1. On loose leaf paper, you
may want to take some
notes as I go through the
PowerPoint.
You should read the textbook
pages 423-443 and take notes on
your Reading Notes pages for a
more comprehensive look at the
50s
3. GI Bill- Servicemanâs
Readjustment Act
īŽ After demobilization WWII
vets worried about lack of
housing and unemployment
īŽ provided 1 year
unemployment payments to
vets unable to find work
īŽ Financial aid for college
īŽ Low interest loans for
homes or to start
businesses
4. THE BABY BOOM
īŽ During the late
1940s and through
the early 1960s the
birthrate in the U.S.
soared
īŽ At its height in 1957,
a baby was born in
America every 7
seconds (over 4.3
million babies in â57
alone)
īŽ Baby boomers
represent the largest
generation in the
nationâs history
5. What 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?
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
6. WHY SO MANY BABIES?
Why did the baby boom
occur when it did?
īŽ Husbands returning from
war
īŽ Decreasing marriage age
īŽ Desirability of large
families (conformity)
īŽ Confidence in economy
īŽ Advances in medicine
7. IMPACT OF BABY BOOM
īŽ As a result of the baby
boom 10 million
students entered
elementary schools in
the 1950s
īŽ California built a new
school every 7 days in
the late â50s
īŽ Toy sales reached an
all-time high in 1958
when $1.25 billion in
toys were sold
8. Symbols 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
9. Fads of the Baby Boomers
Hula Hoops
Frozen Foods
Poodle Skirts and Saddle Shoes
Sock Hops
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
10. WHAT IT WILL MEAN TO YOU
Your generation will be supporting an increasingly
aging American population
11. REMARKABLE
ECONOMIC
RECOVERY
īŽ Immediately following WWII, we experienced
inflation.
īŽ 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
īŽ Americans were ready to buy consumer goods
12. THE AMERICAN DREAM IN THE
FIFTIES
īŽ After WWII ended, Americans
turned their attention to their
families and jobs
īŽ New businesses and improved
productivity due to new
technology created
opportunities for many
īŽ By the end of the 1950s,
Americans were enjoying the
highest standard of living in
the world
īŽ Military spending due to the
Cold War also boosted the
economy.
Ozzie and Harriet reflected
the perfect American family
13. AMERICANS MIGRATE
TO THE SUNBELT
īŽ Many moved to the
sunbelt states (South and
West)
īŽ Warm climate (and the
development of air
conditioning made this
possible)
īŽ Booming industrial
market and growing
cities
īŽ Growth of aerospace
and electronics
industries
14. CHANGES IN LABOR FORCE
īŽ Women in the
workforce
increased,
although most
worked part time
and all were
underpaid.
īŽ Most often jobs,
not careers.
15. THE ORGANIZATION AND THE
ORGANIZATION MAN
īŽ During the 1950s,
businesses expanded
rapidly
īŽ More and more people
held âwhite-collarâ jobs -
clerical, management, or
professional jobs
īŽ The fields of sales,
advertising, insurance
and communications
exploded
White Collar jobs expanded
greatly in the 1950s
16. FRANCHISES EMERGE
īŽ Another strategy for
business expansion
was franchising
īŽ A franchise is a
company that offers
similar services in
many locations
īŽ Fast food restaurants
developed the first
franchises in America
McDonaldâs is one of
the leading franchises
in the world
17. CONGLOMERATES EMERGE
īŽ Conglomerates, major corporations that
include a number of smaller companies
in unrelated fields, emerged in the
1950s
īŽ One conglomerate, International
Telephone and Telegraph (ITT), bought
rental car companies and hotel chains
18. MULTI-NATIONAL
CORPORATIONS EMERGE
īŽ Companies that produced and sold their
goods and services all over the world
and established branches abroad.
īŽ ie. Coca Cola sold soda worldwide
īŽ Hollywood had movie audiences worldwide
19. SOCIAL CONFORMITY
īŽ American workers found
themselves becoming
standardized
īŽ Called the âOrganization
Man,â the modern worker
struggled with a loss of
individualism
īŽ Businesses did not want
creative thinkers, rebels
or anyone that would
ârock the boatâ
20. Despite their success, some workers questioned whether
pursuing the American dream exacted too high a price, as
conformity replaced individuality
21. THE 1948 ELECTION
īŽ The Democrats
nominated President
Truman in 1948
īŽ The Republicans
nominated New York
Governor Thomas
Dewey
īŽ Polls showed Dewey
held a comfortable
lead going into
election day
Dewey
22. TRUMAN WINS IN A
STUNNING UPSET
īŽ Trumanâs
âwhistlestop,â
âGive âem hell,
Harryâ campaign
worked
īŽ Truman won a
very close race
against Dewey
Truman holds a now infamous Chicago
Tribune announcing (incorrectly)
Deweyâs victory
23. To protest Trumanâs emphasis on Civil Rights, the South
opted to run a third candidate, South Carolina Governor
Strom Thurmond- Dixiecrat
24. DESPITE GROWTH,
ISSUES PERSIST
īŽ One persistent
postwar issue
involved labor
strikes
īŽ In 1946 alone, 4.5
million discontented
workers, including
Steelworkers, coal
miners and railroad
workers went on
strike
25. TRUMAN TOUGH ON
STRIKERS
īŽ Truman refused to let strikes cripple the nation
īŽ He threatened to draft the striking workers and
then order them as soldiers to return to work
īŽ The strategy worked as strikers returned to their
jobs
26. SOCIAL UNREST
PERSISTS
īŽ African Americans felt
they deserved equal
rights, especially after
hundreds of thousands
served in WWII
īŽ Truman took action in
1948 by desegregating
the armed forces
īŽ Additionally, Truman
ordered an end to
discrimination in the
hiring of governmental
employees
27. Trumanâs Fair Deal
īŽ An extension of Rooseveltâs New Deal
īŽ Proposal for a nationwide system of
health insurance and a crop-subsidy
system â both defeated
īŽ Raised minimum wage and
extended Social Security Coverage
28. REPUBLICANS PLAN
FOR 1952 ELECTION
īŽ By 1951 Trumanâs
approval rating sank
to an all-time low of
just 23%
īŽ Why? Korean War,
rising tide of
McCarthyism, and a
general impression
of ineffectiveness The Republican (right) were
chomping at the bit in the â52
election
29. STEVENSON VS. IKE 1952
ELECTION
īŽ The Democrats
nominated
intellectual Illinois
Governor Adlai
Stevenson while
the Republicans
nominated war
hero Dwight David
Eisenhower
Stevenson Ike
30. âI LIKE IKEâ
īŽ Eisenhower used the
slogan, âI Like Ikeâ
for his presidential
campaign
īŽ Republicans used
Ikeâs strong military
background to
emphasize his ability
to combat
Communism
worldwide
31. IKEâS VP SLIP-UP
īŽ One potential disaster
for Ike was his running
mateâs alleged âslush
fundâ
īŽ Richard Nixon
responded by going on
T.V. and delivering an
emotional speech
denying charges but
admitting to accepting
one gift for his children
â a dog named Checkers
īŽ The âCheckers speechâ
saved the ticket
Nixon and his dog
Checkers
34. POSTWAR AMERICA
īŽ After WWII, returning
vets faced a severe
housing shortage
īŽ In response to the crisis,
developers used
assembly-line methods to
mass-produce houses
īŽ Developer William Levitt
bragged that his
company could build a
home in 16 minutes for
$7,000
īŽ Suburbs were born
īŽ Film clips from "A City is
Born" - YouTube
35. THE SUBURBAN LIFESTYLE
īŽ Most Americans worked
in cities, but fewer and
fewer of them lived there
īŽ New highways and the
affordability of cars and
gasoline made
commuting possible
īŽ Of the 13 million homes
built in the 1950s, 85%
were built in suburbs
īŽ For many, the suburbs
were the American
Dream
The American Dream complete with
a white picket fence
36. THE AUTOMOBILE
CULTURE
īŽ After the rationing of WWII,
inexpensive and plentiful fuel and easy
credit led many to buy cars
īŽ By 1960, over 60 million Americans
owned autos
37. INTERSTATE HIGHWAY
ACT 1956
īŽ In 1956 Ike
authorized
a
nationwide
highway
network â
41,000
miles of
road linking
America
38. THE INTERSTATE HIGHWAY
SYSTEM
īŽ âAutomaniaâ spurred
the construction of
roads linking major
cities while
connecting schools,
shopping centers and
workplaces to
residential suburbs
39. IMPACT OF THE
HIGHWAY
The Interstate
Highway system
resulted in:
īŽ More trucking
īŽ Less railroad
īŽ More suburbs,
further away
Trucking is the #1 means of
moving cargo in the United
States today
40. HIGHWAYS
âHOMOGENIZEâ AMERICA
īŽ Another effect of the
highway system was
that the scenery of
America began to
look the same
īŽ Restaurants, motels,
highway billboards,
gas stations, etc. all
began to look similar
īŽ The nation had
become
âhomogenizedâ
Anytown, USA
41. âOur 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.â
John Keats, The Insolent Chariots
1958
Safari Montage: Story of Us
Superpower /Interstate Hwy
42. DOWNSIDE
TO MOBILITY
īŽ While the car industry boom stimulated
production, jobs, shopping centers, and the
restaurant industry, it also had
negative effects
īŽ Noise
īŽ Pollution
īŽ Accidents
īŽ Traffic Jams
īŽ Stress
īŽ Decline of public
transportation
43. RISE OF
CONSUMERISM
īŽ By the mid-1950s,
nearly 60% of
Americans were
members of the
middle class
īŽ Consumerism (buying
material goods) came
to be equated with
success and status
44. NEW PRODUCTS
īŽ One new product after
another appeared in
the marketplace
īŽ Appliances, electronics,
and other household
goods were especially
popular
īŽ The first credit card
(Dinerâs Club) appeared
in 1950 and American
Express was introduced
in 1958
īŽ Personal debt
increased nearly 3x in
the 1950s
45. THE ADVERTISING
AGE
īŽ The advertising
industry capitalized
on runaway
consumerism by
encouraging more
spending
īŽ Ads were everywhere
īŽ Ad agencies increased
their spending 50%
during the 1950s
Advertising is everywhere today in
America
46. REDEFINING THE FAMILY
īŽ A return to traditional
roles after the war was
the norm
īŽ The âNuclear Familyâ was
idealized
īŽ Men were expected to
work, while women were
expected to stay home
and care for the children
īŽ Conflict emerged as
many women wanted to
stay in the workforce
īŽ Divorce rates surged
47. WOMENâS ROLES IN THE
1950S
īŽ During the
1950s, the role
of homemaker
and mother was
glorified in
popular
magazines,
movies and
television
48. WOMEN AT WORK
īŽ Those women who
did work were
finding job
opportunities
limited to fields such
as nursing, teaching
and office support
īŽ Women earned far
less than man for
comparable jobs
49. ADVANCES IN MEDICINE
AND CHILDCARE
īŽ 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
50. DR. SPOCK
ADVISES PARENTS
īŽ Many parents raised
their children according
to the guidelines of
pediatrician Dr.
Benjamin Spock
īŽ He thought children
should be allowed to
express themselves and
parents should never
physically punish their
kids
Dr. Spockâs book sold 10
million copies in the 1950s
51. LEISURE IN THE 1950s
īŽ Americans
experienced shorter
work weeks and
more vacation time
than ever before
īŽ Leisure time
activities became a
multi-billion dollar
industry
īŽ Labor-saving
devices added more
spare time
Labor-saving
devices
provided
more leisure
time for
Americans
52. POPULAR LEISURE
ACTIVITES
īŽ In 1953 alone
Americans spent $30
billion on leisure
īŽ Popular activities
included fishing,
bowling, hunting and
golf
īŽ Americans attended,
or watched on T.V.,
football, baseball and
basketball games
Bowling remains
one of the top
leisure activities
in the U.S.
53. POPULAR CULTURE
īŽ A new era of mass
media led by
television
emerged in the
1950s
īŽ In 1948, only 9%
of homes had T.V
īŽ In 1950, 55% of
homes had T.V.
īŽ By 1960, 90% of
American homes
had T.V.
54. THE GOLDEN AGE
OF TELEVISION
īŽ The 1950s was
known as the
âGolden Age of
Televisionâ
īŽ 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
55. TELEVISION EXPERIMENTS
WITH VARIOUS FORMATS
īŽ Television innovations
like on-the-scene-
news reporting,
interviews, westerns
and sporting events
offered the viewer a
variety of shows
īŽ Kidsâ shows like The
Howdy Doody Show
and The Mickey Mouse
Club were extremely
popular
56. TV ADS, TV GUIDES AND TV
DINNERS EXPAND
īŽ TV advertising soared from $170 million in 1950 to
nearly $2 billion in 1960
īŽ TV Guide magazine quickly became the best selling
magazine
īŽ Frozen TV dinners were introduced in 1954 â these
complete ready-to-heat meals on disposable aluminum
trays made it easy for people to eat without missing
their favorite shows
57. A SUBCULTURE EMERGES
īŽ Although mass
media and
television were
wildly popular in
the 1950s,
dissenting voices
emerged
īŽ The âBeat
Movementâ in
literature and rock
nâ roll clashed with
tidy suburban
views of life
58. BEATNIKS FOLLOW OWN PATH
īŽ Centered in San
Francisco, L.A. and
New Yorkâs Greenwich
Village, the Beat
Movement expressed
social nonconformity
īŽ Followers, called
âbeatniksâ, tended to
shun work and sought
understanding
through Zen
Buddhism, music, and
sometimes drugs
Beatniks often performed poetry
or music in coffeehouses or bars
59. MUSIC IN THE 1950s
īŽ Musicians in the
1950s added
electronic instruments
to traditional blues
music, creating
rhythm and blues
īŽ Cleveland DJ Alan
Freed was the first to
play this music in
1951â he called it
ârock and rollâ
FREED
60. ROCK Nâ ROLL
īŽ 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
īŽ The driving rhythm and lyrics featuring
love, cars,
and problems
of being
young ---
captivated
teenagers
across the
country
61. THE KING OF ROCK AND
ROLL
īŽ Presleyâs
rebellious style
captured young
audiences
īŽ Girls screamed
and fainted,
and boys tried
to imitate him
62. Date: 10/27/16
Activity: 1950s PPT Review
Warm Up:
īŽ Why were the beat movement
and Rock ânâ Roll controversial in
the 1950s?
Homework:
âĸ Articles must be printed AND
submitted through turnitin.com
Class ID: 13377099
Class Password: writing
âĸ Study Guide due tomorrow
10/28
âĸ Unit 2 Test 10/28
Pg Assignment Date
30 Project Calendar 10/14
31 Role Chart 10/14
32 Research Notes 10/14
33 Task Sheet 10/14
34 Rubric 10/14
35 Peer Edit 10/24
36 Unit 2 Study Guide 10/24
63. Date: 10/26/16
Activity: 1950s PPT Review
Warm Up:
How/where did we see
conformity in the 1950s?
Homework:
âĸ Good copy of Mag due
TOMORROW 10/27
âĸ See new Rubric
âĸ (article is 35 pts)
âĸ Articles must be printed AND
submitted through turnitin.com
Class ID: 13377099
Class Password: writing
âĸ Study Guide due Friday 10/28
âĸ Unit 2 Test 10/28
Pg Assignment Date
30 Project Calendar 10/14
31 Role Chart 10/14
32 Research Notes 10/14
33 Task Sheet 10/14
34 Rubric 10/14
35 Peer Edit 10/24
36 Unit 2 Study Guide 10/24
64. SECTION 4: THE OTHER
AMERICA
īŽ In 1962, nearly
one out of every
four Americans
was living below
the poverty level
īŽ Most of these
poor were the
elderly, single
women and
their children,
and/or minorities
65. WHITE FLIGHT
īŽ In the 1950s, millions
of middle-class white
Americans left the
cities for the suburbs
īŽ At the same time
millions of African
American rural poor
migrated to the cities
īŽ The so-called âWhite
Flightâ drained cities
of valuable resources,
money and taxes
66. Inner Cities
īŽ 1962 one out of every four Americans
was living below poverty line
īŽ HUD â Housing and Urban
Development
īŽ Construction of low-income housing
67. Poverty Leads to Activism
īŽ Many Mexicans came to America both
legally and illegally in 1900âs
īŽ Many Mexican-Americans faced
discrimination
īŽ Longoria Incident â WWII hero denied
funeral services in his Texas home
īŽ Organize GI Forum and Unity League
of CA
68. Native Americans
īŽ From the passage of the Dawes Act,
1837-1934, policy of Americanization
īŽ 1924 â Snyder Act granted
citizenship to all Native Americans
īŽ 1934 Indian Reorganization Act
move policy to Native American
Autonomy
69. Native Americans Cont.
īŽ 1943 The Bureau of Indian Affairs
and the federal bureaucracy were
found to be at fault for the troubling
problems of horrific poverty due to
extreme mismanagement.
īŽ 1953 Termination Policy â eliminated
economic support, discontinued
reservation system, distributed tribal
lands to individual tribes
īŽ Due to its failure Termination Policy
abandoned in 1963
70. Goals for the rest of today
īŽ Get your magazine put together
and turned in.
īŽ Make sure your name is on
EVERYTHING in the magazine.
īŽ Make sure I have ONE rubric with
your names in the appropriate role
īŽ Work on study guide (due
tomorrow)
71. Goals for Today:
Take about 20ish Minutes to get the following
accomplished!
âĸCheck to make sure everyone has their rough
drafts of everything!
âĸSee if anyone needs help printing, editing,
creating.
âĸMake sure you all have each otherâs contact
information to send good copies of items,
especially in case of illness.
âĸGet your order together so the TOC can be
made.
âĸGet your citations together so the Bibliography
can be made.
72. Date: 10/28/16
Activity: Test/Vocab
Warm Up:
Homework:
âĸ Articles must be printed AND
submitted through turnitin.com
Class ID: 13377099
Class Password: writing
âĸ Vocab, Reading and
Questions all due on
Tuesday 11/1
Pg Assignment Date
34 Rubric 10/14
35 Peer Edit 10/24
36 Unit 2 Study Guide 10/24
37 Unit 3 Vocab 10/28
38
Communists Take Power
In China Reading
10/28
39
Communists Take Power
In China Questions
10/28
73. Date: 10/20/16
Activity: 1950s PPT Review
īŽ Warm Up: None
Homework:
âĸ Mass Culture Read by Tomorrow
10/20
âĸ Rough Draft of Mag Article due
by MONDAY 10/24
âĸ We will be in the library on
FRIDAY TO WORK ON
THIS
âĸ Social Issues Read by 10/25
âĸ Good copy of Mag due 10/27
âĸ Rubric is being altered
âĸ Articles must be printed AND
submitted through turnitin.com
âĸ Unit 2 Test 10/28
Pg Assignment Date
27 Postwar Prosperity 10/13
28 Mass Culture in the 1950s 10/13
29 Social Issues of the 1950s 10/13
30 Project Calendar 10/14
31 Role Chart 10/14
32 Research Notes 10/14
33 Task Sheet 10/14
34 Rubric 10/14
74. Date: 10/25/16
Activity: 1950s PPT Review
īŽ Warm Up: Take the first 10-12
minutes to work in your groups if
you need to organize and ensure
no one is overlapping
material/ads or extra additions.
Also, discuss order for TOC
Homework:
âĸ Good copy of Mag due 10/27
âĸ See new Rubric
âĸ (article is 35 pts)
âĸ Articles must be printed AND
submitted through turnitin.com
Class ID: 13377099
Class Password: writing
âĸ Study Guide due Friday 10/28
âĸ Unit 2 Test 10/28
Pg Assignment Date
30 Project Calendar 10/14
31 Role Chart 10/14
32 Research Notes 10/14
33 Task Sheet 10/14
34 Rubric 10/14
35 Peer Edit 10/24
36 Unit 2 Study Guide 10/24