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BELLRINGER (04/12/17) Briefly explain the significance of each term relative to the early Cold War period (1945 -53): 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Yalta Conference Churchill’s Iron Curtain speech Berlin Airlift NATO & Warsaw Pact Korean War TODAY’S CLASS (04/12/17) Outcome: Be able to explain the political, social, and economic developments within the United States in the decade after World War II. Agenda: 1. Bellringer 2. Announcements: Unit 9 (WWII & the early Cold War) test Friday, 4/14 & unit assignments due Monday 4/17 3. Lecture/Notes/Discussion - U.S. Domestic Developments in the Early Cold War 4. Class review/discussion Organizing developments into political/social/economic categories U.S. DOMESTIC DEVELOPMENTS IN THE EARLY COLD WAR 1946 1954 GI BILL (1944) Returning soldiers = rising unemployment? G.I. Bill provided benefits to returning soldiers College tuition, low-interest loans, unemployment benefits College enrollments Home construction & purchases Ensured U.S. would not return to the Depression - very successful. READJUSTING ECONOMY After the war, GDP slumped from its wartime peak. Price controls & mandatory rationing eliminated Inflation increased 1946-47 – widespread strikes across the country Organized labor (Congress of Industrial Organizations – CIO) failed to gather support in the South (“Operation Dixie”) Racial mixing & forced cooperation provided little results Economic issues swing 1946 midterm elections Republicans gain control of Congress – first since 1932 ORGANIZED LABOR DECLINES Republican Congress sought to limit labor’s power Passed Taft-Hartley Act (1947) Outlawed “closed shops” (mandatory union membership) & allowed president to intervene when strikes threatened national security Truman vetoed bill —Congress overrode & became law Impact: Veto increased Truman’s popularity with labor Slowed growth of organized labor— peaked in 1950, declining since Shift from labor-friendly climate of New Deal Labor rally at Madison Square Garden, June 1947 Source: Congressional Research Service, Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) U.S. ECONOMIC BOOM From 1950-1970, U.S. economy grew substantially National income doubled in 1950s & almost doubled again in the 1960s U.S. had the highest standard of living in the world Consumerism abounded — automobiles, **TVs**, homes, kitchen appliances 1950s—U.S. just 6% of world’s population – owned 40% of world’s wealth Middle class expanded – 60% of Americans earned between $3,000 - $10,000 per year by mid-1950s. ($27,000 - $88,000 in 2016; 45% today) Postwar middle class was TWICE the size of pre-Depression middle class ECONOMIC PROSPERITY ON THE MOVE Wide availability of money meant easier credit: Federal Housing Administration (FHA) & Veterans Administration (VA) mortgages increased. Middle & upper class urbanites moved to the suburbs – outskirts of town Ex. “Levittown” outside Philadelphia – all similar floor plans Not a diverse movement – “white flight” Minorities populated inner cities “Sunbelt” region grows – CA to TX to FL Spurred by government defense spending Growing Aerospace industry in FL & TX CULTURE SHIFTS IN 1950’S Automobile culture emerged New car sales increased 30% from 1950 to 1955 Highway construction connected suburbs & cities Consumerism increased Similar to 1920s consumption rates Household electronics(*TVs!*) & appliance sales skyrocketed Credit cards introduced – “buy now, pay later” easier than ever Growth of Television & Mass Media TV overtook radio as dominant form of media in 1950s By 1960, 90% of homes have TVs Advertising industry soared – created high product demand BABY BOOM Between 1945-1960, 50 million babies were born. Sign of economic prosperity 90% of school-age children enrolled – increasing standard of living 1948 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Democratic Party - split: Truman Strom Thurmond – “Dixiecrats” (Southern Democrats) Supported states’ rights & segregation, opposed civil rights & federal intervention into race issues Truman Thurmond Wallace Dewey Progressive Party – Henry Wallace Supported easing tensions with the Soviet Union Republican Party – Thomas Dewey With major Republican victories in 1946 midterm elections, Truman victory seemed like longshot. 1948 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION WEAKENING OF THE “SOLID SOUTH?” 1948 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION SECOND RED SCARE Post-war fear of communism gripped the U.S. Fear of communist infiltration & control in U.S. gov’t Loyalty Review Board (1947) – investigated federal employees suspected of “subversive” actions. Established by President Truman *Can traditional freedoms (speech, thought, disagreement) survive?* House Un - American Activities Committee ( HUAC) investigated alleged procommunist agents sympathetic to Soviet Union Alger Hiss – convicted of perjury in 1950, sentenced to 5 years Julius & Ethel Rosenberg – convicted of leaking atomic secrets to Soviets, executed in 1953, first Americans executed for espionage in peacetime JOSEPH MCCARTHY Joseph McCarthy – Republican Senator from Wisconsin 1950 – Claimed to have a “list” of 205 communists working in the federal gov’t Stirred communist hysteria – McCarthy untouchable ANY radical positions caught attention – women’s equality, civil rights, aiding the poor Army -McCarthy Hearings (1954) Senate launched full TELEVISED investigation into McCarthy’s allegations of subversion in the U.S. army. McCarthy failed to provide evidence – humiliated & disgraced McCarthyism – practice of making pro Communist accusations without proof or evidence Dominated U.S. society in early Cold War ADDRESSING COMMUNIST THREAT National Security Act (1947) Created Department of Defense in the new Pentagon Secretary of Army + Navy + Air Force = Joint Chiefs of Staff Established the National Security Council – advises the President on national security matters. Responsible for NSC-68 Established the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to coordinate foreign intelligence gathering. Major role in the Cold War U.S. DEVELOPMENTS AFTER WWII Political Social Economic