SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 16
American Historical Period (1940s-1950s) Part 1: 1940 - 1949
1940 1940s was dominated by World War II. Women were needed to replace men who had gone off to war, and so the first great exodus of women from the home to the workplace began.  1.5 million students are enrolled in colleges and universities in the United States. Franklin D. Roosevelt wins reelection to a record third term. The National Education Association calls on educators to contribute to the nation's defense by fostering faith in American democracy. American Association of University Professors establishes a Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure.
1941 Japanese bombs Pearl Harbor December, 7th, 1941. American formal entry into World War II.
1942 The U.S. Armed Forces Institute established – located in Madison, Wisconsin provides a variety of educational services to military and civilian personnel in the armed forces. The Congress of Racial Equality is founded in Chicago. With college students playing significant roles, it initiates a series of actions, including the “Freedom Riders,” of the 1960s, to test new civil rights laws in the South
1944 The G.I. Bill (officially titled Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944, was a bill that provided college or vocational education for returning World War II veterans.
1945 End of World War II Japan surrendered after two atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
1946 College enrollment exceeds two million students, nearly half of whom are veterans attending under the provisions of the GI Bill.
1947 The Truman Commission Report lays the policy groundwork for dramatically increased participation in higher education. The most important enduring legacy of the report was the promotion of the community college system across the United States. The affiliation of the National Training Laboratory (NTL) to NEA, which was a sign of success of adult education. This model used teaching methods from both structured and informal education
1948 Mohandas K. Gandhi, leader of Indian independence and proponent of craft centered education who preached and practiced nonviolence, assassinated in New Delhi, India
1949 The National Commission on Accrediting is formed by the major college and university national associations to accredit the accrediting agencies.
American Cultural History1950-1960 The end of World War II brought thousands of young servicemen back to America to pick up their lives and start new families in new homes with new jobs.  With an energy never before experienced, Americans began buying goods not available during the war, which created corporate expansion and jobs.  The baby boom was underway…. Quick Facts at the beginning of the period… Population: 151,684,000 Unemployed: 3,288,000 Life expectancy: Women 71.1, Men 65.6 Average Salary: $2,992 Labor Force male/female: 5/2 Cost of a loaf of bread: $0.14
Reviewing the Fashion-era Timeline 1950 War in Korea Confirmation of Hydrogen Bomb Program by President Truman. Credit Card system introduced in America. Mass production of computers began. First Organ transplant takes place 1951 Rock and Roll and color TV starts in USA. The still camera is given a built in flash. Education Status! ***As the United States entered the 1950’s, only one-third of all school districts offered adult education programs, and these were mainly in urban areas, financed most often by local district funds rather than by state funds, and limited to vocational education.
1953 Mount Everest conquered by Hillary and Tensing. DNA the secret of life discovered by James Watson and Frances Crick Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) established. Includes the U.S. Office of Education. 1954 US segregation made illegal in United States. 54% of American homes had television sets. Supreme Court, in Brown v. Board of Education, rules that segregation in public schools is unconstitutional. This case preceded by cases in Maryland, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas. 1952 New USA President Dwight Eisenhower elected. Identity cards and food rationing ended. Education Status! *** The 1948 national extension report called for an expanded concept of education that went beyond providing information: to help people think, to broaden subject matter, and to provide service to new audiences.  Extension continued to serve its mainstream clientele, the middle-class farm community, but in the 1950’s, it also began to address social problems through rural development programs, leadership training, and county level councils.
1956 Elvis Presley became an international, world acclaimed star with Love Me Tender film. IBM created the first hard disk drive. Velcro fastening introduced to public. Education Status! ***King and other leaders confronted two critical educational tasks in turning the passive masses into protestors with a strategy.  1. Understand and use nonviolence. And 2.  Turn passive people into protestors.  This was a call for fundamental change in how African Americans understood their relationship to white society. 1955 In the USA, the Civil Rights campaign got underway. Bill Haley’s “Rock Around the Clock” rocks the world. 60% of Americans were in the “middle class”, having incomes between $3000 and $10,000 per year.
1957 The Space Age becomes a reality 2.  	Lasers developed. 1958 NASA founded. Stereo LP records first sold.   Experiments first began in a desire to create the modem. USA annual family income reaches $5000.00 1959 Barbie dolls invented for children.   The microchip was invented, making way for future home computers. Alaska and Hawaii join the USA and become states of North America.
Education Status! *** During its program planning in the spring of 1957, the [Ford] Foundation decided to allocate additional funds for a few years to its Program in Economic Development and Administration, in order to accelerate its efforts to strengthen business education in the United States and thus indirectly throughout the free world.  National Defense Education Act (NDEA), in response to Cold War and Sputnik, provides federal aid for science, math, foreign language, and guidance, and establishes forgivable loans for higher education costs for prospective elementary and secondary teachers. Reasserts emphasis on academic fundamentals.  1960 Almost 60% of American families owned their own homes. By the end of the 1950’s most American households owned their own car and washing machine. Approximately 90% of Americans owned at least one television set.

More Related Content

What's hot

Politics Of The 1920s
Politics Of The 1920sPolitics Of The 1920s
Politics Of The 1920sKevin A
 
The Gilded Age, an overview
The Gilded Age, an overviewThe Gilded Age, an overview
The Gilded Age, an overviewmrs_murphy_ncssm
 
The roaring twenties
The roaring twentiesThe roaring twenties
The roaring twentiesDave Phillips
 
Unit 11 Powerpoint The 1970's and 1980's
Unit 11 Powerpoint The 1970's and 1980'sUnit 11 Powerpoint The 1970's and 1980's
Unit 11 Powerpoint The 1970's and 1980'sCrosswinds High School
 
Great Depression
Great DepressionGreat Depression
Great DepressionKevin A
 
Brown Vs Board Of Education
Brown Vs Board Of EducationBrown Vs Board Of Education
Brown Vs Board Of EducationLucy Norvall
 
Roaring twenties pp pres
Roaring twenties pp presRoaring twenties pp pres
Roaring twenties pp presSandra Waters
 
Black History Month Presentation
Black History Month PresentationBlack History Month Presentation
Black History Month PresentationJanna Diggs
 
Unit 12 Powerpoint The 90s To Present Day
Unit 12 Powerpoint The 90s To Present DayUnit 12 Powerpoint The 90s To Present Day
Unit 12 Powerpoint The 90s To Present DayCrosswinds High School
 
The great migration
The great migration The great migration
The great migration Elhem Chniti
 
Unit 6 powerpoint (the great depression begins)
Unit 6 powerpoint (the great depression begins)Unit 6 powerpoint (the great depression begins)
Unit 6 powerpoint (the great depression begins)Crosswinds High School
 
Watergate
WatergateWatergate
Watergatekbeacom
 
Society & Culture of the 1920s PPT
Society & Culture of the 1920s PPTSociety & Culture of the 1920s PPT
Society & Culture of the 1920s PPTkbeacom
 
Manifest destiny
Manifest destinyManifest destiny
Manifest destinydean dundas
 

What's hot (20)

Politics Of The 1920s
Politics Of The 1920sPolitics Of The 1920s
Politics Of The 1920s
 
The Gilded Age, an overview
The Gilded Age, an overviewThe Gilded Age, an overview
The Gilded Age, an overview
 
The roaring twenties
The roaring twentiesThe roaring twenties
The roaring twenties
 
Unit 11 Powerpoint The 1970's and 1980's
Unit 11 Powerpoint The 1970's and 1980'sUnit 11 Powerpoint The 1970's and 1980's
Unit 11 Powerpoint The 1970's and 1980's
 
Progressive era powerpoint
Progressive era powerpointProgressive era powerpoint
Progressive era powerpoint
 
Great Depression
Great DepressionGreat Depression
Great Depression
 
Richard M. Nixon
Richard M. NixonRichard M. Nixon
Richard M. Nixon
 
Brown Vs Board Of Education
Brown Vs Board Of EducationBrown Vs Board Of Education
Brown Vs Board Of Education
 
Roaring twenties pp pres
Roaring twenties pp presRoaring twenties pp pres
Roaring twenties pp pres
 
American History
American HistoryAmerican History
American History
 
Black History Month Presentation
Black History Month PresentationBlack History Month Presentation
Black History Month Presentation
 
Unit 12 Powerpoint The 90s To Present Day
Unit 12 Powerpoint The 90s To Present DayUnit 12 Powerpoint The 90s To Present Day
Unit 12 Powerpoint The 90s To Present Day
 
The great migration
The great migration The great migration
The great migration
 
Unit 6 powerpoint (the great depression begins)
Unit 6 powerpoint (the great depression begins)Unit 6 powerpoint (the great depression begins)
Unit 6 powerpoint (the great depression begins)
 
Watergate
WatergateWatergate
Watergate
 
September 11th
September 11thSeptember 11th
September 11th
 
Society & Culture of the 1920s PPT
Society & Culture of the 1920s PPTSociety & Culture of the 1920s PPT
Society & Culture of the 1920s PPT
 
Andrew jackson
Andrew jacksonAndrew jackson
Andrew jackson
 
Manifest destiny
Manifest destinyManifest destiny
Manifest destiny
 
Progressive Era
Progressive EraProgressive Era
Progressive Era
 

Viewers also liked

History and impact of the school lunch program
History and impact of the school lunch programHistory and impact of the school lunch program
History and impact of the school lunch programKchampagne2018
 
1940's fashion
1940's fashion1940's fashion
1940's fashionStudy
 
Fashion in the 1930s
Fashion in the 1930sFashion in the 1930s
Fashion in the 1930sKatie Miller
 
Timeline of US Education
Timeline of US EducationTimeline of US Education
Timeline of US EducationMelissa Boutin
 
60’s fashion
60’s  fashion60’s  fashion
60’s fashionTara E
 
Women in the 1920s
Women in the 1920sWomen in the 1920s
Women in the 1920sKate Simon
 
Fashion through the decades
Fashion through the decadesFashion through the decades
Fashion through the decadesmarifex88
 

Viewers also liked (14)

1940s
1940s1940s
1940s
 
History and impact of the school lunch program
History and impact of the school lunch programHistory and impact of the school lunch program
History and impact of the school lunch program
 
1940s
1940s1940s
1940s
 
1940's fashion
1940's fashion1940's fashion
1940's fashion
 
1940's fashion
1940's fashion1940's fashion
1940's fashion
 
Fashion in the 1930s
Fashion in the 1930sFashion in the 1930s
Fashion in the 1930s
 
Timeline of US Education
Timeline of US EducationTimeline of US Education
Timeline of US Education
 
1920s fashion
1920s fashion1920s fashion
1920s fashion
 
Fashion Fad of 80s...
Fashion Fad of 80s...Fashion Fad of 80s...
Fashion Fad of 80s...
 
30s-40s Fashion
30s-40s Fashion30s-40s Fashion
30s-40s Fashion
 
1960s fashion
1960s fashion1960s fashion
1960s fashion
 
60’s fashion
60’s  fashion60’s  fashion
60’s fashion
 
Women in the 1920s
Women in the 1920sWomen in the 1920s
Women in the 1920s
 
Fashion through the decades
Fashion through the decadesFashion through the decades
Fashion through the decades
 

Similar to 1940s-1950s American History: WWII, Cold War, Civil Rights

Guided ResponseRespond to at least two of your classmates’ post.docx
Guided ResponseRespond to at least two of your classmates’ post.docxGuided ResponseRespond to at least two of your classmates’ post.docx
Guided ResponseRespond to at least two of your classmates’ post.docxJeanmarieColbert3
 
Education For African Americans
Education For African AmericansEducation For African Americans
Education For African AmericansDietrichL
 
Well440 american compulsory schooling
Well440 american compulsory schoolingWell440 american compulsory schooling
Well440 american compulsory schoolingLinda Hickling
 
Chapter 30 Period 3
Chapter 30 Period 3Chapter 30 Period 3
Chapter 30 Period 3mattman3721
 
Adult education movement in america 1920 1930
Adult education movement in america 1920 1930Adult education movement in america 1920 1930
Adult education movement in america 1920 1930Wienerblut
 
Lecture 4 (1)
Lecture 4 (1)Lecture 4 (1)
Lecture 4 (1)barkasivv
 
Lecture 4 (1)
Lecture 4 (1)Lecture 4 (1)
Lecture 4 (1)barkasivv
 
Lecture 4 (1)
Lecture 4 (1)Lecture 4 (1)
Lecture 4 (1)barkasivv
 
history ch 18
history ch 18history ch 18
history ch 18missjade
 
Group Project 2 - Chicano Power Movement - Final.pptx
Group Project 2 - Chicano Power Movement - Final.pptxGroup Project 2 - Chicano Power Movement - Final.pptx
Group Project 2 - Chicano Power Movement - Final.pptxMeganHeller4
 
Post World War II Life
Post World War II LifePost World War II Life
Post World War II Lifebkayser
 
WK3 Final Project Framework WorksheetThis worksheet will hel.docx
WK3 Final Project Framework WorksheetThis worksheet will hel.docxWK3 Final Project Framework WorksheetThis worksheet will hel.docx
WK3 Final Project Framework WorksheetThis worksheet will hel.docxambersalomon88660
 
Chapter 30 powerpoint period 5
Chapter 30 powerpoint period 5Chapter 30 powerpoint period 5
Chapter 30 powerpoint period 5mattman3721
 
Practice two
Practice twoPractice two
Practice twoDietrichL
 

Similar to 1940s-1950s American History: WWII, Cold War, Civil Rights (20)

Chapter 41
Chapter 41Chapter 41
Chapter 41
 
Guided ResponseRespond to at least two of your classmates’ post.docx
Guided ResponseRespond to at least two of your classmates’ post.docxGuided ResponseRespond to at least two of your classmates’ post.docx
Guided ResponseRespond to at least two of your classmates’ post.docx
 
Education For African Americans
Education For African AmericansEducation For African Americans
Education For African Americans
 
Chapter 30 Period 5
Chapter 30 Period 5Chapter 30 Period 5
Chapter 30 Period 5
 
Well440 american compulsory schooling
Well440 american compulsory schoolingWell440 american compulsory schooling
Well440 american compulsory schooling
 
Chapter 30 Period 3
Chapter 30 Period 3Chapter 30 Period 3
Chapter 30 Period 3
 
Education
EducationEducation
Education
 
Adult education movement in america 1920 1930
Adult education movement in america 1920 1930Adult education movement in america 1920 1930
Adult education movement in america 1920 1930
 
Lecture 4 (1)
Lecture 4 (1)Lecture 4 (1)
Lecture 4 (1)
 
Lecture 4 (1)
Lecture 4 (1)Lecture 4 (1)
Lecture 4 (1)
 
Lecture 4 (1)
Lecture 4 (1)Lecture 4 (1)
Lecture 4 (1)
 
Chapter 29 ppt notes
Chapter 29 ppt notes Chapter 29 ppt notes
Chapter 29 ppt notes
 
history ch 18
history ch 18history ch 18
history ch 18
 
Group Project 2 - Chicano Power Movement - Final.pptx
Group Project 2 - Chicano Power Movement - Final.pptxGroup Project 2 - Chicano Power Movement - Final.pptx
Group Project 2 - Chicano Power Movement - Final.pptx
 
Chapter 28 Period 3
Chapter 28 Period 3Chapter 28 Period 3
Chapter 28 Period 3
 
Post World War II Life
Post World War II LifePost World War II Life
Post World War II Life
 
WK3 Final Project Framework WorksheetThis worksheet will hel.docx
WK3 Final Project Framework WorksheetThis worksheet will hel.docxWK3 Final Project Framework WorksheetThis worksheet will hel.docx
WK3 Final Project Framework WorksheetThis worksheet will hel.docx
 
Chapter 30 powerpoint period 5
Chapter 30 powerpoint period 5Chapter 30 powerpoint period 5
Chapter 30 powerpoint period 5
 
National
NationalNational
National
 
Practice two
Practice twoPractice two
Practice two
 

1940s-1950s American History: WWII, Cold War, Civil Rights

  • 1. American Historical Period (1940s-1950s) Part 1: 1940 - 1949
  • 2. 1940 1940s was dominated by World War II. Women were needed to replace men who had gone off to war, and so the first great exodus of women from the home to the workplace began. 1.5 million students are enrolled in colleges and universities in the United States. Franklin D. Roosevelt wins reelection to a record third term. The National Education Association calls on educators to contribute to the nation's defense by fostering faith in American democracy. American Association of University Professors establishes a Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure.
  • 3. 1941 Japanese bombs Pearl Harbor December, 7th, 1941. American formal entry into World War II.
  • 4. 1942 The U.S. Armed Forces Institute established – located in Madison, Wisconsin provides a variety of educational services to military and civilian personnel in the armed forces. The Congress of Racial Equality is founded in Chicago. With college students playing significant roles, it initiates a series of actions, including the “Freedom Riders,” of the 1960s, to test new civil rights laws in the South
  • 5. 1944 The G.I. Bill (officially titled Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944, was a bill that provided college or vocational education for returning World War II veterans.
  • 6. 1945 End of World War II Japan surrendered after two atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
  • 7. 1946 College enrollment exceeds two million students, nearly half of whom are veterans attending under the provisions of the GI Bill.
  • 8. 1947 The Truman Commission Report lays the policy groundwork for dramatically increased participation in higher education. The most important enduring legacy of the report was the promotion of the community college system across the United States. The affiliation of the National Training Laboratory (NTL) to NEA, which was a sign of success of adult education. This model used teaching methods from both structured and informal education
  • 9. 1948 Mohandas K. Gandhi, leader of Indian independence and proponent of craft centered education who preached and practiced nonviolence, assassinated in New Delhi, India
  • 10. 1949 The National Commission on Accrediting is formed by the major college and university national associations to accredit the accrediting agencies.
  • 11. American Cultural History1950-1960 The end of World War II brought thousands of young servicemen back to America to pick up their lives and start new families in new homes with new jobs. With an energy never before experienced, Americans began buying goods not available during the war, which created corporate expansion and jobs. The baby boom was underway…. Quick Facts at the beginning of the period… Population: 151,684,000 Unemployed: 3,288,000 Life expectancy: Women 71.1, Men 65.6 Average Salary: $2,992 Labor Force male/female: 5/2 Cost of a loaf of bread: $0.14
  • 12. Reviewing the Fashion-era Timeline 1950 War in Korea Confirmation of Hydrogen Bomb Program by President Truman. Credit Card system introduced in America. Mass production of computers began. First Organ transplant takes place 1951 Rock and Roll and color TV starts in USA. The still camera is given a built in flash. Education Status! ***As the United States entered the 1950’s, only one-third of all school districts offered adult education programs, and these were mainly in urban areas, financed most often by local district funds rather than by state funds, and limited to vocational education.
  • 13. 1953 Mount Everest conquered by Hillary and Tensing. DNA the secret of life discovered by James Watson and Frances Crick Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) established. Includes the U.S. Office of Education. 1954 US segregation made illegal in United States. 54% of American homes had television sets. Supreme Court, in Brown v. Board of Education, rules that segregation in public schools is unconstitutional. This case preceded by cases in Maryland, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas. 1952 New USA President Dwight Eisenhower elected. Identity cards and food rationing ended. Education Status! *** The 1948 national extension report called for an expanded concept of education that went beyond providing information: to help people think, to broaden subject matter, and to provide service to new audiences. Extension continued to serve its mainstream clientele, the middle-class farm community, but in the 1950’s, it also began to address social problems through rural development programs, leadership training, and county level councils.
  • 14. 1956 Elvis Presley became an international, world acclaimed star with Love Me Tender film. IBM created the first hard disk drive. Velcro fastening introduced to public. Education Status! ***King and other leaders confronted two critical educational tasks in turning the passive masses into protestors with a strategy. 1. Understand and use nonviolence. And 2. Turn passive people into protestors. This was a call for fundamental change in how African Americans understood their relationship to white society. 1955 In the USA, the Civil Rights campaign got underway. Bill Haley’s “Rock Around the Clock” rocks the world. 60% of Americans were in the “middle class”, having incomes between $3000 and $10,000 per year.
  • 15. 1957 The Space Age becomes a reality 2. Lasers developed. 1958 NASA founded. Stereo LP records first sold. Experiments first began in a desire to create the modem. USA annual family income reaches $5000.00 1959 Barbie dolls invented for children. The microchip was invented, making way for future home computers. Alaska and Hawaii join the USA and become states of North America.
  • 16. Education Status! *** During its program planning in the spring of 1957, the [Ford] Foundation decided to allocate additional funds for a few years to its Program in Economic Development and Administration, in order to accelerate its efforts to strengthen business education in the United States and thus indirectly throughout the free world. National Defense Education Act (NDEA), in response to Cold War and Sputnik, provides federal aid for science, math, foreign language, and guidance, and establishes forgivable loans for higher education costs for prospective elementary and secondary teachers. Reasserts emphasis on academic fundamentals. 1960 Almost 60% of American families owned their own homes. By the end of the 1950’s most American households owned their own car and washing machine. Approximately 90% of Americans owned at least one television set.