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The Golden Age
A period during which a society attains prosperity and cultural achievements, economic expansion, stable prices, low unemployment, and rising standard of living
When did the Soviets successfully test an atomic bomb?
August 29, 1949
What happened on October 1, 1949?
The CCP defeated the Kuomintang nationalists
The Truman Doctrine March 12, 1947
The US should give support to countries or peoples threatened by Soviet forces or communist insurrection. First expressed in 1947 by US President Truman in a speech to Congress seeking aid for Greece and Turkey, the doctrine was seen by the communists as an open declaration of the Cold War.
When did General Marshall give his address at Harvard, advocating for world peace?
June 5, 1947
Financial and Monetary Conference/Bretton Woods Conference
In July 1944, it created the International Monetary Fund and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
When did racial tensions start riots in Mobile, Beaumont, Detroit, and Harlem?
1943
Evian Conference France 1938
International leaders discussed the Jewish refugee problem and worked to expand Jewish immigration quotas by tens of thousands of people per year but it failed
When did Japan surrender?
Sept 2 1945
When was the first atomic bomb launched?
July 1945
Stimson Doctrine Jan 1932
A doctrine that refused to recognize any state established as a result of Japanese aggression
The Rise of the Middle Class
Increased access to televisions, Air Conditioning, long-distance phone calls, jet travel, electricity, central heat, and indoor plumbing.
John Kenneth Galbraith's "The Affluent Society"
An economist who attacked the prevailing notion that sustained economic growth would solve America's chronic social problems. Encouraged the wealthy to spend more for the common good.
Levittown- William and Alfred Levitt
The prototypical suburban community. Mass production techniques to build inexpensive homes in suburban New York to help relieve the postwar housing shortage. This became a symbol of the movement to the suburbs in the years after WWII.
1950s
Last decade of the industrial age, shift toward service over manufacturing.
Consumer culture
American consumption hit new levels, attitudes about debt change. 1950, the first credit cards.
Consumer Products
After WWII there was an increase in these available which included, cars, refrigerators, washing machines, and televisions. Advertisement was also on the rise to increase the consumption.
Television
This was invented in the 1920's it wasn't until the late 1950's that it became the primary source of information and entertainment. In 1946 there were only 17,000 in America, but by 1957 there were 40 million. The percentage of Americans that owned at least one television increased from 12 percent in 1950 to more than 87 percent in 1960.
Baby Boom
Refers to the dramatic post-World War II increased birth rate during which an estimated 78.3 million Americans were born.
Housing Act of 1949
Act passed by Congress that's goal was to provide a decent home for every family in America, funded by public housing and urban renewal programs.
HOLC (Home Owners Loan Corporation)
Began purchasing and refinancing existing mortgages at risk of default. They introduced the amortized mortgage, allowing borrowers to pay back interest and principal regularly over fifteen years. Home ownership was opened to the multitudes
Redlining
The least secure, highest-risk neighborhoods for loans received a D grade and the color red. Refusing to make loans secured by property located in certain neighborhoods for discriminatory purposes. It was a reason for the development of highly segregated cities in the North, and the decline of inner-cities.
Blockbusting
A process where real estate agents convince white property owners to sell their houses at low prices because of the fear that black people will move into the neighborhood. also known as “panic peddling.”
Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
A federal agency established in 1943 to increase home ownership by providing an insurance program to safeguard the lender against the risk of nonpayment, so more home loans were available for consumers.
Suburban Americanization
A move away from urban ethnic communities that established rigid racial boundaries
Brown v. Board of Education
In 1954, the Supreme Court overruled Plessy v. Ferguson, declared that racially segregated facilities are inherently unequal, and ordered all public schools to be desegregated
Jim Crow
Laws designed to enforce segregation of blacks from whites
Martin Luther King Jr.
U.S minister and civil rights leader and a noted orator, who was against blacks by organizing nonviolent resistance and peaceful mass demonstrations. Wrote, Stride Toward Freedom, in 1958
Montgomery Bus Boycott
In 1955, after Rosa Parks was arrested for refusing to give up her seat on a city bus, Dr. Martin Luther King helped lead this effort, and after 11 months, the Supreme Court ruled segregation of public transportation illegal
Emmett Till
A 14 year old black boy who was murdered in 1955 for whistling at a white woman by her husband and his friends. They kidnapped him and brutally killed him. His death led to the American Civil Rights movement.
SCLC (Southern Christian Leadership Conference)
Organization formed by MLK in 1957 to organize nonviolent resistance to achieve equality for African Americans
Leave It to Beaver
Popular TV show that exemplifies the 1950s ideal that women should return home to their roles as wives and mothers
Dr. Spock
This author wrote a best-selling parenting guide that emphasized flexibility and the child's individuality to help them develop. Spock emphasizes that ultimately, the parents' "natural loving care" for their children is most important.
Rebel Without a Cause
Created in 1955, It was an example of the changes in conformity to ideals of the 50s. Movies like this made people fearful of the delinquency.
Elvis Presley
1950s; a symbol of the rock-and-roll movement of the 50s when teenagers began to form their own subculture, dismaying to conservative parents; created a youth culture that ridiculed phony and pretentious middle-class Americans, celebrated uninhibited sexuality and spontaneity; foreshadowed the coming counterculture of the 1960s
Beat Generation
Group of American writers who came to prominence in the 1950s, and also the cultural phenomena that they wrote about and inspired (later sometimes called "beatniks"). Central elements of "Beat" culture include a rejection of mainstream American values, experimentation with drugs and alternate forms of sexuality, and an interest in Eastern spirituality. Examples: Ginsberg and Kerouac
Keynesian Economics
Theory based on the principles of John Maynard Keynes, stating that government spending should increase during business slumps and be curbed during booms.
Libertarianism and Libertarian Economics
An ideology that cherishes individual liberty and insists on minimal government, promoting a free market economy, a non-interventionist foreign policy, and an absence of regulation in moral, economic, and social life.
Liberals
Those who believe that government should promote equality and provide social services and should provide civil liberty
Conservatives
Believed in personal responsibility, limited government, free markets, individual liberty, traditional values, and strong national defense
General Dwight Eisenhower
The ex-World War II general was popular, but he ended up running as a republican and was elected in 1950 who won 2 terms
“Middle of the Road”
Eisenhower’s political policy to stay neutral within parties
National Interstate and Defense Highways Act
The 1956 act that provided funds for the construction of 42,500 miles of roads throughout the US
Massive Retaliation
The “new look” defense policy of the Eisenhower administration of the 1950’s was to threaten “massive retaliation” with nuclear weapons in response to any act of aggression by a potential enemy
Freedom Train 1947
It was a collaborative effort of Americans to promote the freedoms afforded to our country following the devastation of WWII; The train carried 127 "documents of liberty" and 6 historical flags: the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights, the Emancipation Proclamation, the Gettysburg Address, the German and Japanese surrender documents that ended WW2, and the Constitution.
Freedom Train (Langston Hughes)
Langston Hughes published a new poem, "Freedom Train," in The New Republic, about the contradictions of the actual "Freedom Train".
Iron Curtain
Term coined by Winston Churchill, he spoke about the "Iron Curtain" that split Europe, West mostly democratic and East communist.
The Cold War
A global political and ideological conflict; competing notions of freedom and social justice.
Grew out of a failure to achieve a durable settlement among leaders from the "Big Three" Allies—the US, Britain, and the Soviet Union to shape the postwar order.
When did the US join WWII?
1941
When did the European war start?
1939
September 18 Incident
The Manchurian Incident in September 1931, where Japan set off an explosion to invade Manchuria by bombing the South Manchuria Railway
Why couldn’t the US fight against the Japanese army?
They had a force of 4,100,000 men and 900,000 Chinese collaborators and were armed with modern rifles, artillery, armor, and aircrafts
What happened in the Spanish Civil War in 1936?
Hitler and Benito Mussolini intervened and toppled the communist Spanish Republican Party
Why did the European war start?
German Wehrmacht invaded Poland on September 1, 1939
Who were the Nazi’s?
Hitler’s National Socialists invaded German institutions and destroyed democratic traditions and leftist groups
What did Germany do in 1938?
Germany annexed Austria and set its sights on the Sudetenland
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact
Hitler signed a secret agreement with the Soviet Union to split Poland between them and a truce afterwards
Blitzkrieg
“lightning war”, the use of tanks, planes, and infantry to smash front lines and wreak havoc
What happened to France in June 1940?
France was split, Germany governed the north and the south was governed by a puppet government
Operation Sea Lion
The planned German invasion of the British Isles
Battle of Britain
German Luftwaffe vs. Royal Air Force from June-Oct 1940
Blitz
A bombing campaign against cities and civilians in London, Liverpool, and Manchester from September 1940 to May 1941
Great Patriotic War
Battles in Leningrad, Stalingrad, and Moscow
European Recovery Program
The Marshall Plan pumped enormous sums into Western Europe and was designed to rebuild Western Europe, open markets, and win European support for capitalist democracies
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
Military alliance created in 1949 made up of 12 non-communist countries, including the United States, that support each other if attacked
Warsaw Pact 1955
The Soviet Union would formalize its own collective defensive agreement in 1955, the Warsaw Pact, which included Albania, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and East Germany.
Long Telegram 1946
Telegram written to the US State Department by George Kennan who worked at the US Embassy in Moscow. He alarmed them that the Soviet Union had to be contained because the Soviet Union had plans for expansionism of their communist ideology
National Security Memorandum 68 (NSC-68)
A 1950 Cold War Manifesto that urged a "rapid build-up of political, economic, and military strength" in order to "roll back the Kremlin's (Russia) drive for world domination
"Long Roots" of it all
An alliance of convenience during World War II to bring down Hitler's Germany was not enough to erase decades of mutual suspicions.
Security Council
An important division of the United Nations that contains five permanent members — the United States, Britain, China, France, and Russia — and ten rotating members. It is often called into session to respond quickly to international crises.
Allied Airlift
The Soviet Union initiated a ground blockade, cutting off rail and road access to West Berlin to gain control over the entire city. The United States organized and coordinated a massive airlift that flew essential supplies into the beleaguered city for eleven months, until the Soviets lifted the blockade on May 12, 1949.
Korean War
Fighting erupted in Korea between communists in the north and American-backed anti-communists in the south
- North Koreans launched a successful surprise attack and Seoul, the capital of South Korea, fell to the communists on June 28.
-General MacArthur, growing impatient and wanting to eliminate the communist threats, requested authorization to use nuclear weapons against North Korea and China. Denied, MacArthur publicly denounced Truman. Truman, unwilling to threaten World War III and refusing to tolerate MacArthur's public insubordination, dismissed the General in April.
Internal Security Act
The McCarran Act mandated all "communist organizations" to register with the government, gave the government greater powers to investigate sedition, and made it possible to prevent suspected individuals from gaining or keeping their citizenship
Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD)
Both sides, then, would theoretically be deterred from starting a war, through the logic of "mutually-assured destruction," Oppenheimer likened the state of "nuclear deterrence" between the US and the USSR to "two scorpions in a bottle, each capable of killing the other," but only by risking their own lives
Intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM)
After the end of the war, American and Soviet rocket engineering teams worked to adapt German technology in order to create an intercontinental ballistic missile. The Soviets achieved success first.
Sputnik
They even used the same launch vehicle on October 4, 1957, to send Sputnik 1 into orbit, and it was a decisive Soviet propaganda victory
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)
As a secretive military research and development operation, it was tasked with funding and otherwise overseeing the production of sensitive new technologies
McCarthyism
it was only a symptom of a massive and widespread anti-communist hysteria that engulfed Cold War America
The Spy Trials : Rosenbergs & Hiss
Rosenbergs were accused of passing secret bomb-related documents to Soviet officials and were indicted and later executed
-Hiss was convicted on two counts of perjury
House UnAmerican Activities Committee (HUAC)
It was created in 1938 to investigate alleged disloyalty and subversive activities on the part of private citizens, public employees, and those organizations suspected of having Communist ties.
Executive Order 9835
Loyalty reviews for Federal employees. The order established the first loyalty program in the United States, designed to root out communist influence in the U.S. federal government.
Popular Front
An effort to make communism mainstream by adapting it to American history and American culture
J.E. Hoover
was the longtime director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
-took an active role in the domestic battle against communism
Godless Communism
American religion was facing a battle of godless communism vs God-fearing Americanism
-Politicians infused government with religious symbols, The Pledge of Allegiance was altered to include "one nation under God"
-The official national motto was "In God We Trust"
Dominoes Theory
Unless Soviet power in Asia was halted, Chinese influence would ripple across the continent, and one country after another would "fall" to communism. Easily transposed onto any region of the world
-became a standard basis for the justification of US interventions abroad
military-industrial complex
The Cold War facilitated a new permanent defense establishment
- an informal alliance between a nation's military and the arms industry that supplies it
- both sides benefit--one side from obtaining war weapons, and the other from being paid to supply them
Smith-Mundt Act of 1948
An act to showcase American values through its artists and entertainers
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
An international treaty that committed signatories to lower barriers to the free flow of goods across national borders
Totalitarianism
A political system in which the government has total control over the lives of individual citizens
Taft-Hartley Act (1947)
Anti-union law passed by increasingly conservative Congress over Truman's veto. Prohibited the closed shop (union only), permitted states to ban union-shop agreements (to become anti-union "right to work" states), forbade union contributions to candidates in federal elections, forced union leaders to swear in affidavits that they were not communists, and mandated an 80 day cooling off period before carrying out strikes. This enraged labor, who called it a "slave labor" law. Helped contribute to massive decline in unions.
Bretton Woods Conference
Meeting of Western allies to establish a postwar international economic order. Led to the creation of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, designed to regulate currency levels and provide aid to underdeveloped countries.
Fair Deal (1949)
Truman's extension of the New Deal that increased min wage, expanded Social Security, and constructed low-income housing
Executive Order 9981
An executive order abolishing segregation in the armed forces and ordering full integration of all the services. The order also established an advisory committee to examine the rules, practices, and procedures of the armed services and recommend ways to make desegregation a reality.
Dixiecrats
A short-lived break-away segregationist political party determined to protect states' rights to legislate racial segregation from what its members regarded as an oppressive federal government.
Strom Thurmond (South Carolina)
SC governor; southerners did not like Truman's proposed civil rights bill and they went and formed a "Dixiecrat" party and ran Thurmond for president.
Four Freedoms (1941)
FDR announced his Four Freedoms:
Freedom of speech, of worship, from want, and from fear—that all of the world's citizens should enjoy.
Good Neighbor Policy (FDR)
- Franklin D. Roosevelt's policy, in which the U.S. pledged that it would no longer intervene in the internal affairs of Latin American countries.
Japan invades China "Rape of Nanjing"
The broken Chinese army gave up Beiping (Beijing) to the Japanese on August 8, Shanghai on November 26, and the capital, Nanjing (Nanking), on December 13. Between 250,000 and 300,000 people were killed, and tens of thousands of women were raped, when the Japanese besieged and then sacked Nanjing
Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
Chinese communist party. Founded in 1921 and came to power in 1949. It is the ruling party for the people's republic of China.
Pearl Harbor, 1941
December 7-Japanese ambush attack-led to American involvement in WWII