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Chapter 37 “The Eisenhower Era” Election of 1952 • Republicans – Dwight D. Eisenhower – World War II hero – Anticommunist Richard M. Nixon was chosen as his running mate – Nixon gave “Checkers Speech” after being accused of wrongdoing in regard to a secretly financed “slush fund” – “Checkers speech” showed power of Television • Democrats – Adlai Stevenson Checkers Speech • [The gift] was a little cocker spaniel dog . . Checkers . . .and, you know, the kids, like all kids, love the dog, and I just want to say this right now, that regardless of what they say about it, we're going to keep it. "The Checkers Speech" 1952 End of Korean Conflict • • • Only after Ike threatened to use nuclear weapons, was an armistice finally signed. 54,000 Americans had died, and tens of billions of dollars had been wasted in the effort Communism had been “contained.” General/President Eisenhower Ike "Ike" and four brothers proudly exhibit muskies and northern pike caught on Wisconsin Lake Copyright 1997 State Historical Society of Wisconsin McCarthyism • • • The success of brutal anticommunist “crusader” Joseph R. McCarthy was quite alarming after he had charged onto the national scene by claiming that Secretary of State Dean Acheson was knowingly employing 205 Communist Party members. He sought to prosecute suspected Communists, often targeting innocent people and destroying families and lives. Eisenhower privately loathed McCarthy, but the president did little to stop the anti-red, since it appeared that most Americans supported his actions. • In 1954, when he attacked the army, he went too far and was exposed for the liar and drunk that he was; three years later, he died unwept and unsung. McCarthyism This editorial cartoon comments on the political problems Senator Joseph McCarthy presented to President Dwight D. Eisenhower. CREDIT: Hungerford Cy, artist. "An Uncomfortable Situation." December 3, 1953. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress Desegregating the South • • • • • Jim Crow laws – Segregation laws in the South Plessy vs Ferguson – 1896 the United States Supreme Court said that separate but equal facilities were permissible. Segregation occurred in every aspect of society, from schools to restrooms to restaurants and beyond. Only about 20% of the eligible Blacks could vote, due to intimidation, discrimination, poll taxes, and other schemes meant to keep Black suffrage down In his 1944 novel, An American Dilemma, Swedish scholar Gunnar Myrdal had exposed the hypocrisy of American life, noting how while “every man [was] created equal,” Blacks were certainly treated worse than Whites Segregation Image courtesy - Library of Congress Jackie Robinson • Jackie Robinson became the first black baseball player in the modern major leagues when he joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. Playing from 1947 to 1956, Robinson had a career batting average of .311, and in 1962 became the first black player elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. Baseball retired Robinson’s number 42 Improvements in Civil Rights 1. National Association for the Advancement of Colored People • • 1944 the Supreme Court ruled the “white primary” unconstitutional The case of Sweatt v. Painter (339 U.S. 629) was a pivotal event in the history of The University of Texas, its School of Law, and the struggle for civil rights in the United States. Heman Marion Sweatt (1912-1982), an African American postal worker from Houston, was denied admission to The University of Texas School of Law in 1946. The NAACP's legal team, led by Thurgood Marshall, carried the legal battle to the United States Supreme Court, which struck down the system of "separate but equal" graduate school education and paved the way for the landmark decision of Brown v. Board of Education in 1954. Taking a Stand 2. Rosa Parks • • In Montgomery, Alabama a collegeeducated black seamstress refused to give up her seat in the “whites only” section of a bus. Her arrest sparked a yearling black boycott of the city buses and served notice throughout the South that blacks would no longer submit meekly to the absurdities and indignities of segregation Rosa Parks 3. Truman’s Desegregation of the Armed Forces 4. Chief Justice Earl Warren • Shocked his conservative backers by actively assailing Black injustice and ruling in favor of AfricanAmericans. 5. Brown V. Topeka Board of Education – Segregation in the public school was “inherently unequal” and thus unconstitutional. – Reversed the Court’s earlier declaration of 1896 in Plessy v. Ferguson that “separate but equal” facilities were allowable under the Constitution Nettie Hunt and her daughter, Nickie, sit on the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court in May 1954. Photo by Cass Gilbert/Bettman/Corbis 6. Little Rock Nine • • Eisenhower refused to issue a statement acknowledging the Supreme Court’s ruling in the Brown Case, and he even privately complained about this new end to segregation. In September of 1957, Orval Faubus, the governor of Arkansas, mobilized the National Guard to prevent nine Black students from enrolling in Little Rock’s Central High School, Ike sent troop to escort the children to their classes. photo: U.S. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS The Little Rock Nine pose in Daisy Bates ’ living room,,1957.From top left, Jefferson Thomas,Melba Pattillo,Terrance Roberts,Carlotta Walls,Daisy Bates,Ernest Green,and from left bottom,Thelma Mothershed,Minnie Jean Brown,Elizabeth Eckford,and Gloria Ray. Elizabeth Eckford Elizabeth Eckford at a bus stop after soldiers with bayonets denied her entry to Central High School. Finally a woman from the crowd, Grace Lorch, confronted the mob and escorted her to safety. From “Crisis in Little Rock, 1957.” © Will Counts Elizebeth Eckford and Hazel Bryan 50 years later 7. Southern Christian Leadership Conference – – Aimed to mobilize the vast power of Black churches on behalf of Black rights—a shrewd strategy, since churches were a huge source of Black power. Started by Martin Luther King Jr. King's interest in nonviolence became a central tenet of his leadership of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and helped lead a young generation of African Americans to promote desegregation through peaceful sit-ins. Courtesy of Atlanta History Center Archives 8. Greensboro, North Carolina sit-in • • • an event that is often credited with launching the civil rights movement of the 1960s: a sit-in campaign by African American college students to integrate the whites-only lunch counter at a Woolworth's store in Greensboro, North Carolina. When the young people were denied service on the first day of the sit-in, February 1, 1960, they refused to leave, and the lunch counter was shut down. Over the next two weeks, as the Greensboro students continued to sit in, similar actions spread to 15 Southern cities More than 50,000 students participated in the new movement that year, and 3,600 were jailed. By the end of 1960, many lunch counters across the South — including the one at the Greensboro Woolworth's — were segregated no longer A.and T. College students sit in at a Woolworth's lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina, on February 2, 1960. 9. Creation of Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) • In April 1960, southern Black students formed the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, or SNCC, to give more focus and force to their civil rights efforts. Stokley Carmichael the leader of SNCC Black Power Black Power is a term that emphasizes racial pride and the desire for African Americans to achieve equality. The term promotes the creation of Black political and social institutions. The term was popularized by Stokely Carmichael during The Civil Rights Movement. Many SNCC (Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee) members were becoming critical of leaders that articulated non-violent responses to racism. Stokely Carmichael Tommie Smith and John Carlos Tommie Smith and John Carlos give the Black Power salute at the 1968 Summer Olympics. The two men were suspended by the United States team and banned from Olympic village. The action is considered a milestone of The Civil Rights Movement. Dynamic Conservatism (Modern Republicanism) • "I will be a conservative when it comes to money matters and a liberal when it comes to human beings." Dwight D. Eisenhower • By Dynamic Conservatism, Eisenhower meant: 1. Budget cutting 2. Government support for big business 3. The return of federal functions back to state and local governments Goal of Ike – Roll Back Gains of New Deal 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Decreased government spending by decreasing military spending Tried to transfer control of offshore oil fields to the states Tried to curb the TVA’s by setting up a private company to take their places. His secretary of health, education, and welfare condemned free distribution of the Salk anti-polio vaccine. Cracked down on illegal Mexican immigration that cut down on the success of the bracero program by rounding up 1 million Mexicans and returning them to their native country in 1954. Interstate Highway Act • Very New Deal-ish • Built 42,000 miles of interstate freeways Massive Retaliation • • Secretary of State John Foster Dulles stated that the policy of containment was not enough and that the U.S. was going to push back Communism and liberate the peoples under it. Planned on building a fleet of superbombers called Strategic Air Command, which could drop massive nuclear bombs in any retaliation. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles (left) meets with President Eisenhower. Dulles advocated “massive retaliation” to combat communist aggression, but Eisenhower refused pleas to employ nuclear weapons in Vietnam. (AP photo ) B-52 • • Since becoming operational in 1955, the Boeing Stratofortress B52 has been the main long-range heavy bomber of the Strategic Air Command. Affectionately known as the BUFF (Big Ugly Fat Fella), it first flew on April 15, 1952. Nearly 750 B-52s were built when production ended in October 1963, of which 170 were D models. On January 18, 1957, three B-52Bs completed the world's first non-stop round-theworld flight by jet aircraft, lasting 45 hrs., 19 mins., with only three aerial refuelings en route. A B-52 also made the first known airborne hydrogen bomb drop over Bikini Atoll on May 21, 1956. Ike and the USSR • • Ike tried to thaw the Cold War by appealing for peace to new Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev at the 1955 Geneva Conference, but the Soviet leader rejected such proposals, along with one for “open skies.” The two leaders talked and both expressed a desire to cut back on nuclear weapons. (spirit of Geneva) The Vietnam Nightmare • • • • Ho Chi Minh – Leader of Vietnam, became Communist. Vietnam was a French colony. French and a democratic group within Vietnam fought Minh with help from the U.S. financially. North Vietnamese (Communist) V. South Vietnamese (democratic) In March 1954, when the French became trapped at Dienbienphu, Eisenhower’s aides wanted to bomb the Viet Minh guerilla forces, but held back, fearing plunging the U.S. into another Asian war so soon after Korea, and after the Vietnamese won, Vietnam was split at the 17th parallel, supposedly temporarily. Vietnam became clearly split between a Communist north and a pro-Western south Ending of the “Spirit of Geneva” 1. 2. 3. In 1956, when the Hungarians revolted against the USSR, the Soviets crushed them with brutality and massive bloodshed. In 1953, to protect oil supplies in the Middle East, the CIA engineered a coup in Iran that installed the shah, Mohammed Reza Pahlevi, as ruler of the nation, protecting the oil for the time being but earning the wrath of Arabs that would be repaid in the 70s. The Suez crisis was far messier: President Gamal Abdel Nasser, of Egypt, needed money to build a dam in the upper Nile and flirted openly with the Soviet side as well as the U.S. and Britain, and upon seeing this blatant Communist association, Secretary of State Dulles dramatically withdrew his offer, thus forcing Nasser to nationalize the dam. Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). • In 1960, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, Iran, and Venezuela joined to form the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC. Election of 1956 • Republicans – Ike • Democrats – Adlai Stevenson • The GOP called itself the “party of peace” while the Democrats assaulted Ike’s health, since he had had a heart attack in 1955 and a major abdominal operation in ’56. • Ike won in a landslide but the Democrats won a majority in Congress Eisenhower Doctrine • In January 1957 in a speech to Congress Eisenhower recommended the use of American forces to protect Middle East states against overt aggression from nations "controlled by international communism". He also urged the provision of economic aid to those countries with anti-communist governments. • Landrum-Griffin Act (September 14, 1959), law passed by Congress to eliminate corruption and suppress the influence of organized crime in labor unions. Also called the Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act, it requires that unions file annual financial reports showing how the dues of union members are spent Jimmy Hoffa, president of the Teamsters Union, speaks to a crowd of 10,000 labor union members at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Hoffa was campaigning against the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act, which proposed that unions disclose all of their finances and hold regular leadership elections. The United States Congress passed the act in 1959. (Corbis) Jimmy Hoffa • In 1952 Hoffa became vice president of the Teamsters Union under Dave Beck, the president. Allegations were made in 1956 that the leadership of the union was involved in illegal activities. • Beck was eventually imprisoned for five years and Hoffa became the new president of the Teamsters Union. • Robert Kennedy claimed that Hoffa had misappropriated $9.5 million in union funds and had corruptly done deals with employers. Hoffa's lawyer, Edward Bennett Williams, managed to persuade the jury to find him not guilty. George Meany, president of the AFL-CIO, did not agree with the verdict and Hoffa and the Teamsters Union were expelled from the association. Hoffa’s Mysterious Disappearance • • • • In 1964, Hoffa succeeded in bringing virtually all truck drivers in North America under a single national master-freight agreement with the Teamsters Union. Both President John F. Kennedy and his successor, Lyndon B. Johnson, put pressure on Hoffa through the president's brother Robert F. Kennedy (then Attorney General), in an attempt to investigate his activities and disrupt his ever-growing union. In 1964, Hoffa was convicted of attempted bribery of a grand juror and jailed for 15 years. Hoffa disappeared on July 30, 1975 from the parking lot of the a Restaurant in Michigan. Sputnik I • • • • • • 1st satellite Shattered American confidence Proved to Americans that a “missile gap” existed. The USSR appeared to be far more technologically advanced the the U.S. Four months after Sputnik I, the U.S. sent its own satellite (weighing only 2.5 lbs) into space, but the apparent U.S. lack of technology sent concerns over U.S. education, since American children seemed to be learning less advanced information than Soviet kids The 1958 National Defense and Education Act (NDEA) gave $887 million in loans to needy college students and grants for the improvement of schools. Biggest effect was in education reform in the United States. – – Led to science and math emphasis in schools. President Eisenhower said that this event should not cause one iota of concern Sputnik 1 • Sputnik 1, launched on Oct.4, 1957, became the first artificial satellite to successfully orbit the Earth. It was a metallic sphere about 2 feet across, weighing 184 lbs (84 kg), with long "whiskers" pointing to one side, and stayed in orbit for 6 months before falling back to Earth. Its rocket booster, weighing 4 tons, also reached orbit and was easily visible from the ground. Sputnik 2 • Scientists in the Soviet Union were sure that organisms from Earth could live in space. To demonstrate that, they sent the world's second artificial space satellite — Sputnik 2 — to space from the Baikonur Cosmodrome on November 3, 1957. On board was a live mongrel dog named Laika (Barker in Russian) on a life-support system. Laika also was known as Kudryavka (Little Curly in Russian). The American press nicknamed the dog Muttnik. • While other animals had made suborbital flights, Laika was the first animal to go into orbit. She suffered no ill effects while she was alive in an orbit at an altitude near 2,000 miles Laika inside Sputnik 2 [Tass News Agency photo via Russian Space Agency] Camp David Talks • One Eisenhower’s greatest presidential accomplishments was his success at keeping America at peace throughout the Cold War. When Khrushchev visited America in 1959, he and Eisenhower seemed to get along so well that it seemed a thaw in the Cold War was possible. But Khrushchev would end up scuttling the Paris Peace Conference the following year after the Soviets shot down a U.S. U-2 spy plane over their airspace. The U-2 incident was Eisenhower's greatest embarrassment and disappointment as president. U-2 Incident • Gary Powers was convicted of espionage and sentenced to 3 years imprisonment and 7 years of hard labor. He only served 1 year 9 months and 9 days before being traded for the Soviet spy Colonel Rudolph Ivanovich Abel Gary Power Pilot of U-2 Cuban Communism • • • Latin American nations resented the United States’ giving billions of dollars to Europe compared to millions to Latin America, and the U.S.’s constant intervention (Guatemala, 1954), as well as its support of cold dictators who claimed to be fighting communism In 1959, in Cuba, Fidel Castro overthrew U.S.-supported Fulgencio Batista, promptly denounced the Yankee imperialists, and began to take U.S. properties for a land-distribution program, and when the U.S. cut off heavy U.S. imports of Cuban sugar, Castro confiscated more American property. In 1961 America broke diplomatic relations with Cuba Fidel Castro, leader of Cuba Since 1959 Election of 1960 • • Republicans – Richard Nixon Democrats – John F. Kennedy – – – Lyndon B. Johnson his VP candidate. A marriage of convenience (LBJ meant southern votes) Kennedy was attacked because he was the first Catholic presidential candidate ever, but defended himself and encouraged Catholics to vote for him, and if he lost votes from the South due to his religion, he got them back from the North due to the bitter Catholics there In four nationally televised debates, JFK held his own and looked more charismatic, perhaps helping him to win the election by a comfortable margin, becoming the youngest president elected (but not served) ever. 1960 Nixon/Kennedy Debate 1960 Presidential Election Eisenhower Legacy • Ended the Korean War and kept the U.S. out of a war with Russia • In 1959, Alaska and Hawaii became the 49th and 50th states to join the Union • Ike did little for civil rights • Escalation of the nuclear threat • Warned against a military/industrial complex. Ironic because he came up with the idea of Strategic Air Command • Remained popular after his presidency Alaskan Statehood Signing of the Alaska Statehood Proclamation, January 3, 1959. Photo Courtesy Fairbanks Daily News-Miner Hawaiian Statehood Admitting Hawaii as the 50th state to join the Union, August 21, 1959. Attending, Fred Seaton, Daniel K.Ineuye, Edward Johnson, Sam Rayburn, Richard Nixon, Lt. Col. James S. Cook Jr., Maj. Gen. A. T. McNamara. Early Computers • The economy really sprouted during the 50s, and the invention of the transistor exploded the electronics field, especially in computers, helping such companies as International Business Machines (IBM) expand and prosper • Key to economic growth in 50s was electronics Analog computing machine, an early version of the modern computer. (Image is taken from NASA's Web site: http://www.nasa.gov.) Early Passenger Airplanes • Aerospace industries progressed, as the Boeing company made the first passenger-jet airplane (adapted from the superbombers of the Strategic Air Command), the 707. Interior of the Boeing 707 First Air Force One Today’s Air Force One 1953 First Issue of Playboy 1954 Original McDonald’s San Bernadino, CA Elvis Opening of Disneyland Construction of the Matterhorn Changing Economy • • • • In 1956, “white-collar” workers outnumbered “blue collar” workers for the first time, meaning that the industrial era was passing on As this occurred, labor unions also labored, since most of their members were industrial workers. Women more employable after 1945 because of the change to a more service sector society. Critics charged that the American people had developed into a nation of conformists 1950s Cult of Domesticity Ozzie and Harriett Show Leave it to Beaver Show NY Giants Become the SF Giants in 1958 NY Giants Baseball game at the Polo Grounds in 1911 SF Giants First Baseball game at Seals Stadium in 1958 Brooklyn Dodgers Become the LA Dodgers in 1958 1955 Brooklyn Dodgers game at Yankee Stadium Don Larson Pitched a no-hitter. The Feminine Mystique • Written by Betty Friedan • Launched modern women’s Liberation movement • Discussed the boredom of suburban housewifery Betty Friedan 1950s Television