be hired
• Prompted by continuous
strikes
• Vetoed by Truman but
overridden by Congress
Election of 1948
• South Carolina Gov. Strom
Thurmond – States’ Rights
Party
• Former VP Henry Wallace –
Progressive Party
• New York Gov. Thomas
Dewey – Republican
• Pres. Harry Truman Democrat
• Dewey was predicted to
win but Truman made a
“whistle stop” train tour
of 30 speeches & 31,000
miles to win by a narrow
victory
Fair Deal
• Truman’s plan to
strengthen existing New
Deal reforms & establish
new programs (national
health insurance)
• Congress did not
support
Election of 1952
• WWII Gen. Dwight D.
“Ike” Eisenhower –
Republican (had never
held political office)
• Illinois Sen. Adlai
Stevenson - Democrat
• First Presidential
election to use
campaign ads on TV
• Eisenhower wins easily
Section 2
A Society on the
Move
Suburban Migration
• 40 million moved to the
suburbs between 1940 &
1960
• Why? – shortage of
urban housing (baby
boom families)
William Levitt
• Mass produced suburban
homes using the same
plan
• Built in weeks rather than
months
• Paid for on an installment
plan
Federal Housing
Administration (FHA)
• Provided low-interest
loans allowing home
buyers to make a down
payment of 5-10% & pay
out 30-year mortgage
“Car culture”
• Registered automobiles rose
from 26M to 60M from 1945
to 1960
• Due to growth of suburbs
• Big engines, enormous
horsepower, newest
technology
• Resulted in fast-food
restaurants & drive-in movies
Interstate Highway Act
• 1956 law authorizing
funds to build 41,000
miles of highways –
multilane expressways
to connect the nation’s
major cities
• Highways were renamed
in 1990 to recognize
Eisenhower’s role –
became known as the
Dwight D. Eisenhower
System of Interstate and
Defense Highways
• Boosted travel & vacation
industries
Sunbelt
• Name given to the
southern & western states
which saw an increase in
population following WWII
• Appealing climate
• Jobs in defense industries
including aerospace &
electronics
Impact of Migration
• Political power shifted
with population shift:
Suburbs & Sunbelt gained
representation;
Northeast & Midwest lost
• Environmental concerns:
traffic jams, smog & water
shortages
Service sector
• Businesses that provide
services, such as
healthcare, law, retail,
banking, or insurance
• Outnumbered jobs in the
manufacturing sector
• Included those in
information industries
Information industries
• Businesses that provide
informational services
• Built & operated first
computers
• Hotel reservations; bank
accounts
ENIAC
• Electronic Numerical
Integrator and Computer
• Took up 18,000 square
feet (3 basketball courts)
• Less powerful than today’s
desktop computers
Franchise businesses
• Allow a company
to distribute its
products or
services through
retail outlets
owned by
independent
operators
• Stressed quality
& sameness
Kemmons Wilson
• Homebuilder who
established the Holiday
Inn franchise after a
family vacation on which
hotels were difficult to
locate, overpriced &
lacked adequate parking
facilities
Multinational corporations
• Companies that produced
& sold their goods &
services all over the world
& established branches
worldwide
• General Motors, General
Electric, IBM, Coca Cola
Education Expansion
• More educated workforce
boosted economic
productivity
• Percentage college
attendees rose from 15% to
40% between 1940 & 1960
• High school graduations
increased
• Federal funding for
schools increased after
the launch of Sputnik –
National Defense
Education Act: $1B
program to produce
more scientists &
science teachers
California Master Plan
• Called for 3 tiers of
higher education:
research universities,
state colleges, &
community colleges – to
be accessible to all of
the state’s citizens
Brown v. Board of Education
of Topeka
• 1954 Supreme Court
ruling to desegregate
schools on the basis that
segregation in schools
was unconstitutional
Section 3
Mass Culture &
Family Life
Consumerism
• Large scale buying, mostly on
credit
• Why? – 1). Rise in median family
income (average family income);
2). Consumer-oriented
companies encouraged buying
on credit
• Shopping became a pastime
(Supermarkets & shopping
centers)
Nuclear family
• A household consisting of
a mother and father and
their children
• Seen as the backbone of
society in the 1950’s
• Traditional family values
returned
Dr. Benjamin Spock
• Author of Common Sense
Book of Baby and Child
Care
• Emphasized the
importance of nurturing
children; children could
not get too much comfort
& love
Religious Revival
• Organized religious groups
became popular
• Church attendance rose
• Increased number of
churches strengthened
community ties
• Religious services were
shown on TV
Dr. Jonas Salk
• 1954 – developed a
vaccine against polio
which along with an oral
vaccine developed by
Alfred Sabin almost
eliminated the disease
• Contributed to longer life
expectancies for children
Television
• Bought by Americans at
a faster rate than radios
or cars in the 1920’s
• Popularity threatened he
movie industry
• Attracted children
• Shows
reflected &
reinforced
traditional
family values
Rock-and-roll
• Name given by disc jockey
Alan Freed to music that
had commonly been
known as “race” music
• Originated in the rhythm &
blues traditions of African
Americans
• Included
musicians
such as
Elvis
Presley
and Chuck
Berry
Section 4
Dissent and
Discontent
Betty Friedan
• Author of The Feminine
Mystique which described
the plight of the suburban
housewife during the
1950’s
• Later became
instrumental to the
women’s rights movement
Beatniks
• Writers and artists who
openly criticized
American society
• Refused to conform to
accepted ways of
dressing, thinking or
acting
Rural & Urban poverty
• Urban slums, rural poverty
& discrimination
dominated American
society despite
appearances of wealth &
prosperity
• 1962 book claimed ¼ of
population lived in poverty
Inner city
• The older, central part of
a city with crowded
neighborhoods in which
low-income, usually
minority groups, live
• Usually have increased
crime rates
Urban Renewal
• Projects developed by
federal, state & local
governments to
“revitalize” the older
parts of town
Injustices
• Puerto Ricans: migrants to
New York City clustered
together in poor
neighborhoods with few
economic opportunities;
discrimination; lack of
political power due to
language differences
• Mexicans: Braceros
(Mexican migrant farm
workers) had been given
temporary visas during
WWII; often exploited &
cheated by employers
• Ernesto Galarza –
organized unions for
Mexican farm workers
• Native Americans: 1953 –
Termination policy enacted
to end tribal government &
relocate Native Americans
to the nation’s cities; also
terminated federal health
& welfare