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Postwar America The Truman and Eisenhower administrations led the nation to make social, economic, and political adjustments after World War II. The GI Bill of Rights • This was passed in 1944, it was created to help ease veteran’s return to civilian life. – It offered partial tuition payments. – Guaranteed a year’s worth of unemployment benefits while searching for work. – Offered low interest guaranteed loans. – Millions of young families used the loans to buy houses, farms, and businesses. Housing Crisis • Pre-Fab housing was manufactured. • The suburbs exploded. For less than $7,000.00, one could purchase a home. • Americans loved the openness, and small-town feel of the suburbs. War Marriages in Trouble • After the war, G.I.’s came back home to their wives who had a new sense of freedom. • They were working on the assembly lines and now lost their job to the men who had returned. • They had been the breadwinners and decision makers, and now that was back to the responsibility of the husband. The Economy Recovers • People had gone without any goods for so long and now had money to spend. • The American economy boomed, the demand for goods and services were more than the supply could keep up with. • Production increased and with it so did the jobs. Truman’s Fair Deal • Was an extension of Roosevelt’s New Deal. • It included: – Raising the hourly minimum wage from 40 cents to 75 cents. – Extending Social Security coverage to 10 million more people. – Initiated flood control and irrigation projects. – Provided financial support for cities to clear out slums and build 810,000 housing units for lowincome families. Conglomerates • A major corporation that includes a number of smaller companies in unrelated industries. • Examples are Time-Warner, and General Electric, Coca-Cola. Franchise • A company that offers similar products or services in many locations. • McDonald’s, Burger King, Dunkin Donuts. The Baby Boom • This era was between the late 1940’s and the early 1960’s. • The birth rate of America soared after the veterans from World War II had settled into a family life. • The height of the boom was in 1957. • This is the largest generation in the nation’s history. Dr. Jonas Salk Dr. Jonas Salk • He created a vaccine for polio. That would help make Polio a thing of the past within the next twenty years. • Polio is a crippling disease. It was a viral disease which affected the spinal cord causing muscle weakness and paralysis. Dr. Benjamin Spock Dr. Benjamin Spock • He wrote a book called “Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care”, in 1946. • The book took off in the 1950’s when the baby boom started to hit. – He encouraged parents not to spank or scold their children. – He encouraged families to hold meetings so that kids could express themselves. – He said it was important for mothers to stay at home. American Leisure in the Fifties • American’s had more leisure time than ever before. • More people now owned: – Washing Machines – Clothes Dryers – Dishwashers – Lawn Mowers – Television Sets $30 Billion is spent on Leisure Activities • Sports: Fishing, hunting, bowling, boating, golf. • Pro Sports attendance rose. • Americans became avid readers. – Hemingway – J.D. Salinger – Sports Illustrated – Reader’s Digest Automobile Culture • Due to Suburban living, American’s need cars for transportation to work and leisure activity. • New highways were formed because of the car boom. – Route 495 – Route 24 were built during this time. – The Interstate Highway Act- built a nationwide highway network. This helped create more suburbs farther from the cities. 1950’s Automobiles Car Boom Creates • Drive In Theaters are created. • Drive in Restaurants and diners are created. • Shopping Malls are built. Negative Effects of Car Boom • Pollution. • Upper class and middle class whites left the crowded cities for Suburbian life. • Jobs and Businesses soon followed. • Public Transportation declined. • Poor in the cities were left without jobs or public service. • The gap between the poor and middle class widened. Consumerism • Buying material goods. • This became a way to show someone how successful you were. • The more materials the better off you were. Planned Obsolescence • This is where manufacturers began using this marketing strategy. They would purposely design products to wear out or become outdated in a short period of time. • Americans came to expect new and better products and to throw out items that have been hardly used. • America became a “throw away society.” The First Credit Card is issued. • The Diner’s Club in 1950 was America’s first credit card. • The American Express card would be introduced in 1958. • Instead of saving money, American’s were spending it. They felt that economic prosperity would continue. Advertising Boom • Advertising was now in magazines, on radio and television and on billboards along highways. Mass Media • Means of communication that reach large audiences. • This was used through television and radio. The Rise Of Television • The 1950’s were considered the “Golden Age” of Television. • Federal Communications Commission (FCC)- is a government agency that regulates and licenses television, telephone, telegraph, radio, and other communications industries. • By 1956 they had allowed 500 new stations to broadcast across America. The Beat Movement • Was started in New York City’s Greenwich Village. • The movement was made up of poets, artists, and writers who expressed social and literary works against the norm. – Jack Kerouac “On the Road” 1957 – Allen Ginsberg “Howl” Jack Kerouac 1922-1969 Allen Ginsberg 1926-1997 Rock and Roll • A disc jockey named Alan Freed named the new sound of rhythm and blues Rock and Roll. • Although it was a predominately african-american sound, many white artists took advantage and recorded their own versions of the songs. Early Pioneers of Rock and Roll • • • • • • • Little Richard Chuck Berry Fats Domino Elvis Presley Bill Haley and the Comets Buddy Holly and the Crickets Jerry Lee Lewis Jazz • Was reinvented in the fifties by artists such as Miles Davis, Sonny Rollins, Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Thelonius Monk. • Their music was not in the mainstream because they were African-American. Most radio stations would not play it. Urban Renewal • The National Housing Act was passed to tear down old rundown neighborhoods and construct low income housing. • Although it did some good, a lot of the land was used for parking lots and shopping malls. • This did not address the need for housing the poor. The poor simply left what used to be their living space and go to another poor neighborhood. Braceros • They were Mexican hired hands that were allowed into the United States in order to harvest certain crops. Once the harvest was done they were sent back to Mexico. • The problem was many remained in the U.S. illegally. The Longoria Incident • Felix Longoria was a Mexican-American World War II hero, who was killed in the Phillipines. • The only undertaker in town refused to provide funeral services. Termination Policy • This eliminated federal economic responsibility for Native American Tribes. • All reservations and tribal lands were discontinued. • The bureau of Indian affairs tried to relocate Native Americans into cities. – The Indians were not prepared or equipped for new jobs. – Discrimination and prejudice was a large reason why they did not succeed.