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Chapter 37 The Eisenhower Era 1952-1960. 1952 Election Democrats= Adalai Stevenson, Republicans= Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard Nixon (VP) “I Like Ike!”

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 37 The Eisenhower Era 1952-1960. 1952 Election Democrats= Adalai Stevenson, Republicans= Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard Nixon (VP) “I Like Ike!”"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 37 The Eisenhower Era 1952-1960

2 1952 Election Democrats= Adalai Stevenson, Republicans= Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard Nixon (VP) “I Like Ike!” TV campaign/advertising Nixon’s Checkers Speech Somewhat a return to normalcy 442 EV for Ike, 89 for Stevenson

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4 The Republicans’ Choice, 1952

5 Presidential Election of 1952 (with electoral vote by state) A Democrat quipped that “if the voters liked the Republicans the way they liked Ike, the two-party system would be in bad shape.” Fortunately for Democrats, Eisenhower scored a personal, not a party, victory. Republicans won minuscule majorities in Congress, which disappeared in the congressional elections two years later.

6 McCarthyism Joseph McCarthy= “205 Communists in state department”  witch hunt Army-McCarthy hearings in 1954 on TV Hearings combined with Edward R. Murrow’s attack on McCarthy= change in public opinion McCarthyism often refers to entire hysteria

7 Senator McCarthy Extinguishes the Torch of Liberty While preaching patriotism, McCarthy irresponsibly menaced American traditions of civil liberties.

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9 Call for Civil Rights Jim Crow laws in South, denied voting 1955: murder of Emmett Till in Mississippi December 1955: Rosa Parks  Montgomery Bus Boycott led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. 1948: Truman desegregated military Warren Court- Chief Justice Earl Warren= judicial activism

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11 The Face of Segregation These women in the segregated South of the 1950s were compelled to enter the movie theater through the “Colored Entrance.” Once inside, they were restricted to a separate seating section, usually in the rear of the theater.

12 Call for Civil Rights 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education litigated by Thurgood Marshall “separate but equal is inherently unequal” Desegregation of schools “with all deliberate speed”- Southern opposition 1964 less than 2% in Deep South abided 1957 Little Rock Nine at Central High School  barred by Orval Faubus

13 Integration at Little Rock, 1957 While white mobs jeered at the first black students entering Central High School, federal troops, with bayonets fixed, enforced the law.

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16 Call for Civil Rights Civil Rights Act of 1957= mild voting rights and Civil Rights Commission 24 hour filibuster by Strom Thurmond 1957 Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) with King= nonviolent February 1960 Greensboro sit in movement at Woolworth’s lunch counters April 1960 Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)

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18 Martin Luther King, Jr., and His Wife, Coretta, Arrested King and his wife were arrested for the first time in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1955 while organizing the bus boycott.

19 Brinkmanship John Foster Dulles= Mutually Assured Destruction Geneva Summit 1955 with new Premier Nikita Khrushchev –O–Open Skies, arms reduction, free trade Crisis in Hungary 1956

20 Hungarian Uprising, October 26, 1956 Soviet tanks rolled through the streets of Budapest to crush an anticommunist uprising against the Soviets, who had controlled Hungary since World War II. This demonstration of brute force against a grassroots democratic movement turned many communist sympathizers in the West definitively against the Soviet Union.

21 Start of Vietnam Indochina= controlled by French (then Japanese) then French after war Ho Chi Minh= leader of communist party and the Vietminh Split of Vietnam after fall of Dien Bien Phu May 1954= split at 17 th parallel US assistance + Domino Theory US backed government in South Vietnam with Ngo Dihn Diem= cancel free elections!

22 East and Southeast Asia, 1955– 1956

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24 Middle East 1953 CIA coup d’etat in Iran  replace Mohammad Mossadegh with shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi Egyptian President Nasser wanted a dam and arms from USSR Suez Crisis Eisenhower Doctrine 1957 –T–Tested in 1958 with Lebanon

25 Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, 1954 Shown here greeting exuberant supporters after his election as the first president of the new Egyptian republic, Nasser was long a thorn in the flesh of American and European policymakers anxious to protect the precious oil resources of the Middle East. “Nassarism,” his version of pan-Arabism, won a great following in the Arab world during the 1950s and 1960s.

26 Space Race Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (1957) by Soviets and Sputnik US= Space Race! –Educational focus on math and science –Creation of NASA –1959 US achieved ICBMs

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28 U-2 Program Ease Cold War tensions= Paris Peace Summit U-2 Program started after Geneva May 1, 1960: U-2 shot down (Francis Gary Powers) Khrushchev walked out of Summit

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30 Castro Resentment in Latin America US backed dictator in Cuba Batista overthrown in 1959 Fidel Castro= land distribution and communism  embargo by US 10% of Cuba left in exile

31 1960 Election GOP= Nixon vs. Democrats= JFK Kennedy= Catholic September 1960: 1 st televised debate= looked good 303 EV for JFK, 219 for Nixon but popular vote within 118,574

32 John F. Kennedy Campaigning for the Presidency, 1960 At right is his wife, Jacqueline Kennedy.

33 The Shopping Mall as New Town Square, 1960

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35 Presidential Election of 1960 (with electoral vote by state) Kennedy owed his hairbreadth triumph to his victories in twenty-six of the forty largest cities—and to Lyndon Johnson’s strenuous campaigning in the South, where Kennedy’s Catholicism may have been a hotter issue than his stand on civil rights.

36 Society Changing nature of work (blue collar  white collar) Cult of Domesticity juxtaposed with women working (pink collar)= psychological strain The Feminine Mystique by Betty Friedan 1960 Reactionary: The Lonely Crowd and The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit Commercialization + media –Elvis Presley, Marilyn Monroe


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