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THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME
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THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

Dec 28, 2015

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Page 1: THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

THE 1950’s

THE POSTWAR YEARS

AT HOME

Page 2: THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

Eisenhower and the 1950’s

Page 3: THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

The Postwar Economy

• People were eager to get the things that they had been missing since the Depression

• Per capita income: average income per person doubled in the 1950’s

• Conglomerates: large corporation that owns many smaller companies– Grew out of fear learned during the Depression– If one area of the economy failed, investments in

another area would be safe

Page 4: THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

Economy of the 1950’s

Page 5: THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

Business Changes• Franchise: right to open a restaurant using a

parent company’s name and system– McDonald’s was the first franchise– Allowed an individual to begin a business with a

small cash investment and enjoy the support of a huge parent corporation

• Television: raised money to broadcast by selling advertising time– Companies benefited by persuading viewers to

buy their products– In 1955, the average American family watched 4-

5 hours per day

Page 6: THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

Technology

• Computers: developed out of war technology; advanced by the invention of the transistor– Made computers smaller– Government purchased 1 of the first to tally the

Census in 1950

• Nuclear Power: developed out of research for the atomic bomb– In 1957, the first commercial nuclear power plant

opened using nuclear energy for a peaceful purpose

Page 7: THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

1950’s Suburbia

Page 8: THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

Highways Change Life• New services: drive-in restaurants and movies,

hotels & more gas stations

• Move to the suburbs– GI Bill provided low interest mortgages to soldiers – Levittown: pre-cut & pre-assembled houses that

were almost identical

• Interstate Highway Act: government built an interstate highway system– Provided a network of new roads for evacuation

from a nuclear attack

Page 9: THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

1950’s Politics

• Conversion to peacetime economy– Prices soared 25% when restrictions were lifted.– Strikes affected nearly everyone.

• Taft-Hawley Act: workers must return to work while government investigated strikes in major industries

• Fair Deal: Truman’s proposals to improve conditions for all– Continuation of New Deal Programs– Most programs were rejected by the Congress

Page 10: THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

Election of 1952

• Although he did not have strong support, Truman won re-election in 1948.

• He chose not to run again in 1952.• Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower easily

won.– K1C2 was the Republican slogan for the

problems facing America: Korea, Communism & Corruption

– Richard Nixon became Vice President

Page 11: THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

President Eisenhower• Modern Republicanism: conservative when it came

to money, liberal when it came to human beings• Favored big business• Suffered 3 recessions during his terms• However, maintained a mood of stability• National Defense Education Act: improved

science and math education to improve US technology– Provided millions of dollars in low cost loans to college

students – Granted millions to states for building science and foreign

language facilities

Page 12: THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

Minority Rights

Page 13: THE 1950’s THE POSTWAR YEARS AT HOME. Eisenhower and the 1950’s.

Demands for Civil Rights• Brown v. Board of Education: ruled that separate

but equal can never be equal.– Outlawed segregation in public schools– Overturned Plessy v. Ferguson

• Montgomery Bus Boycott: African Americans refused to use the busses – Introduced nonviolent protest practices– Produced a new generation of leaders

• Little Rock Integration: conflict erupted when Central High School was integrated in 1957– State government refused to follow Court ruling– Eisenhower called in National Guard to carry out order