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when was truman president
april 1945 - december 1952
served (nearly) 2 whole terms
when was eisenhower president
january 1953 - december 1960
served 2 full terms
when was kennedy president
january 1961 - november 1963
did not complete a whole term
when was johnson president
november 1963 - december 1968
served 1 term and a bit
when was nixon president
january 1969 - august 1974
served 1 term and a bit
when was ford president
august 1974 - december 1976
did not complete a whole term
when was carter president
january 1977 - november 1981
served 1 full term
how did usa differ compared to other world powers at the end of ww2
europe endured bombings, food shortages, rationing, massive casualties, huge social disruptions
america suffered none of this bc war didnt happen on american soil
usa's significance from a global standpoint, despite only being 7% of the global population
- 42% of the world income
- 62% of word's discovered oil
- 50% of manufacturing output
usa unemployment in 1944
1.4%
roosevelt approval rating at time of his death
70%, never below 48%
how was truman initially perceived by many people when he was elected
a compromise candidate who was not up to the job
how did roosevelt's actions during his presidency impede truman
congress and individual states believed roosevelt had increased executive power at their expense, so were unlikely to repeat this in a peacetime era with an inexperienced president
average annual GDP growth under roosevelt
8.5% - highest growth rate in the history of any industrialised country
usa trade advantage after ww2
europe had undergone bombardment, america hadnt
europe needed goods and raw materials to rebuild their infrastructure - usa in position to supply them
loan repayment
european countries repaying the loans usa had lent them during the war
steady source of income
what % of the population was african american
10% (14 million people)
great migration
movement of african americans from rural south into northern cities
african americans and indigenous americans significantly more likely to...
- live in poverty
- lack good quality education
- lack good quality healthcare
- lack good quality housing
impact of men leaving for war on agriculture jobs
their jobs were taken up by women and african americans
what % of the workforce in 1944 was women
36%
jobs after the war ended
- 12 million men returned home from war expecting a job -> women excluded from the workforce
- african american soldiers returned to find segregation still intact and the GI bill not applied equally to them
of the 100,000 black men that applied for the GI bill's education fund in 1946, how many actually succeeded in registering for college
1/5
congressmen saw increasing power of trade unions as being a sign of...
the first stirrings of a communist threat to america
trumans foreign policy aims
contain soviet expansion
ensure security of US allies and trading partners
NSC-68
security policy document which suggested an increase in defence spending from original $13 billion planned for 1950 to $50 billion
when and why was NSC-68 issued
april 1950, in response to soviet union successfully testing a nuclear device in august 1949
made to carry out Kennan's policy of containment and warned of the destruction of civilisation that was at stake if the US failed to contain spread of communism
secretary of state under truman
dean acheson
kennan's long telegram
summary of soviet union's foreign policy goals
stated that Soviet Union was willing to do anything it took to advance the strength of the USSR as a factor in international society and abandon "every single ethical value" to do so
when was kennan's long telegram sent
february 1946
sinews of peace
churchill's speech - march 1946
'an iron curtain has descended across europe'
truman doctrine
1947
truman's pledge to provide aid to any country fighting totalitarian (ie communist) forces
how much did truman ask of from congress to carry out truman doctrine
$400 million
how much money did the marshall plan give to europe
$17 billion
where did most of the money from the marshall plan go
uk, france, germany, italy
how much industrial growth did europe see 1948-1952
35%
impact of marshall plan on US-Russian relations
established usa as europe's protector
further alienated stalin, who wanted germany to never recover economically
when did stalin start the blockade
24th june 1948
how many tonnes of supplies were flown in during berlin blockade
1.5 million
number of flights in berlin blockade
275,000
NATO collective defence agreement april 1949
an attack on one of its members constituted an attack on all
when was the berlin blockade lifted
12th may 1949
significance of usa's success in blockade
justified formation of NATO and deployment of B-29 bombers in europe
entrenched truman doctrine as basis of US foreign policy
us involvement in japan after their surrender
general macarthur given complete power to transform japan from militaristic state to modern democracy
why did an economically powerful japan become desirable after mao zedong's victory
fear that a poor japan would make it more susceptible to communism - trigger domino effect
when did china fall to communism
october 1949
how much support did truman give china in the fight against communsim
limited military and financial aid bc of nationalists' inability to form a stable china after the war
who did america support in the indochina war between france and vietnam
ho chi minh expected truman to support bc US was openly committed to self-determination
US instead gave support to france
how much of the cost of french involvement in indo-china did america cover
78%
north korean leader (communist - ussr)
kim il sung
south korean leader (anti-communist - america)
syngman rhee
when was the start of the korean war
june 1950
why did truman feel he had to react to north korean invasion
contain communism
offset criticism he faced for 'losing' asia
how did truman intervene in korea
via the UN, to avoid disputes with the uncooperative congress
inchon
turning point of korean war
china intervened as UN troops reached...
yalu river boundary
macarthur's dismissal
- repeatedly urged truman to use nuclear weapons to end the stalemate
- truman declined for fear of widening the war
- macarthur makes statements that directly contradicted US foreign policy
- truman fires macarthur, replaced with ridgeway
when did truman fire macarthur
11th april 1951
public response to macarthur's dismissal
outrage bc he was a war hero
truman's approval rating fell to 22%
held ticker tape parade for macarthur
impact of korean war from us perspective
no real change from original 38th parallel, so no clear victory
war dragged on in stalemate and threat of atomic bomb lead to arms race
monetary cost of korean war
$30 billion
american casualties from korean war
138,000 deaths
by how much did america's GDP suffer as a result of the korean war
14%
end of the korean war
july 1953
what did america need to do to maintain its superpower status after ww2
return to peaceful trading with europe
how much money did britain owe america after ww2
$31 billion
how much did france owe america after ww2
$3.2 billion
how much did china owe america after ww2
$1.6 billion
when was the bretton-woods conference and how many took part
july 1944
44 allied nations
what did the bretton-woods conference achieve
led to establishment of the IMF and the World Bank
obliged countries to adopt a monetary policy that tied their currency to USD
promised that the IMF would intervene in countries with financial trouble
implication of the bretton-woods system and IMF
new world economic order would be based around american concept of capitalism and trade
number of soldiers re-entering job market after ww2
12 million
how many soldiers did truman demobilise in 1945
9 million
how much more was the army reduced to in 1946
1.5 million
truman presidency never saw unemployment run higher than...
5%
inflation 1945-46
25%
what was truman successfully able to introduce to combat inflation (1946)
employment Act
council of economic advisors (CEA)
what did the 1946 employment act do
mandated the federal govt to do everything in its power to achieve full employment
GI bill 1944
bill to provide educational opportunities for veterans returning from war
features of GI bill
90% mortgage
guaranteed 52 weeks of unemployment
loans for college
how much did the gov invest through the GI bill in the decade following its passing
$20 billion
impact of baby boom
created huge new market for consumer goods and services
stimulated housing
car sales in 1946 vs 1955
1946 - 2 million
1955 - 8 million
value of war bonds bought by US citizens since 1941
$185 million
increase on total output by 1952 from 1939 levels
90%
industrial output increase under truman
doubled
agricultural output increase under truman
by 1/3
increase in business investment under truman
$14 billion to $38 billion
employment rise under truman
46 million to 61 million
rise of income of americans per capita under truman
40% increase
who gained control over the house and senate in 1946 midterms
republicans
'do nothing' congress
1946-1948
republicans control congress and house
strom thurmond
southern democrat 'dixiecrat'
advocated for states' rights ie segregation
domestic problems year after ww2
baby boom and women staying at home - increased pressure on housing and school system
demand for war materials ended so jobs threatened
unemployment by 1950
5%
industries on strike 1945-46
steel, coal, auto and railroad
number of worker strikes 1946
5 million
number of workers unionised in 1945
15 million
how did truman end the strikes
threatened to conscript striking railroad workers
1947 taft-hartley act (anti-union law)
features of 'fair deal'
- federal aid to education
- tax cuts for low-income earners
- anti-lynching laws
- permanent FEPC
- establishment of new Dept. of Welfare
- increased minimum wage
- national health insurance + expanded social security coverage