I. Roots of the Cold War
A. U.S. point of view
1. Stalin seemed intent
on creating "spheres" of influence in Eastern Europe
a. Yalta Conference: Soviet pledge to allow democratic elections
in E. Europe was
broken incl. Poland, Romania, Bulgaria. Later Czechoslovakia & Hungary
dominated
by Moscow.
b. USSR refused to release E. Germany while the US, British and French
allowed their
western zones to be unified into a new democratic West Germany.
2. US wanted democracy
spread throughout the world with a strong international
organization to maintain global peace (United Nations)
-- Soviet Union eventually supported resistance to democracy throughout
the world.
3. Churchill’s "Iron
Curtain" Speech warned Americans of Soviet expansion (March 1946
in Fulton, Missouri)
-- Americans
now realized that a protracted conflict with the USSR was a reality.
B. Soviet point of view
1. US did not open western
front in W. Europe early enough; millions of Soviet
soldiers died fighting the brunt of Nazi armies alone until mid-1944.
2. The US and British froze
Russia out of the atomic bomb project.
3. US terminated lend-lease
to Moscow in 1945 and refused $6 billion plea
from Stalin while granting Britain $3.75 billion in 1946.
4. Soviets wanted a security
guarantee for the Soviet western border, especially in Poland
a. USSR twice attacked by Germany in 20th century.
b. Eastern Europe would become a "buffer zone"
C. Partitioning
1. Korea & Vietnam
split into northern and southern zones controlled by communists in
the north
and
pro-democracy forces in the south.
-- Two major wars would be fought by U.S.: Korean War (1950-53); Vietnam
(1964-1973)
2. Germany split into
4 zones with Berlin also being split in to quadrants. Issue of Berlin
nearly
resulted in full-scale war in 1948-49
II. Shaping the Postwar World
A. Bretton Woods Conference (1944): International
Monetary Fund (IMF) created by
western Allies
1. International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (World Bank) founded to
promote economic growth in war-torn and underdeveloped areas; stabilize
currencies
2. Soviets declined to participate
B. United Nations
1. Yalta Conference
-- "Big Three" had called for a conference on world
organization to meet in April 1945 in the United States
2. Dumbarton Oaks Conference
(August 21-October 7, 1944)
-- Laid the basis for the United Nations Charter
3. San Francisco Conference
opened on April 25, 1945.
a. UN Charter created a General Assembly composed of all member
nations which
would act as the ultimate policy-making body.
-- In reality, had the power to recommend but not enforce.
b. Security Council composed of US, USSR, China, Britain, and France
(+ 6
additional nations elected by the General Assembly for 2 year terms)
i. Any single veto would overrule a proposal
ii. Responsible for settling disputes among UN member nations.
III. The German Question
A. Nuremberg Trials
1. Potsdam Conference had
decided on punishing war crimes and for a program
of denazifying Germany.
2. Allies tried 22 top Nazis
at Nuremberg, Germany during 1945 and 1946.
3. 12 Nazis hanged and seven
sentenced to long jail terms.
4. Legal critics in U.S.
condemned proceedings as judicial lynchings because the victims
were tried for offenses that had not been clear-cut crimes when the war
began.
B. Partition of Germany
1. Soviets dominated their
Eastern German zone after WWII.
a. Sought to strip E. German resources and ship them to Russia as compensation
for war
losses.
b. Did not want revitalized Germany that could once again pose a threat
2. U.S. and W. Europeans
felt German economy vital to recovery of Europe
-- West Germany eventually became an independent country when US, France
and
Br. gave back each of their occupation zones.
3. 1949, a democratic West
Germany created; East Germany created under Soviet
domination.
IV. Reconstruction of Japan
A. Despite Soviet protest, US led by Gen. Douglas
MacArthur implemented democracy in
Japan (Allied Control Council).
B. Japanese war criminals tried between 1946-48;
7 hanged (including Tojo), 18 sent to prison
C. A constitution adopted in 1946 renouncing militarism
& introducing Western-style
democracy.
D. Within decades, Japan would become an economic
powerhouse.
V. Policy of "Containment"
A. 1947, US Ambassador to Russia, George Kennan,
warned Truman that Russia sought
to expand its empire.
1. Soviet leaders had an
ideology that "the outside world was hostile and that it was
their duty eventually to overthrow the political forces beyond their borders."
2. Soviet policy in E. Europe,
Germany, and Middle East of great concern.
3. Kennan’s ideas became
the basis for Truman’s "containment" policy.
B. Truman Doctrine -- Defined US foreign
policy for next 20 years.
"It must be the policy of
the US to support free peoples who are resisting attempted
subjugation by armed minorities
or by outside pressures."
1. Truman doctrine initiated
a policy of "containment": prevent the spread of communism
2. March
12, 1947, Truman asked Congress for $400 million to support democracy
in Turkey and Greece since the British were no longer able.
-- Result was positive for democracy in both countries
3. Truman quickly recognized
Israel in 1948 as the new country would be a bastion
of democracy in the Middle East.
C. Marshall Plan (1947)
1. France, Italy and Germany
were still suffering from economic chaos after WWII.
2. US feared Communist parties
could exploit these hardships and take control.
3. Sec. of State George
C. Marshall invited Europeans to create a joint plan
for economic recovery. US would provide financial assistance.
a. Soviets walked out of the conference in Paris in July, 1947.
-- Criticized it as US plan to take over Europe
b. Congress at first balked at huge monetary proposal but changed course
after the Soviet-sponsored coup d’ etat in Czechoslovakia
in Feb. 1948
which extended the influence of communism in Eastern Europe.
4. Plan allocated $12.5
billion over four years in 16 cooperating countries.
5. Within a few years,
most recipients of the plan's aid were exceeding prewar output;
seen as "economic miracle."
-- Communism lost ground in Italy and France
6. Czechoslovakia initially
interested in aid but pressure from Moscow forced
a veto. E. European nations prohibited from accepting aid from US &
W. Europe.
D. Organization of American States (OAS)
created to prevent communism in Latin America
E. U.S. government reorganization and rearmament
1. National Security
Act of 1947 created the Department of Defense
a. Headed by new cabinet post -- Sec. of Defense; housed in new Pentagon
b. National Security Council (NSC) and Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) created
by Truman in 1948 and 1949.
c. NSC Number 68 (1950)
i. Issued in response to the fall of China and onset of hostilities in
Korea.
ii. U.S. would implement a rigorous worldwide defense of Communism
with "an immediate and large-scale build up of our military."
2. 1948, first peacetime military
draft enacted
3. "Voice of America" authorized
by Congress beamed US broadcasts behind iron curtain
4. Atomic Energy
Commission created in 1946 -- established civilian control over nuclear
development and gave president sole authority over the use of atomic weapons
in warfare.
F. Berlin Airlift (1948-49)
1. Berlin, deep inside E.
Germany, was cut off from the west by Soviet forces in 1948.
a. Russian response to the creation of the Federal Republic of German (West
Germany)
b. US, French, & British zones in Berlin became an "island" inside
E. Germany
i. Soviets also shut off electric power
ii. 2 million W. Berliners became hostages
iii. Berlin became a symbolic issue for both sides.
2. US organized massive
airlift for nearly a year; 277,000 flights, 2 million tons of supplies.
3. Many thought World War
III was inevitable
4. Soviets lifted blockade
in May 1949.
VI. The Cold War during Truman’s second term under Secretary of State
Dean Acheson
A. North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
1. Created April
4, 1949 by 12 nations inc. U.S., Fr. Br., It., Belgium, Netherlands, Lux.,
Denmark, Norway, Portugal, Iceland, and Canada.
a. In 1953, Turkey & Greece joined.
b. West Germany joined in 1954
c. Created in response to Berlin Crisis.
2. Collective
security organization that essentially warned Moscow that a threat to any
of the signatories would be met with force.
3. In 1955 USSR formed Warsaw
Pact as a response to NATO which included all
eastern bloc countries -- satellite countries
4. ANZUS -- U.S.
forged a collective security agreement with Australia and New Zealand
to buttress democracy in the Pacific.
5. CENTO -- Central
Treaty Organization (in Central America)
B. Soviet Union exploded an atomic bomb in Sept.
1949; U.S. no longer had monopoly
-- The world now had
two atomic superpowers
C. China becomes Communist in 1949
1. US supported Nationalist
leader Jiang Jieshi (Chang-Kai-Shek) during WWII
2. In late 1949, Mao
Zedong’s (Mao Tse-tung) communist forces defeated the last of
Jiang's forces and the Nationalists fled to Formosa (Taiwan).
-- Mao supported by Soviet Union
3. Loss of China seen as
a major defeat for US.
a. 25% of world's population became communist in one shot.
b. Truman criticized for allowing China to fall to communists.
c. Truman replied that China had never been his to lose.
4. U.S. refused to recognize
the People’s Republic of China ("Red China") and maintained
Jiang’s regime on the UN Security Council
a. U.S.S.R. boycotted the Security Council in protest
b. People’s Republic of China not recognized as a permanent Security Council
member
until 1973.
D. The Hydrogen Bomb
1. U.S. exploded H-bomb
in 1952
-- Many scientists felt H-bomb had become an instrument of genocide.
2. In 1953, Soviets successfully
exploded an H-bomb; nuclear arms race continued.
3. For the first time in
history, humankind had the ability to end civilization.
E. Korean War (1950-53)
1. Background
a. During WWII, Russian troops occupied northern Korea while US troops
occupied
southern Korea.
b. Before leaving in 1949, both set up rival regimes on each side of the
49th parallel.
-- North Korea led by Communist dictator Kim Il-Sung -- supported
by
Soviet Union
c. Sec. of State Dean Acheson claimed Korea was outside essential US defense
perimeter in the Pacific and U.S. forces were reduced there.
2. June 25, 1950 -- N.
Korean army with Soviet-made tanks invaded S. Korea and took
nearly all the country.
3. Truman resurrected NSC-68,
a call to quadruple US defense spending, and ordered a
massive military buildup well beyond the purposes of the war.
-- US soon had 3.5 million men and was spending $50 billion -- 13% of GNP
4. UN Security Council (with
Russia absent) called for members to restore peace and
condemned the invasion with a vote of 9-0
-- UN votes military aid to South Korea.
5. UN votes to establish
UN force with Truman’s choice, Gen. Douglas MacArthur, as
UN commander who took his orders from Washington
-- Truman orders US troops into Korean fighting; 4/5 of UN troops
6. By August 1950, North
Korea captured virtually all of S. Korea
-- North Korea had superior military aid from Soviet Union.
7. MacArthur directs
surprise amphibious landing at Inchon behind Korean lines.
a. Within two weeks, UN forces recapture nearly all of S. Korea as North
Koreans
retreat behind 38th parallel.
b. Although original objectives are complete, MacArthur orders UN forces
to cross 38th
parallel with support of Truman and UN.
-- North Korean forces driven back near Chinese border.
c. UN calls for the establishment of a unified, independent, and democratic
Korea.
8. November 1950, 300
thousand Chinese soldiers pour across Yalu River into N. Korea
and force UN troops to retreat with heavy losses across 38th parallel.
-- Truman and others horrified that Korea might be completely lost
9. Truman fires MacArthur
a. Truman seeks limited war (and announces it Nov. 28, 1950)
i. US would seek specific objectives rather than total victory
ii. Nuclear weapons would not be used
iii. Original objective again to restore border between N. & S. Korea
iv. Invasion of China might mean Soviet retaliation in Europe or Asia.
v. Decision may have averted a world war.
b. MacArthur against limited war -- "No substitute for victory"
i. Asked for nuclear weapons to be used on China and demanded strong
military action against Chinese cities.
ii. Believed political decisions in Washington hampered conduct of war.
c. MacArthur circumvents Truman and demands total N. Korean surrender.
-- Undercuts Truman’s attempt at negotiations; threat to president’s power.
d. Truman removes MacArthur from command and orders him back to
US.
i. MacArthur returns home a hero
ii. Congressional committee investigates Truman decision
iii. Truman successfully defends his decision
e. Significance: Civilian control of US military is reaffirmed
10. Cease-Fire
a. Negotiations begin in July 1951 and continue for 2 years while war contiues.
i. Presidential candidate in 1952 Dwight D. Eisenhower pledges to personally
go to
Korea and get stalled negotiations moving again.
-- Eisenhower wins in 1952 and within weeks visits Korea.
ii. Eisenhower threatens to use nuclear weapons unless the deadlocked peace
negotiations are successful.
b. Cease-fire signed on July 27, 1953 (armistice still in effect today)
i. 38th parallel as boundary is restored.
ii. DMZ along boundary
c. Americans disappointed at unclear conclusion (WWII had been a clear
victory)
11. Results of Korean War
a. 54,000 US soldiers & 3,000 UN soldiers dead; 103,000 UN soldiers
wounded
(including Americans); 2 million civilians dead (mostly in South Korea);
over 1.5 million
dead Chinese and N. Korean soldiers.
-- Total casualties as high as 4 million.
b. UN successfully repelled N. Korean attack on S. Korea
c. US gov’t demonstrated its determination to enforce "containment"
VII. Truman’s First Term -- domestic policy
A. Taft-Hartley Act -- June 1947 (passed
by Congress over Truman’s veto)
1. Conservative response
to powerful labor unions (Republicans gained Congress in 1946)
a. In 1946, over 4 million workers went on strike demanding higher wages.
b. Shutdowns in the auto, steel, electric, railroad, and maritime industries
ensued.
c. Much striking activity orchestrated by John L. Lewis, president
of the
United Mine Workers, who demanded higher pay, safer work conditions, and
a small tax on coal to fund worker pensions.
2. Major provisions of Taft-Hartley
Act
a. Most important: 80 day cooling-off period for strikers in key
industries
b. Outlawed the "closed-shop" (process of hiring only union members)
-- "union shop" allowed (obligated new workers to become union members)
c. Unions still flourished; AFL had 8 million in 1950; CIO 6 million
3. By 1954, 15 states
passed "right to work" laws outlawing the "union-shop."
B. Civil Rights: gains for African Americans
1. 1946, Truman created
the President’s committee on Civil Rights
-- In 1947, committee published To Secure These Rights,
calling for desegregation in
American society, anti-lynching legislation and an end to poll taxes.
2. 1948, president banned
racial discrimination in federal government hiring practices
and ordered desegregation of the armed forces; blacks integrated
in 1953
-- Jackie Robinson first African American in Major League Baseball
in 1947
C. Presidential Succession Act of 1947
1. Created as a contingency
for nuclear war.
2. After the vice-president,
the Speaker of the House, president pro tempore (Senate)
and secretary
of state the next in line for succession.
D. 22nd Amendment (1951)
1. Limited president to
two terms; or a maximum of 10 years if he, as vice president,
assumed the presidency due to the death or departure of a previous president.
2. Largely a conservative
move in the face of over 17 years of continuous Democratic rule
in the White House (FDR and Truman)
-- FDR had been elected to four terms and many saw this as an opportunity
for the
executive branch to consolidate excessive power.
VIII. Anti-Communist Crusade -- "Red Scare"
A. American Fears -- Paranoia about communism
and its sympathizers began to set in due to:
1. Communism at home:
fear of spies infiltrating U.S. gov’t: Alger Hiss, Rosenbergs
2. Fear
of nuclear war: Soviet A-bomb in 1949; fear of H-bomb in 1953, sputnik
in 1957
3. Spread of communism
around the world (E. Europe, fall of China in 1949, Korea)
4. Demagogue politicians
using fear for gain (HUAC, McCarthy)
5. Fear of another depression (recessions in 1946-47 and early ‘50s triggered concerns)
-- A depression
might trigger growth of communism
6. Note: this was the 2nd
red scare of 20th century (first occurred after WWI: 1919-1920
during Wilson's presidency.)
7. Culture
reflected these fears: movies such as Invasion of the Body Snatchers,
The Blob, They
B. Smith Act of 1940
1. Made it illegal to advocate
the overthrow of the government by force or to belong
to an organization advocating such a position.
2. Used by Truman administration
to jail leaders of the American Communist Party.
-- 11 communists brought to trial in New York in 1949 and sent to prison
for
advocating the overthrow of the US gov't by force.
C. Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC)
indicts Alger Hiss, 1947
1. HUAC created in 1945
to root out communism during the "Red Scare" after WWII
that lasted into the mid-1950s.
a. Committee was sensationalistic, including going after public figures
in Hollywood.
b. Liberals and members of the New Deal targeted
c. Senate counterpart to HUAC also active in anti-communist investigations.
2. Richard Nixon led
the movement to indict Alger Hiss, a distinguished
member of the "eastern establishment," prominent
ex-New Dealer, and current member of U.S.
State Department
3. Hiss denied being a Communist
agent in the 1930s but was convicted of perjury in 1950
and sentenced to 5 years in prison.
4. The case brought Nixon
national prominence; was elected vice president 5 years later.
D. Truman's "loyalty" program
1. Truman countered HUAC
with anti-communist programs of his own.
a. Attorney General identified 90 "disloyal" organizations who were not
given
the right to prove their innocence.
b. Truman gave FBI approval and resources to go after suspected "reds"
2. Loyalty Review Board
investigated more than 3 million fed. employees
-- About 3,000 resigned or were dismissed without formal indictment, 212
fired
3. Loyalty oaths were increasingly
demanded of employees, esp. teachers
4. Many felt civil liberties
were being suppressed.
5. Gov’t employees forbidden
to:
a. Criticize US foreign policy
b. Advocate equal rights for women
c. Own books on socialism
d. Attend foreign films
E. McCarran Internal Security Bill (1950)
1. Required communist-front
organizations to register with the attorney general and
prevented their members from defense work and travel abroad.
2. Truman vetoed this bill
which authorized the President to arrest and detain suspicious
persons during an "internal security emergency".
a. Many felt this bill was a step towards a police state.
b. Congress passed it anyway
F. The Rosenbergs, 1954
1. Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
were convicted and executed for allegedly giving atomic bomb
secrets to the Soviets.
2. Both were avowed communists.
G. Blacklisting
1. Many actors, writers,
and directors had dabbled with the Communist Party
in the 1930's when it was considered fashionable.
2. 10 of these movie industry
people, the "Hollywood Ten" refused to testify
and decided to go to prison rather than testifying to the HUAC claiming
protection from the Constitution.
3. The industry responded
by denying work to 250 actors, writers, and directors.
H. McCarthyism
1. Senator Joseph R.
McCarthy (Republican from Wisconsin) became a demagogue
2. In Feb. 1950, asserted
that scores of unknown Communists were in the Dept. of State
a. His technique was to make sweeping accusations, employ guilt by association
and
documents out of context
b. Public convinced he was looking out for national security.
c. Was unable to substantiate his claims but ruined many gov't officials.
d. Almost no one was safe from his accusations.
e. Supporters tended to be Republican and blue-collar
3. Other Accusations:
a. Claimed Democratic party was guilty of 20 years of treason
b. Wanted Truman impeached for being soft on communism (despite Truman
Doctrine,
Marshall
Plan, NATO, Berlin Airlift, Korean War)
c. Claimed George Marshall was an instrument of Soviet conspiracy.
d. Hinted Eisenhower was "soft on communism."
e. McCarthy would slander people and claim they were homosexual as well
as communist.
4. McCarthy’s Senate
hearings created an atmosphere of conformity and fear
5. Eisenhower
despised McCarthy but did little to oppose him
6. Downfall of McCarthy
occurred when he took on the Army in 1954
a. McCarthy was intensely examined by Joseph Welch, Army attorney.
b. By Dec., 1954, Senate passed a resolution condemning McCarthy 67-22
c. McCarthy died three years later from alcohol and exhaustion.
7. Did the end of McCarthy signal the end of the red scare? Not really, but hysteria did mellow.
a.Sputnik caused some hysteria in 1957; Americans feared Soviets technologically superior.
b.Many Americans built bomb shelters in their back yards fearing nuclear war with Soviets
c.School’s continued “duck and cover” drills to prepare for a nuclear attack.
d.John Birch Society, an ultra-conservative nationalist group, emerged in late 1950s.
e.Aggressive rooting out of suspected communists still existed.
8. Arthur Miller’s The Crucible: popular play in 1950s that used the Salem Witch Trials as a
metaphor for McCarthyism.
IX. Election of 1948 -- Truman defeats Dewey in a stunning upset
(303-189)
A. Democrats were split into three camps: Truman,
southern States' Rights Party led by
Strom Thurmond of S.C.,
and the new Progressive party who nominated Henry Wallace.
B. Thomas Dewey was nominated by the Republicans;
Earl Warren v.p. nominee
-- Platform included anti-"big-labor"
plank and reduction of New Deal policies.
C. Truman called for housing, full employment, and
higher minimum wage, better farm supports,
new TVAs and extension of
Social Security and more civil rights for African Americans.
D. Truman's victory came with support from farmers,
workers, and blacks who felt
threatened by the Republicans.
E. Democrats established clear majority in both
houses of Congress
X.The “Vital Center”: 1948-1968
A. A political
consensus developed in America, although bitter political wrangling
continued to
characterize America.
B. Three major components to the “vital center” common in both major parties:
1.Anti-communism; containment
2.Belief that economic growth can solve all of society’s problems
-- JFK: “rising tides lift all boats”
3.Political pluralism: belief that a variety of ideas can compete in America.
-- e.g., New Deal becomes accepted by both parties (although it does not expand)
C. The “vital center” elected Truman in 1948; Eisenhower in 1952 & 1956; Kennedy in 1960; and
Johnson in 1964.
D. Flaws in the “vital center”
1.Vietnam War exposed problems with containment
2.As many as 25% of Americans lived in poverty; the economic boom did not “lift all boats”
3.Jim Crow demonstrated lack of true pluralism in America
E. “Vital Center” is shattered in 1968
1.Vietnam War pits hawks against doves; amplifies generation gap
2.White conservative backlash against liberalism— “Great Society” programs of Johnson, the civil rights movement, and apparent lack of law and order—contributes to Republican control of the White House for 20 of the next 24 years.
-- Popular TV show: All in the Family with Archie Bunker as a “loveable” bigot
XI. Truman’s FAIR DEAL
1949, Truman called for a "Fair Deal" including housing, full
employment, and higher minimum wage, better farm supports, new TVAs and
extension of Social Security, and increased rights for African Americans.
A. The only major successes were raising the minimum
wage, public housing and
extending old-age
insurance to more beneficiaries (SSA of 1950)
B. Sec. of Agriculture’s proposed program of continued
price supports for farmers failed to be
passed by Congress and surpluses
continued to pile up.
C. In essence, Truman was able to preserve New Deal
programs but unable to add to it.
D. Coalition of Republicans and Southern Democrats
prevented little more than the
maintenance of existing
programs.
E. Truman decides not to run for reelection in 1952
1. Military deadlock in
Korea, war-induced inflation, and White House scandal.
2. Adlai E. Stevenson runs
on the Democratic ticket against Dwight D. Eisenhower.
3. Election of 1952, Eisenhower
defeats Stevenson 442-89. Nixon is VP.
XII. American Society in the Post-WWII era (1945-1970)
A. GI Bill of Rights
1. Response to unemployment
fears resulting from 15 million returning GIs from WWII.
2. Servicemen’s Readjustment
Act of 1944 sent millions of veterans to school.
a. Majority attended technical and vocational schools.
b. Eventually, about $14.5 spent on program.
3. Veteran’s Administration
(VA) guaranteed about $16 billion in loans for veterans
to buy homes, farms, and small businesses.
-- Bill contributed to economic prosperity that emerged in late 1940s
B. Baby Boom
1. In the 1950s, population
grew by over 28 million; 97% in urban and suburban areas.
2. Between 1946 and 1961,
63.5 million babies were born
-- Between 1931 and 1946, only 41.5 million born
3. Proportional growth
in population unprecedented in American history.
C. Economic boom: 1950-1970 -- "The Affluent
Society"
1. National income nearly
doubled in 1950s; almost doubled again in 1960s.
a. Americans enjoyed about 40% of world’s wealth despite accounting for
only 6%
of population.
b. By mid-1950s, 60% of Americans owned their own homes compared with
only 40% in the 1920s.
c. Majority of postwar jobs went to women in urban offices and shops.
i. By 1990s, women would account for about half of total workers.
ii. Clash between demands of suburban domesticity and realities
of employment sparked the feminist revolt in the 1960s.
d. Economy largely fueled by the growth of the defense industry.
-- Accounted for over 50% of the national budget by 1960.
e. Cheap energy and increased supply of power facilitated growth.
f. Rising productivity (due to increases in education and technology)
increased
the average Americans standard of living two-fold.
2. Consumerism mushroomed
as Americans had more disposable income
-- Americans
bought cars, gadgets for their homes, vacations, etc. in unprecedented
numbers
3. Middle class
a. 5.7 in 1947; over 12 million by early 1960s.
b. Suburbs
i. Grew 6X faster than cities in 1950s.
ii. Resulted from increased car production, white flight from urban areas
due to black
migration into Northern and Midwestern cities, and gov’t policies that
insured both
builders and homeowners.
c. Cult of domesticity re-emerges
i. A few advocated that science supported the idea that women could only
find
fulfillment as a homemaker.
ii. The concept of a woman’s place being in the home was widespread in
magazines,
TV, and society in general.
-- TV shows
included Father Knows Best, Ozzie & Harriet, Leave it to Beaver,
iii. Dr. Benjamin Spock:
The Commonsense Book of Baby and Child Care
-- Sold an average of 1 million
copies per year between 1946 and 1960.
-- Message: Women’s primary
responsibility was to stay home and nurture their children.
--
Also, parents should trust themselves as they attend to their children’s
physical
and
psychological needs.
D. Sunbelt vs. Frostbelt (or Rustbelt)
1. Sunbelt is a 15-state
area stretching from Virginia through Florida and Texas to
Arizona and California (includes all former Confederate states)
2. Advent of air-conditioning
spurred enormous growth
a. Population increase twice that of the old industrial zones of the Northeast.
b. California which became most populous state by 1963.
3. War industries and
high-tech industries attracted millions to the west coast.
4. Aerospace industry and
huge military installations attracted millions to Texas and Florida.
5. Traditional midwest industrial
workers lost ground as many of their jobs were
shipped overseas.
6. "Rustbelt" states of
the Ohio Valley angered at federal outlays for Southern
and Western states
7. Every president elected
since 1964 has come from the Sunbelt.
8. Sunbelt’s representation
in Congress has increased significantly.
E.Question:
To what extent was their either conformity or consensus in American society
between 1945 and 1960?
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