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SS8H8 The student will analyze the important events
  that occurred after World War I and their impact on
                       Georgia


• a. Describe the impact of the boll weevil and
  drought on Georgia.
• b. Explain economic factors that resulted in the
  Great Depression.
• c. Discuss the impact of the political career of
  Eugene Talmadge.
• d. Discuss the effect of the New Deal in terms of
  the impact of the Civilian Conservation Corps,
  Agricultural Adjustment Act, rural electrification,
  and Social Security.
The Destruction of King Cotton
  a. Describe the impact of the boll weevil and drought on Georgia

 • Boll weevil: insect which ate Georgia’s
   most important cash crop
 • Price of cotton also dropped
 • 1924: major drought (period with little or
   no rain) hit Georgia
 • Georgia farmers did not have the “good
   life” that many Americans enjoyed
 • Farms closed forcing banks and farm-
   related business to close
The Bottom Drops Out
  b. Explain economic factors that resulted in the Great Depression   .
• Stock Market: Place where shares of
  ownership in corporations (stock) are
  bought and sold
• “Black Tuesday” – October 29, 1929: Stock
  market prices fall greatly; millions of people
  lose all their wealth
• Total losses by end of year: $40 billion
• Example: U.S. Steel was $262 per share –
  dropped to $22 per share
• Some stocks worth less than 1¢
Causes of the Depression
    b. Explain economic factors that resulted in the Great Depression.


• Many people had borrowed too much money
• Factories produced more goods than they could
  sell
• As people and businesses had problems making
  money, banks did not get paid for loans
• “Speculation” in the stock market: paying only a
  portion of the price of a stock hoping that the value
  will go up
• Runs on banks: people were afraid they would
  lose their money if it was left in the bank
• laissez-faire: attitude that the economy would fix
  itself if left alone
Living Through the Depression
• 1932: 13 million unemployed
• 9,000 banks closed
• 31 Georgia banks failed
• Hoovervilles: named for President Hoover –
  shacks where homeless people gathered
• Soup kitchens set up by charities and
  governments to feed hungry
• Schools were often forced to close or shorten
  schedules
• Georgians were already suffering from economic
  problems before Black Tuesday
Easing the Burden
• President Hoover’s plan: government would
  buy farmer’s crops to help raise the price
• Plan did not work, but the food and cotton
  were used to help the needy
• Another plan was to hire unemployed
  people to do work for the government
• Plan did not employ enough people to really
  help

                              Click to return to Table of Contents.
Eugene Talmadge
• A conservative white supremacist
• Became governor in 1933
• Disliked public welfare and tried to rid the state
  of the New Deal programs
• Elected to a second term in 1934
• Elected again 1940
• Softened his view on the New Deal and used
  modified versions of New Deal legislation
• Tried to interfere with integration of the
  University of Georgia and cost Georgia’s white
  colleges their accreditation
The New Deal
           Discuss the effect of the New Deal




• 1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt elected
  president
• New Deal: Roosevelt’s plan to end the
  depression
  – Examined banks for soundness
  – Give jobs to unemployed workers
  – Tried to improve American’s lives
• Paved the way for recovery though all
  programs did not work
Georgia and the New Deal
• NIRA: National Industrial Recovery Act – set
  minimum wage
• Textile mill owners did not like the minimum
  wage
• Stretch out: mill owners tried to make workers
  work longer, faster, or more tasks
• TVA: Tennessee Valley Authority – Blue Ridge
  Lake, Lake Chatuge, Lake Nottley built
• CCC: Civilian Conservation Corps – built many
  parks, sewer systems, bridges, etc.
• REA: Rural Electrification Authority – brought
  electric power to rural areas
New Deal
• Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC ) 1933 Provided
  jobs for young single men building forest trails and
  roads, building parks, and planting trees to reforest the
  land and control flooding.

• Rural electrification -- The REA loaned over $300
  million to farmers’ cooperatives to help them extend their
  own power lines and buy power wholesale. This program
  was one on the most important and far-reaching of the
  New Deal programs. By 1940, a significant percentage
  of farmers in Georgia and other parts of the nation had
  electricity. Electric water pumps, lights,milking machines,
  and appliances made farm life much easier.
New Deal
• Under the Agricultural Adjustment Act, farm
  subsidies (grants of money from the
  government) went to property owners rather
  than to the tenant farmers, who were
  predominantly black.
• The Social Security Act was not designed to
  provide an income for farm and household
  workers, so African Americans working at those
• jobs were not covered.
African Americans During
       the New Deal
• Did not benefit from many New Deal
  programs
• WPA: Works Public Administration – did
  employ many African Americans
• Roosevelt’s “Black Cabinet”: influential
  African Americans working with President
  Roosevelt:
  – Mary McLeod Bethune
  – Clark Foreman
  – Robert Weaver
  – William Hastie
Georgia’s New Deal
            Governors
• Richard B. Russell
  – Worked to reorganize state government like a successful
    business
  – Elected to U.S. Senate and served for 38 years
• Eugene Talmadge
  – Did not like New Deal programs in Georgia
• Eurith “Ed” Rivers
  – Worked with Roosevelt to increase New Deal spending in
    Georgia
  – Began programs for public housing
  – Term ended with corruption problems
Georgia’s New Deal
            Governors
• Talmadge re-elected in 1940
  – Began to use some New Deal programs
  – Used his power as governor to remove state
    officials working to integrate Georgia’s state
    colleges
• Ellis Arnall
  – Reformed Board of Regents and state prisons
  – Removed poll tax
  – New state constitution
                                   Click to return to Table of Contents.
1. Besides the boll weevil,
Georgia cotton farmers have been
        hurt primarily by

A.) tornadoes.
B.) droughts.
C.) frosts.
D.) fires
2. Which was NOT a cause of the
       Great Depression?


A.) borrowing more money than could be repaid
B.) speculating in the stock market
C.) overproducing farm products
D.) failing to save money
3. Which was one effect of the
  Great Depression in Georgia?


A.) lower income for farmers
B.) increased enrollment in schools
C.) increases in highway construction
D.) an increase in health care services
4. Which did Governor Eugene
       Talmadge support?


A.) public welfare
B.) voting rights for blacks
C.) reduced property taxes
D.) federal assistance programs
5. Which was NOT a result of the
           drought?


A.) Workers moved away to seek jobs.
B.) The number of working farms declined.
C.) Banks faced losses of assets.
D.) Tourism increased.
6. What action by Eugene Talmadge resulted in the
loss of accreditation of ten Georgia public colleges and
    universities, including the University of Georgia?

A.) He withheld federal funds from Georgia’s
colleges and universities.
B.) He ordered the Confederate flag to be flown
at all colleges in Georgia.
 C.) He fired two University System
 administrators who supported integration.
 D.) He approved the admission of several black
 students at two all-white colleges.
7. What did the New Deal’s rural
electrification project (REA) do for
         Georgia’s farmers?
A.) It provided loans to farmers’ cooperatives so
they could run power lines in rural areas.
B.) It provided funds for power companies to run
lines in rural areas.
C.) It required power companies to provide
power at a lower rate.
D.) It enabled farms to double their size.
8. Why did Georgia NOT
 immediately feel the impact of the
       stock market crash?
A.) Georgia was already in a depression.

 B.) Georgia’s banks were protected by state
 insurance.
C.) Georgians had little money invested in the
stock market.
D.) Georgia’s constitution prohibited the state
from investing in the stock market.
9. Besides himself and God, who
   did Eugene Talmadge call the
       friend of rural voters?

A.) Franklin D. Roosevelt
B.) Montgomery Ward
C.) Sears Roebuck
D.) William Hartsfield
10. What group of people was
 NOT covered by Social Security?


A.) store clerks
B.) farm workers
C.) schoolteachers
D.) factory owners
SS8H9 The student will describe the impact of
  World War II on Georgia’s development
   economically, socially, and politically.

• a. Describe the impact of events leading up to American
  involvement in World War II; include Lend-Lease and the
  bombing of Pearl Harbor.
• b. Evaluate the importance of Bell Aircraft, military
  bases, the Savannah and Brunswick shipyards, Richard
  Russell, and Carl Vinson.
• c. Explain the impact of the Holocaust on Georgians.
• d. Discuss President Roosevelt’s ties to Georgia
  including his visits to Warm Springs and his impact on
  the state.
The War Begins
• 1938: Hitler’s Germany attacks France to
  “take back” land lost in WWI (Rhineland)
• Sent troops to take over Austria,
  Czechoslovakia, and Poland
• Great Britain and France declared war
• Soviet Union invaded nearby countries
  and agreed to split Poland with Germany
• By 1940, Hitler controlled Denmark,
  Norway, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg
  and a large part of France and began
  bombing Great Britain
A Neutral United States
• Most Americans did not want to get
  involved in the war, but Roosevelt wanted
  to help Britain
• Hitler turned on Stalin in 1941 and invaded
  the Soviet Union
• Lend-lease: policy to lend or lease (rent)
  weapons to Great Britain and the Soviet
  Union
• American ships began escorting British
  ships in convoys
“A Day that Will Live in
           Infamy”
• President Roosevelt stopped exports to Japan to
  protest its expansion into other countries
• Exports of oil, airplanes, aviation gasoline and
  metals were stopped
• The Japanese attacked the U.S. Navy fleet at
  Pearl Harbor, Hawaii on Dec. 7, 1941
• Japan hoped to destroy the fleet giving them
  control of the Pacific Ocean
• The USA declared war on Japan
• Allied Powers: USA, Great Britain, Soviet Union
• Axis Powers: Germany, Italy, Japan
American Military Forces
• Millions of Americans enlisted after the
  attack on Pearl Harbor
• 330,000 women joined – could not serve
  in combat roles
• Segregation in the military kept African
  American and white service men in
  different units
• Tuskegee Airmen: famous African
  American flyers of the Army Air Force
The War in Europe
• 1942-1943: British and American troops won
  control of Africa
• 1943: Mussolini overthrown and Italy joined the
  Allies
• American general Dwight D. Eisenhower
  coordinated plan to recapture Europe
• D-Day: June 6, 1944 – Allied forces land in
  northern France
• Early 1945: Germans pushed out of France
• April 1945: Soviet and American troops meet
  and Germany surrenders – Hitler commits
  suicide
Georgia Loses a Friend
• President Roosevelt visited Georgia often
  at his “Little White House” in Warm
  Springs
• His polio symptoms were eased in the
  mineral springs
• April 24, 1945: President Roosevelt died
  at Warm Springs
• Millions of Georgians and Americans
  mourned
• Vice President Harry Truman became
  president
The War in the Pacific
• 1942: Japan expanded its territory throughout
  the Asian Pacific region
• 1945: Allied forces began to retake Japanese
  controlled lands
• Japan refused to surrender
• President Truman authorized the use of atomic
  bombs to force Japan’s surrender
• Enola Gay: plane that dropped first atomic bomb
  on Hiroshima, Japan
• Japan surrendered after a second atomic bomb
  dropped on Nagasaki
• Over 50 million people died in the war
Bell Aircraft
• Opened in 1943 in Marietta – largest aircraft
  assembly plant in the world
• Assembled bombers for the USAF from 1943-
  1945.
• Employed 27,000 people and assembled over
  668 planes
• Opened in 1950 as the Lockheed Aircraft
  Corporation
• Today is operated by the Lockheed Martin
  Corporation
Military Bases
• The state became the site of many military
  bases during the war including:
• Fort Benning in Columbus
• Fort McPherson in Atlanta
• Fort Gillem in Clayton County
• Fort Stewart in Savannah
• These military bases helped Georgia’s
  economy by bringing jobs into the state
Brunswick and Savannah
            Shipyards
• Built the “Liberty ships” essential to war
  effort
• Savannah - 88 ships built by 15,000
  employees – mostly women
• Brunswick – 99 Liberty ships built by over
  16,000 men and women
Richard B. Russell, Jr.
• Became state’s youngest governor on
  June 27, 1931
• Created Board of Regents
• Elected to U.S. Senate in 1932
• Supported states’ rights and a strong
  national defense
• Co-sponsored a bill to provide school
  lunch to all children
Carl Vinson
• Vinson was a major influence in promoting
  a strong national defense.
• President Roosevelt and Vinson worked to
  increase the country’s military readiness.
• Georgia’s economy had grown to depend
  heavily on the state’s military installations,
  and Vinson represented Georgia’s interest
  in the military through his committee work.
The Holocaust
• The Holocaust: name given to the Nazi
  plan to kill all Jewish people
• Auschwitz, Buckenwald, Dachau,
  Treblinka, Bergen-Belsen infamous
  concentration camps where Jews and
  others were executed
• 6 million people killed in the Holocaust
Georgia During World War II
• 320,000 Georgians joined the armed forces –
  over 7,000 killed
• Military bases were built in the state which
  improved the economy –
• Farmers grew needed crops – income tripled for
  the average farmer
• Limits were put on the consumption of goods
  such as gasoline, meat, butter, and sugar
  (rationing)
• Students were encouraged to buy war bonds
  and defense stamps to pay for the war
• Victory Garden: small family gardens to make
  sure soldiers would have enough food
• POW (prisoner of war) camps in Georgia at
  some military bases
The War’s Effects on Society
• Everyone was expected to help in the war
  effort
• Women began working in jobs to replace
  men who had gone to war
• G.I. Bill: law to help returning soldiers
  adapt to civilian life
   – Low cost loans for homes or business
   – College education opportunities
• Women and African Americans did not
  want to go back to the kind of life they had
  before the war               Click to return to Table of Contents.
SS8H9 Quick Questions
1. What was the lend-lease act and how did it
   help lead America into WWII?
2. How did Bell Aircraft, military bases, and the
   Savannah and Brunswick shipyards impact
   Georgia?
3. What was Carl Vinson’s and Richard Russell’s
   impact on Georgia?
4. What was the Holocaust?
5. How was President Roosevelt tied to Georgia
   and what was his impact on the state?
1. What countries were allies in World
  War I?
• A. United States, France, Austria-
  Hungary, and Great Britain
• B. Great Britain, France, United States,
  and Russia
• C. Germany, Russia, and Austria-Hungary
• D. Germany, Japan, and Russia
2. Which was NOT a World War I training
  camp located in Georgia?
• A. Camp Benning
• B. Camp Gordon
• C. Fort Campbell
• D. Fort McPherson
3. The United States entered World War
  II when Japan attacked
• A. China.
• B. Manchuria.
• C. Midway.
• D. Pearl Harbor.
4. Why did the United States start a lend-lease
    system of war equipment?
•   A. Its allies ran out of money with which to
    purchase the equipment.
•   B. It would get the materials back at the end of
    the war.
•   C. It could charge interest and make more
    money.
•   D. Their allies preferred to lease the equipment.
5. The Holocaust was the name given to
  Hitler’s method of
• A. getting rid of the bodies of those who
  died or were killed in World War II.
• B. exterminating six million Jews and other
  “undesirables.”
• C. frightening those who opposed Adolph
  Hitler.
• D. eliminating war prisoners.
6. Which military base was NOT located
  in Georgia during World War II?
• A. Fort Benning
• B. Fort Campbell
• C. Fort McPherson
• D. Fort Stewart
7. Where in Georgia were Liberty ships
  built during World War II?
• A. Atlanta and Augusta
• B. Brunswick and Jekyll Island
• C. Brunswick and Savannah
• D. St. Simons Island and Augusta
8. What Georgian is known as the
  “father of the two-ocean navy?”
• A. Ben Epps
• B. Walter F. George
• C. Richard B. Russell, Jr.
• D. Carl Vinson
9. What statement about the Bell Aircraft
  Company is FALSE?
• A. It was located in Marietta.
• B. It produced B-29 aircraft.
• C. It closed before World War II ended.
• D. It was the largest facility of its kind in
  the Deep South.
10. How did Franklin Roosevelt’s time spent in
  Georgia bring about the establishment of
• the Rural Electrification Agency?
• A. He made a campaign promise to provide
  electricity to rural Georgia.
• B. He wanted to reduce the cost of electricity for
  the poor.
• C. He owned rural land and wanted to have
  electricity.
• D.He noticed that his neighbors did not have
  electricity.
SS8H10 The student will evaluate key post-
  World War II developments of Georgia from
                 1945 to 1970.


• a. Analyze the impact of the transformation of
  agriculture on Georgia’s growth.
• b. Explain how the development of Atlanta,
  including the roles of mayors William B.
  Hartsfield and Ivan Allen, Jr., and major league
  sports, contributed to the growth of Georgia.
• c. Discuss the impact of Ellis Arnall.
a. Analyze the impact of the transformation of
        agriculture on Georgia’s growth.

• After WWII agriculture was no longer
  dominant
• People moved from farms to the city to
  work in factories during the war
• Machinery such as tractors and harvesters
  replaced labor on farms
• 1940 - 66% rural/farmers; 34% urban
• 1970 – 40% rural/farmers; 60% urban
Industries Move into
            Georgia
• Businesses continued to move into the state
• Air conditioning began to be installed
  making year round work more comfortable
• Georgia’s low taxes were attractive to
  workers and businesses
• Lockheed became largest employer
• CDC: Centers for Disease Control – Atlanta
  headquarters established
William B. Hartsfield
• Served 6 terms as mayor of Atlanta
• Best known for making Atlanta the aviation
  hub of the Southeast
• A leader in integrating the city of Atlanta
  including schools, lunch counters, busses
  and golf courses
Ivan Allen
• Atlanta mayor 1962-1970
• Continued Hartsfield’s approach to
  peaceful integration
• Took down all “Colored” and “White” signs
  in city hall on the day he took office
• Integrated fire department
• Was able to get the Metropolitan Atlanta
  Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA) in
  service
Major League Sports
•   1966 – Atlanta Braves
•   1968 – Atlanta Hawks
•   1972-1980 – Atlanta Flames (hockey)
•   1997 – Atlanta Thrashers
•   These teams have raised the prestige of
    the city and generate millions of dollars in
    revenue each year
Ellis Arnall
• Made board of regents separate from the
  governor’s office
• The Southern Association of Colleges and
  Schools (SACS) restored accreditation to
  Georgia’s colleges
• Established a board of corrections and a parole
  board
• Abolished poll tax
• New constitution in 1945
• First state to grant 18 year olds the right to vote
SS8H10
1.
SS8H11 The student will evaluate the role
  of Georgia in the modern civil rights
              movement.
•   a. Describe major developments in civil rights and Georgia’s role
    during the 1940s and 1950s; include the roles of Herman Talmadge,
    Benjamin Mays, the 1946 governor’s race and the end of the white
    primary, Brown v. Board of Education, Martin Luther King, Jr., and
    the 1956 state flag.
•   b. Analyze the role Georgia and prominent Georgians played in the
    Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and 1970s; include such events
    as the founding of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee
    (SNCC), Sibley Commission, admission of Hamilton Holmes and
    Charlayne Hunter to the University of Georgia, Albany Movement,
    March on Washington, Civil Rights Act, the election of Maynard
    Jackson as mayor of Atlanta, and the role of Lester Maddox.

•   c. Discuss the impact of Andrew Young on Georgia.
Herman Talmadge
• Re-elected governor in 1950
• Expanded schools to include grades 1-12
• Lengthened school year to 9 months
• Raised standards for buildings,
  equipment, transportation and school
  curricula
• 3 percent tax passed to pay for changes
Benjamin Mays
• Educator and president of Morehouse
  College
• Mentor to MLK, Jr.
• Chairman of the Atlanta Board of
  Education
• Has a street and a high school named in
  his honor in southwest Atlanta
1946 Governor’s Race
(The Three Governors Episode)
• Eugene Talmadge was elected but died before
  taking office
• Three men claimed the office: Ellis Arnall
  (current governor), Herman Talmadge
  (Eugene’s son who was chosen by the
  legislature based on write-in votes in the
  election) and Melvin Thompson (Lt. Governor)
• In March, the Georgia Supreme court ruled that
  Melvin Thompson was the rightful head of the
  state until a special election could be held in
  1948
1956 State Flag
• Many were offended by the Confederate
  battle emblem on the flag because of its
  references to slavery
• Others felt it was a memorial to the war
  dead
• The flag was hurting business and tourism
  in the state
• Gov. Roy Barnes changed the flag
• Sonny Perdue promised to change the
  flag if elected
End of the White Primary
• The state allowed only white Democrats to vote
  in the primary elections (those in which
  candidates from each party are chosen)
• This kept blacks from choosing their own
  candidates – they were only allowed to vote in
  the general election in which there really wasn’t
  a choice
• In 1946, the U. S. Supreme Court, Georgia’s
  white primary system unconstitution (King V.
  Chapman)
The Supreme Court and
         Education
• 1948: racial integration ordered in armed
  forces
• 1950: Brown v. Board of Education – case
  struck down “separate but equal” concept;
  schools were to be integrated
• Sibley Commission: found that most
  Georgians would rather close schools than
  integrate
• More private schools opened
• 1961: Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes
  first African American students at UGA
• 1971: All Georgia public schools integrated
Montgomery Bus Boycott

• Dec. 1, 1955: Rosa Parks, African
  American, refused to give up her bus
  seat to whites in Montgomery, AL
• Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the
  NAACP organized civic leaders and
  prepared marches
• Supreme court ruled segregation on
  public transportation unconstitutional
A Nonviolent Movement is
           Born
• Martin Luther King, Jr. of Atlanta
• Developed a nonviolent approach to social
  change
• Four-prong approach:
  –   direct, nonviolent actions
  –   legal remedies
  –   ballots
  –   economic boycotts
• SCLC: Southern Christian Leadership
  Conference – civil rights group led by Dr. King
• Sit-in: Dr. King’s strategy to people refuse to
  leave a public building until their demands are
  met
The Albany Movement
• 1961: Albany, GA becomes center of civil
  rights activity
• SNCC: Student Nonviolent Coordinating
  Committee – challenged segregated bus
  system in Albany
• Nearly 500 people jailed
• Biracial committee formed to study
  concerns of African Americans
Protests Move to Alabama
• 1963: Martin Luther King, Jr. begins work to
  integrate all aspects of public life in
  Birmingham, AL
• Over 3000 people arrested
• Bomb killed 4 black children in their church
• African Americans and whites from the
  north and south began to join together to
  stop the violence
The Civil Rights Act
• President Kennedy created new civil rights
  laws
• Kennedy was assassinated before the new
  laws came into effect
• Lyndon Johnson became president and
  pushed for passage of the Civil Rights Act
  of 1964
• All public facilities had to be integrated
• Discrimination was prohibited in business
  and labor unions
The Voting Rights Act
• 1964: Freedom Summer – Martin Luther
  King, Jr. and SNCC worked to get African
  Americans registered to vote
• Selma-to-Montgomery, AL march led by Dr.
  King
• Nearly 30,000 marchers
• Congress passed the Voting Rights Act of
  1965 – one million African Americans were
  registered to vote
A Shift in Mood
• Some people moved from the nonviolent
  strategies to more aggressive ones
• SNCC and “Black Panthers” confronted
  police
• Malcolm X preached black separatism
• Race riots in Los Angeles, Detroit, and
  Newark
• April 1968: Dr. King assassinated in
  Memphis, TN while working with striking
  sanitation workers
Atlanta: A Case Study in
              Change
• Integration in Atlanta was relatively peaceful
• Church leaders get much credit for this peaceful
  change
• William Hartsfield: Atlanta mayor who expanded
  Atlanta’s airport and worked with African
  American and white leaders; worked to integrate
  Atlanta’s schools
• Ivan Allen: Atlanta mayor ordered removal of
  “white” and “colored” segregation signs in the City
  Hall; integrated police and fire services and city
  government
• Troubled times followed but were overcome
• The city became known as “the city too busy to
  hate”                              Click to return to Table of Contents.
Lester Maddox
• Elected governor 1967
• Segregationist who surprised everyone by
  appointing more blacks to state boards
  and commissions than all prior governors
  combined
SS8H12 The student will explain the
importance of significant social, economic, and
 political developments in Georgia since 1970.


• a. Evaluate the consequences of the end of the county
  unit system and reapportionment.
• b. Describe the role of Jimmy Carter in Georgia as state
  senator, governor, president, and past president.
• c. Analyze the impact of the rise of the two-party system
  in Georgia.
• d. Evaluate the effect of the 1996 Olympic Games on
  Georgia.
• e. Evaluate the importance of new immigrant
  communities to the growth and economy of Georgia.
County Unit System
• Designed to give voting power to rural
  areas even though most of the population
  growth was in urban areas
• In April 1962, it was ruled unconstitutional
  which shifted political power from sparsely
  populated rural areas to the more
  populated urban areas allowing black
  populations equal opportunity in electing
  representatives
Reapportionment
• One-person, one-vote concept
• Wesberry v. Sanders – U.S. Supreme
  Court ruled that legislative districts should
  depend on population and not county
  boundary lines
• The Georgia General Assembly had to
  reapportion (redraw) its Congressional
  voting districts to ensure that the districts
  were of equal population sizes
Jimmy Carter
• 1962 – Georgia Senate
• 1970 – Governor – cut executive agencies from
  300 to 25, reformed judge selection process,
  equalized public school funding, expanded
  special ed. and vocational ed., pre-school and
  mental health services
• 1976 – President – national energy policy, major
  civil service reform, created Dept. of Education,
  negotiated the 1978 Camp David Peace Accords
  between Israel and Egypt, withdrew America
  from the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow
Rise of the Two-Party System
• Shift during 1980s and 1990s
• Georgians started electing more and more
  Republicans to national offices while still
  electing Democrats to state offices
• 2002 - Sonny Perdue was the first
  Republican governor since
  Reconstruction; however, Democrats
  maintained control of the Georgia General
  Assembly
Georgia Hosts the Olympics
• Summer 1996: Atlanta hosted XXVI Olympiad
• 10,000 athletes from 197 countries
• 90,000 volunteers in Atlanta and other Georgia
  cities and locations
• Brought international attention to the city and state
• July 29, 1996: Bomb in Olympic Park killed one
  visitor and injured 117
• Traffic problems brought much criticism
• Too many street vendors and commercialism were
  other concerns
• “Southern hospitality” and athletic competition
  were noteworthy
                                     Click to return to Table of Contents.
1996 Olympic Games
• Four major benefits:
• 1. Millions of dollars spent on world-class
  competition facilities (stadium, horse park,
  etc)
• 2. International recognition
• 3. Volunteer, educational, and training
  programs, as well as, thousands of
  employment opportunities
• 4. Brought millions of dollars to Georgia
Immigrants
• Dalton – Carpet industry attracts many
  immigrants from Mexico and Latin
  America countries
• Hall Co. (Gainesville) – Poultry Industry
• South Georgia – Vidalia Onion industry
  attracts migrant workers
• Many ethnic businesses and churches are
  operated in these areas

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Georgia in the 20th century2

  • 1. SS8H8 The student will analyze the important events that occurred after World War I and their impact on Georgia • a. Describe the impact of the boll weevil and drought on Georgia. • b. Explain economic factors that resulted in the Great Depression. • c. Discuss the impact of the political career of Eugene Talmadge. • d. Discuss the effect of the New Deal in terms of the impact of the Civilian Conservation Corps, Agricultural Adjustment Act, rural electrification, and Social Security.
  • 2. The Destruction of King Cotton a. Describe the impact of the boll weevil and drought on Georgia • Boll weevil: insect which ate Georgia’s most important cash crop • Price of cotton also dropped • 1924: major drought (period with little or no rain) hit Georgia • Georgia farmers did not have the “good life” that many Americans enjoyed • Farms closed forcing banks and farm- related business to close
  • 3. The Bottom Drops Out b. Explain economic factors that resulted in the Great Depression . • Stock Market: Place where shares of ownership in corporations (stock) are bought and sold • “Black Tuesday” – October 29, 1929: Stock market prices fall greatly; millions of people lose all their wealth • Total losses by end of year: $40 billion • Example: U.S. Steel was $262 per share – dropped to $22 per share • Some stocks worth less than 1¢
  • 4. Causes of the Depression b. Explain economic factors that resulted in the Great Depression. • Many people had borrowed too much money • Factories produced more goods than they could sell • As people and businesses had problems making money, banks did not get paid for loans • “Speculation” in the stock market: paying only a portion of the price of a stock hoping that the value will go up • Runs on banks: people were afraid they would lose their money if it was left in the bank • laissez-faire: attitude that the economy would fix itself if left alone
  • 5. Living Through the Depression • 1932: 13 million unemployed • 9,000 banks closed • 31 Georgia banks failed • Hoovervilles: named for President Hoover – shacks where homeless people gathered • Soup kitchens set up by charities and governments to feed hungry • Schools were often forced to close or shorten schedules • Georgians were already suffering from economic problems before Black Tuesday
  • 6. Easing the Burden • President Hoover’s plan: government would buy farmer’s crops to help raise the price • Plan did not work, but the food and cotton were used to help the needy • Another plan was to hire unemployed people to do work for the government • Plan did not employ enough people to really help Click to return to Table of Contents.
  • 7. Eugene Talmadge • A conservative white supremacist • Became governor in 1933 • Disliked public welfare and tried to rid the state of the New Deal programs • Elected to a second term in 1934 • Elected again 1940 • Softened his view on the New Deal and used modified versions of New Deal legislation • Tried to interfere with integration of the University of Georgia and cost Georgia’s white colleges their accreditation
  • 8. The New Deal Discuss the effect of the New Deal • 1932: Franklin D. Roosevelt elected president • New Deal: Roosevelt’s plan to end the depression – Examined banks for soundness – Give jobs to unemployed workers – Tried to improve American’s lives • Paved the way for recovery though all programs did not work
  • 9. Georgia and the New Deal • NIRA: National Industrial Recovery Act – set minimum wage • Textile mill owners did not like the minimum wage • Stretch out: mill owners tried to make workers work longer, faster, or more tasks • TVA: Tennessee Valley Authority – Blue Ridge Lake, Lake Chatuge, Lake Nottley built • CCC: Civilian Conservation Corps – built many parks, sewer systems, bridges, etc. • REA: Rural Electrification Authority – brought electric power to rural areas
  • 10. New Deal • Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC ) 1933 Provided jobs for young single men building forest trails and roads, building parks, and planting trees to reforest the land and control flooding. • Rural electrification -- The REA loaned over $300 million to farmers’ cooperatives to help them extend their own power lines and buy power wholesale. This program was one on the most important and far-reaching of the New Deal programs. By 1940, a significant percentage of farmers in Georgia and other parts of the nation had electricity. Electric water pumps, lights,milking machines, and appliances made farm life much easier.
  • 11. New Deal • Under the Agricultural Adjustment Act, farm subsidies (grants of money from the government) went to property owners rather than to the tenant farmers, who were predominantly black. • The Social Security Act was not designed to provide an income for farm and household workers, so African Americans working at those • jobs were not covered.
  • 12. African Americans During the New Deal • Did not benefit from many New Deal programs • WPA: Works Public Administration – did employ many African Americans • Roosevelt’s “Black Cabinet”: influential African Americans working with President Roosevelt: – Mary McLeod Bethune – Clark Foreman – Robert Weaver – William Hastie
  • 13. Georgia’s New Deal Governors • Richard B. Russell – Worked to reorganize state government like a successful business – Elected to U.S. Senate and served for 38 years • Eugene Talmadge – Did not like New Deal programs in Georgia • Eurith “Ed” Rivers – Worked with Roosevelt to increase New Deal spending in Georgia – Began programs for public housing – Term ended with corruption problems
  • 14. Georgia’s New Deal Governors • Talmadge re-elected in 1940 – Began to use some New Deal programs – Used his power as governor to remove state officials working to integrate Georgia’s state colleges • Ellis Arnall – Reformed Board of Regents and state prisons – Removed poll tax – New state constitution Click to return to Table of Contents.
  • 15. 1. Besides the boll weevil, Georgia cotton farmers have been hurt primarily by A.) tornadoes. B.) droughts. C.) frosts. D.) fires
  • 16. 2. Which was NOT a cause of the Great Depression? A.) borrowing more money than could be repaid B.) speculating in the stock market C.) overproducing farm products D.) failing to save money
  • 17. 3. Which was one effect of the Great Depression in Georgia? A.) lower income for farmers B.) increased enrollment in schools C.) increases in highway construction D.) an increase in health care services
  • 18. 4. Which did Governor Eugene Talmadge support? A.) public welfare B.) voting rights for blacks C.) reduced property taxes D.) federal assistance programs
  • 19. 5. Which was NOT a result of the drought? A.) Workers moved away to seek jobs. B.) The number of working farms declined. C.) Banks faced losses of assets. D.) Tourism increased.
  • 20. 6. What action by Eugene Talmadge resulted in the loss of accreditation of ten Georgia public colleges and universities, including the University of Georgia? A.) He withheld federal funds from Georgia’s colleges and universities. B.) He ordered the Confederate flag to be flown at all colleges in Georgia. C.) He fired two University System administrators who supported integration. D.) He approved the admission of several black students at two all-white colleges.
  • 21. 7. What did the New Deal’s rural electrification project (REA) do for Georgia’s farmers? A.) It provided loans to farmers’ cooperatives so they could run power lines in rural areas. B.) It provided funds for power companies to run lines in rural areas. C.) It required power companies to provide power at a lower rate. D.) It enabled farms to double their size.
  • 22. 8. Why did Georgia NOT immediately feel the impact of the stock market crash? A.) Georgia was already in a depression. B.) Georgia’s banks were protected by state insurance. C.) Georgians had little money invested in the stock market. D.) Georgia’s constitution prohibited the state from investing in the stock market.
  • 23. 9. Besides himself and God, who did Eugene Talmadge call the friend of rural voters? A.) Franklin D. Roosevelt B.) Montgomery Ward C.) Sears Roebuck D.) William Hartsfield
  • 24. 10. What group of people was NOT covered by Social Security? A.) store clerks B.) farm workers C.) schoolteachers D.) factory owners
  • 25. SS8H9 The student will describe the impact of World War II on Georgia’s development economically, socially, and politically. • a. Describe the impact of events leading up to American involvement in World War II; include Lend-Lease and the bombing of Pearl Harbor. • b. Evaluate the importance of Bell Aircraft, military bases, the Savannah and Brunswick shipyards, Richard Russell, and Carl Vinson. • c. Explain the impact of the Holocaust on Georgians. • d. Discuss President Roosevelt’s ties to Georgia including his visits to Warm Springs and his impact on the state.
  • 26. The War Begins • 1938: Hitler’s Germany attacks France to “take back” land lost in WWI (Rhineland) • Sent troops to take over Austria, Czechoslovakia, and Poland • Great Britain and France declared war • Soviet Union invaded nearby countries and agreed to split Poland with Germany • By 1940, Hitler controlled Denmark, Norway, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg and a large part of France and began bombing Great Britain
  • 27. A Neutral United States • Most Americans did not want to get involved in the war, but Roosevelt wanted to help Britain • Hitler turned on Stalin in 1941 and invaded the Soviet Union • Lend-lease: policy to lend or lease (rent) weapons to Great Britain and the Soviet Union • American ships began escorting British ships in convoys
  • 28. “A Day that Will Live in Infamy” • President Roosevelt stopped exports to Japan to protest its expansion into other countries • Exports of oil, airplanes, aviation gasoline and metals were stopped • The Japanese attacked the U.S. Navy fleet at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii on Dec. 7, 1941 • Japan hoped to destroy the fleet giving them control of the Pacific Ocean • The USA declared war on Japan • Allied Powers: USA, Great Britain, Soviet Union • Axis Powers: Germany, Italy, Japan
  • 29. American Military Forces • Millions of Americans enlisted after the attack on Pearl Harbor • 330,000 women joined – could not serve in combat roles • Segregation in the military kept African American and white service men in different units • Tuskegee Airmen: famous African American flyers of the Army Air Force
  • 30. The War in Europe • 1942-1943: British and American troops won control of Africa • 1943: Mussolini overthrown and Italy joined the Allies • American general Dwight D. Eisenhower coordinated plan to recapture Europe • D-Day: June 6, 1944 – Allied forces land in northern France • Early 1945: Germans pushed out of France • April 1945: Soviet and American troops meet and Germany surrenders – Hitler commits suicide
  • 31. Georgia Loses a Friend • President Roosevelt visited Georgia often at his “Little White House” in Warm Springs • His polio symptoms were eased in the mineral springs • April 24, 1945: President Roosevelt died at Warm Springs • Millions of Georgians and Americans mourned • Vice President Harry Truman became president
  • 32. The War in the Pacific • 1942: Japan expanded its territory throughout the Asian Pacific region • 1945: Allied forces began to retake Japanese controlled lands • Japan refused to surrender • President Truman authorized the use of atomic bombs to force Japan’s surrender • Enola Gay: plane that dropped first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan • Japan surrendered after a second atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki • Over 50 million people died in the war
  • 33. Bell Aircraft • Opened in 1943 in Marietta – largest aircraft assembly plant in the world • Assembled bombers for the USAF from 1943- 1945. • Employed 27,000 people and assembled over 668 planes • Opened in 1950 as the Lockheed Aircraft Corporation • Today is operated by the Lockheed Martin Corporation
  • 34. Military Bases • The state became the site of many military bases during the war including: • Fort Benning in Columbus • Fort McPherson in Atlanta • Fort Gillem in Clayton County • Fort Stewart in Savannah • These military bases helped Georgia’s economy by bringing jobs into the state
  • 35. Brunswick and Savannah Shipyards • Built the “Liberty ships” essential to war effort • Savannah - 88 ships built by 15,000 employees – mostly women • Brunswick – 99 Liberty ships built by over 16,000 men and women
  • 36. Richard B. Russell, Jr. • Became state’s youngest governor on June 27, 1931 • Created Board of Regents • Elected to U.S. Senate in 1932 • Supported states’ rights and a strong national defense • Co-sponsored a bill to provide school lunch to all children
  • 37. Carl Vinson • Vinson was a major influence in promoting a strong national defense. • President Roosevelt and Vinson worked to increase the country’s military readiness. • Georgia’s economy had grown to depend heavily on the state’s military installations, and Vinson represented Georgia’s interest in the military through his committee work.
  • 38. The Holocaust • The Holocaust: name given to the Nazi plan to kill all Jewish people • Auschwitz, Buckenwald, Dachau, Treblinka, Bergen-Belsen infamous concentration camps where Jews and others were executed • 6 million people killed in the Holocaust
  • 39. Georgia During World War II • 320,000 Georgians joined the armed forces – over 7,000 killed • Military bases were built in the state which improved the economy – • Farmers grew needed crops – income tripled for the average farmer • Limits were put on the consumption of goods such as gasoline, meat, butter, and sugar (rationing) • Students were encouraged to buy war bonds and defense stamps to pay for the war • Victory Garden: small family gardens to make sure soldiers would have enough food • POW (prisoner of war) camps in Georgia at some military bases
  • 40. The War’s Effects on Society • Everyone was expected to help in the war effort • Women began working in jobs to replace men who had gone to war • G.I. Bill: law to help returning soldiers adapt to civilian life – Low cost loans for homes or business – College education opportunities • Women and African Americans did not want to go back to the kind of life they had before the war Click to return to Table of Contents.
  • 41. SS8H9 Quick Questions 1. What was the lend-lease act and how did it help lead America into WWII? 2. How did Bell Aircraft, military bases, and the Savannah and Brunswick shipyards impact Georgia? 3. What was Carl Vinson’s and Richard Russell’s impact on Georgia? 4. What was the Holocaust? 5. How was President Roosevelt tied to Georgia and what was his impact on the state?
  • 42. 1. What countries were allies in World War I? • A. United States, France, Austria- Hungary, and Great Britain • B. Great Britain, France, United States, and Russia • C. Germany, Russia, and Austria-Hungary • D. Germany, Japan, and Russia
  • 43. 2. Which was NOT a World War I training camp located in Georgia? • A. Camp Benning • B. Camp Gordon • C. Fort Campbell • D. Fort McPherson
  • 44. 3. The United States entered World War II when Japan attacked • A. China. • B. Manchuria. • C. Midway. • D. Pearl Harbor.
  • 45. 4. Why did the United States start a lend-lease system of war equipment? • A. Its allies ran out of money with which to purchase the equipment. • B. It would get the materials back at the end of the war. • C. It could charge interest and make more money. • D. Their allies preferred to lease the equipment.
  • 46. 5. The Holocaust was the name given to Hitler’s method of • A. getting rid of the bodies of those who died or were killed in World War II. • B. exterminating six million Jews and other “undesirables.” • C. frightening those who opposed Adolph Hitler. • D. eliminating war prisoners.
  • 47. 6. Which military base was NOT located in Georgia during World War II? • A. Fort Benning • B. Fort Campbell • C. Fort McPherson • D. Fort Stewart
  • 48. 7. Where in Georgia were Liberty ships built during World War II? • A. Atlanta and Augusta • B. Brunswick and Jekyll Island • C. Brunswick and Savannah • D. St. Simons Island and Augusta
  • 49. 8. What Georgian is known as the “father of the two-ocean navy?” • A. Ben Epps • B. Walter F. George • C. Richard B. Russell, Jr. • D. Carl Vinson
  • 50. 9. What statement about the Bell Aircraft Company is FALSE? • A. It was located in Marietta. • B. It produced B-29 aircraft. • C. It closed before World War II ended. • D. It was the largest facility of its kind in the Deep South.
  • 51. 10. How did Franklin Roosevelt’s time spent in Georgia bring about the establishment of • the Rural Electrification Agency? • A. He made a campaign promise to provide electricity to rural Georgia. • B. He wanted to reduce the cost of electricity for the poor. • C. He owned rural land and wanted to have electricity. • D.He noticed that his neighbors did not have electricity.
  • 52. SS8H10 The student will evaluate key post- World War II developments of Georgia from 1945 to 1970. • a. Analyze the impact of the transformation of agriculture on Georgia’s growth. • b. Explain how the development of Atlanta, including the roles of mayors William B. Hartsfield and Ivan Allen, Jr., and major league sports, contributed to the growth of Georgia. • c. Discuss the impact of Ellis Arnall.
  • 53. a. Analyze the impact of the transformation of agriculture on Georgia’s growth. • After WWII agriculture was no longer dominant • People moved from farms to the city to work in factories during the war • Machinery such as tractors and harvesters replaced labor on farms • 1940 - 66% rural/farmers; 34% urban • 1970 – 40% rural/farmers; 60% urban
  • 54. Industries Move into Georgia • Businesses continued to move into the state • Air conditioning began to be installed making year round work more comfortable • Georgia’s low taxes were attractive to workers and businesses • Lockheed became largest employer • CDC: Centers for Disease Control – Atlanta headquarters established
  • 55. William B. Hartsfield • Served 6 terms as mayor of Atlanta • Best known for making Atlanta the aviation hub of the Southeast • A leader in integrating the city of Atlanta including schools, lunch counters, busses and golf courses
  • 56. Ivan Allen • Atlanta mayor 1962-1970 • Continued Hartsfield’s approach to peaceful integration • Took down all “Colored” and “White” signs in city hall on the day he took office • Integrated fire department • Was able to get the Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA) in service
  • 57. Major League Sports • 1966 – Atlanta Braves • 1968 – Atlanta Hawks • 1972-1980 – Atlanta Flames (hockey) • 1997 – Atlanta Thrashers • These teams have raised the prestige of the city and generate millions of dollars in revenue each year
  • 58. Ellis Arnall • Made board of regents separate from the governor’s office • The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) restored accreditation to Georgia’s colleges • Established a board of corrections and a parole board • Abolished poll tax • New constitution in 1945 • First state to grant 18 year olds the right to vote
  • 60. SS8H11 The student will evaluate the role of Georgia in the modern civil rights movement. • a. Describe major developments in civil rights and Georgia’s role during the 1940s and 1950s; include the roles of Herman Talmadge, Benjamin Mays, the 1946 governor’s race and the end of the white primary, Brown v. Board of Education, Martin Luther King, Jr., and the 1956 state flag. • b. Analyze the role Georgia and prominent Georgians played in the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and 1970s; include such events as the founding of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), Sibley Commission, admission of Hamilton Holmes and Charlayne Hunter to the University of Georgia, Albany Movement, March on Washington, Civil Rights Act, the election of Maynard Jackson as mayor of Atlanta, and the role of Lester Maddox. • c. Discuss the impact of Andrew Young on Georgia.
  • 61. Herman Talmadge • Re-elected governor in 1950 • Expanded schools to include grades 1-12 • Lengthened school year to 9 months • Raised standards for buildings, equipment, transportation and school curricula • 3 percent tax passed to pay for changes
  • 62. Benjamin Mays • Educator and president of Morehouse College • Mentor to MLK, Jr. • Chairman of the Atlanta Board of Education • Has a street and a high school named in his honor in southwest Atlanta
  • 63. 1946 Governor’s Race (The Three Governors Episode) • Eugene Talmadge was elected but died before taking office • Three men claimed the office: Ellis Arnall (current governor), Herman Talmadge (Eugene’s son who was chosen by the legislature based on write-in votes in the election) and Melvin Thompson (Lt. Governor) • In March, the Georgia Supreme court ruled that Melvin Thompson was the rightful head of the state until a special election could be held in 1948
  • 64. 1956 State Flag • Many were offended by the Confederate battle emblem on the flag because of its references to slavery • Others felt it was a memorial to the war dead • The flag was hurting business and tourism in the state • Gov. Roy Barnes changed the flag • Sonny Perdue promised to change the flag if elected
  • 65. End of the White Primary • The state allowed only white Democrats to vote in the primary elections (those in which candidates from each party are chosen) • This kept blacks from choosing their own candidates – they were only allowed to vote in the general election in which there really wasn’t a choice • In 1946, the U. S. Supreme Court, Georgia’s white primary system unconstitution (King V. Chapman)
  • 66. The Supreme Court and Education • 1948: racial integration ordered in armed forces • 1950: Brown v. Board of Education – case struck down “separate but equal” concept; schools were to be integrated • Sibley Commission: found that most Georgians would rather close schools than integrate • More private schools opened • 1961: Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes first African American students at UGA • 1971: All Georgia public schools integrated
  • 67. Montgomery Bus Boycott • Dec. 1, 1955: Rosa Parks, African American, refused to give up her bus seat to whites in Montgomery, AL • Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the NAACP organized civic leaders and prepared marches • Supreme court ruled segregation on public transportation unconstitutional
  • 68. A Nonviolent Movement is Born • Martin Luther King, Jr. of Atlanta • Developed a nonviolent approach to social change • Four-prong approach: – direct, nonviolent actions – legal remedies – ballots – economic boycotts • SCLC: Southern Christian Leadership Conference – civil rights group led by Dr. King • Sit-in: Dr. King’s strategy to people refuse to leave a public building until their demands are met
  • 69. The Albany Movement • 1961: Albany, GA becomes center of civil rights activity • SNCC: Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee – challenged segregated bus system in Albany • Nearly 500 people jailed • Biracial committee formed to study concerns of African Americans
  • 70. Protests Move to Alabama • 1963: Martin Luther King, Jr. begins work to integrate all aspects of public life in Birmingham, AL • Over 3000 people arrested • Bomb killed 4 black children in their church • African Americans and whites from the north and south began to join together to stop the violence
  • 71. The Civil Rights Act • President Kennedy created new civil rights laws • Kennedy was assassinated before the new laws came into effect • Lyndon Johnson became president and pushed for passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 • All public facilities had to be integrated • Discrimination was prohibited in business and labor unions
  • 72. The Voting Rights Act • 1964: Freedom Summer – Martin Luther King, Jr. and SNCC worked to get African Americans registered to vote • Selma-to-Montgomery, AL march led by Dr. King • Nearly 30,000 marchers • Congress passed the Voting Rights Act of 1965 – one million African Americans were registered to vote
  • 73. A Shift in Mood • Some people moved from the nonviolent strategies to more aggressive ones • SNCC and “Black Panthers” confronted police • Malcolm X preached black separatism • Race riots in Los Angeles, Detroit, and Newark • April 1968: Dr. King assassinated in Memphis, TN while working with striking sanitation workers
  • 74. Atlanta: A Case Study in Change • Integration in Atlanta was relatively peaceful • Church leaders get much credit for this peaceful change • William Hartsfield: Atlanta mayor who expanded Atlanta’s airport and worked with African American and white leaders; worked to integrate Atlanta’s schools • Ivan Allen: Atlanta mayor ordered removal of “white” and “colored” segregation signs in the City Hall; integrated police and fire services and city government • Troubled times followed but were overcome • The city became known as “the city too busy to hate” Click to return to Table of Contents.
  • 75. Lester Maddox • Elected governor 1967 • Segregationist who surprised everyone by appointing more blacks to state boards and commissions than all prior governors combined
  • 76. SS8H12 The student will explain the importance of significant social, economic, and political developments in Georgia since 1970. • a. Evaluate the consequences of the end of the county unit system and reapportionment. • b. Describe the role of Jimmy Carter in Georgia as state senator, governor, president, and past president. • c. Analyze the impact of the rise of the two-party system in Georgia. • d. Evaluate the effect of the 1996 Olympic Games on Georgia. • e. Evaluate the importance of new immigrant communities to the growth and economy of Georgia.
  • 77. County Unit System • Designed to give voting power to rural areas even though most of the population growth was in urban areas • In April 1962, it was ruled unconstitutional which shifted political power from sparsely populated rural areas to the more populated urban areas allowing black populations equal opportunity in electing representatives
  • 78. Reapportionment • One-person, one-vote concept • Wesberry v. Sanders – U.S. Supreme Court ruled that legislative districts should depend on population and not county boundary lines • The Georgia General Assembly had to reapportion (redraw) its Congressional voting districts to ensure that the districts were of equal population sizes
  • 79. Jimmy Carter • 1962 – Georgia Senate • 1970 – Governor – cut executive agencies from 300 to 25, reformed judge selection process, equalized public school funding, expanded special ed. and vocational ed., pre-school and mental health services • 1976 – President – national energy policy, major civil service reform, created Dept. of Education, negotiated the 1978 Camp David Peace Accords between Israel and Egypt, withdrew America from the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow
  • 80. Rise of the Two-Party System • Shift during 1980s and 1990s • Georgians started electing more and more Republicans to national offices while still electing Democrats to state offices • 2002 - Sonny Perdue was the first Republican governor since Reconstruction; however, Democrats maintained control of the Georgia General Assembly
  • 81. Georgia Hosts the Olympics • Summer 1996: Atlanta hosted XXVI Olympiad • 10,000 athletes from 197 countries • 90,000 volunteers in Atlanta and other Georgia cities and locations • Brought international attention to the city and state • July 29, 1996: Bomb in Olympic Park killed one visitor and injured 117 • Traffic problems brought much criticism • Too many street vendors and commercialism were other concerns • “Southern hospitality” and athletic competition were noteworthy Click to return to Table of Contents.
  • 82. 1996 Olympic Games • Four major benefits: • 1. Millions of dollars spent on world-class competition facilities (stadium, horse park, etc) • 2. International recognition • 3. Volunteer, educational, and training programs, as well as, thousands of employment opportunities • 4. Brought millions of dollars to Georgia
  • 83. Immigrants • Dalton – Carpet industry attracts many immigrants from Mexico and Latin America countries • Hall Co. (Gainesville) – Poultry Industry • South Georgia – Vidalia Onion industry attracts migrant workers • Many ethnic businesses and churches are operated in these areas