Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Automobile Culture of 1950s America

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Automobile Culture of 1950s America"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Automobile Culture of 1950s America
AUTOMANIA and the INTERSTATE HIGHWAY SYSTEM

2 What to do notice about this picture?

3 Automobile History of America
At the end of the 19th century, there was just one motorized vehicle on the road for every 18,000 Americans.  Most of those roads were made not of asphalt or concrete but of packed dirt (on good days) or mud. Outside cities and towns, there were almost no gas stations or even street signs, and rest stops were unheard-of.  A nation of drivers needed good roads, but building good roads was expensive.

4 The Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956
During World War II, Eisenhower had been stationed in Germany, where he had been impressed by the network of high-speed roads known as the Reichsautobahnen. After Eisenhower became president in 1953, he was determined to build the highways that lawmakers had been talking about for years.  A new Federal-Aid Highway Act passed in June 1956. It also allocated $26 billion to pay for this new interstate highway system. 

5 THE INTERSTATE HIGHWAY SYSTEM
“Automania” spurred local and state governments to construct roads linking the major cities while connecting schools, shopping centers, and workplaces to residential suburbs. The more cars there were, the more roads were needed. The Interstate Highway Act authorized the building of a nationwide highway network— 41,000 miles of expressways. The new roads, in turn, encouraged the development of new suburbs farther from the cities.

6

7

8 Compare and contrast What differences do you notice between these two images?

9 auto sales surge in the 1950s!
During World War II, the U.S. government had rationed gasoline to curb inflation and conserve supplies. After WWII an abundance of petroleum led to inexpensive, plentiful fuel for consumers. Easy credit and extensive advertising persuaded Americans to buy cars in record numbers. In response, new car sales rose from 6.7 million in 1950 to 7.9 million in The total number of private cars on the road jumped from 40 million in to over 60 million in 1960.

10

11 1950s Car Comercials Actual Commercials from the 1950s…

12

13

14

15 Things to Think About… Who do these commercials appeal to?
Do these commercials reinforce gender stereotypes?

16 AUTOMANIA Suburban living made owning a car a necessity.
Most of the new suburbs did not offer public transportation, and people had to drive to their jobs in the cities. Many of the schools, stores, synagogues, churches, and doctors’ and dentists’ offices were not within walking distance of suburban homes.

17 Linking the country from coast to coast
Interstate highways also made high-speed, long-haul trucking possible, which contributed to a decline in the commercial use of railroads. Towns along the new highways prospered, while towns along the older, smaller roads experienced hard times. The system of highways also helped unify and homogenize the nation. homogenize: to make the same or similar “Our new roads, with their ancillaries, the motels, filling stations, and restaurants advertising Eats, have made it possible for you to drive from Brooklyn to Los Angeles without a change of diet, scenery, or culture.” The Insolent Chariots, John Keats 1958

18

19 Hitting the road With access to cars, affordable gas, and new highways, more and more Americans hit the road. They flocked to mountains, lakes, national parks, historic sites, and amusement parks for family vacations. Disneyland, which opened in California in July 1955, attracted 3 million visitors the next year.

20 MOBILITY TAKES ITS TOLL
As the automobile industry boomed, it stimulated production and provided jobs in other areas, such as drive-in movies, restaurants, and shopping malls. Yet cars also created new problems for both society and the environment. Noise and exhaust polluted the air. Automobile accidents claimed more lives every year. Traffic jams raised people’s stress levels, and heavy use damaged the roads.

21 From urban to suburban Because cars made it possible for Americans to live in suburbs, many upper- class and middle-class whites left the crowded cities. Jobs and businesses eventually followed them to the suburbs. Public transportation declined, and poor people in the inner cities were often left without jobs and vital services. As a result, the economic gulf between suburban and urban dwellers and between the middle class and the poor widened.


Download ppt "The Automobile Culture of 1950s America"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google