1 / 13

Post-War Kansas

Post-War Kansas. Chapter 6, Section 1. Post-War Boom. After WWII, people were ready to get back to normal life Women could leave their factory jobs and go back to the home 1946-1952 was the “baby boom” Very high birth rate after WWII

maude
Download Presentation

Post-War Kansas

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Post-War Kansas Chapter 6, Section 1

  2. Post-War Boom • After WWII, people were ready to get back to normal life • Women could leave their factory jobs and go back to the home • 1946-1952 was the “baby boom” • Very high birth rate after WWII • Alf Landon – “we have a reconstruction and rehabilitation job ahead that will tax the tremendous capabilities of our country to the limit. We must meet it.”

  3. Baby Boomers

  4. Kansas Rebuilds • Not enough houses, shortage of goods • Cheap houses for factory workers were only temporary – needed for returning soldiers • The US gov’t wanted to combat communism • Saw home ownership as a way to do this • GI Bill – Congress gave college education, living expenses, and home loans to soldiers • Televisions became more common in homes • Promoted capitalism through tv shows

  5. Anti-Communism Propoganda

  6. Rebuilding Industries • Factories that built planes for war now built them for travel and mail • Those that built tanks now built cars, refrigerators, freezers, and washing machines • Medical advances from the battlefield were brought back home • Mental health hospitals improved • Karl Menninger opened a world-famous clinic

  7. Modernizing Kansas • 100,000+ farms still didn’t have running water and electricity • Better highways were needed in rural areas • Alcohol was still illegal in Kansas • Had been legalized in the US in 1933 • Alcohol was the big issue in the governor’s election in 1946 • New governor, Frank Carlson promised a vote • Kansas legalized alcohol in 1948

  8. Kansas Floods • Advisors had urged flood control systems as early as 1927 in Kansas • Began being built in 1949 with federal money • Smoky Hill and Fall Rivers were dammed to create the Kanopolis and Fall River Reservoirs • Farmers were unhappy • Lots of farmland was to be flooded

  9. Kansas Floods • July 1951 – one of the greatest Missouri River floods in history happened • Reminded Kansas why dams and reservoirs were needed • Land from Central Kansas to Eastern Missouri was flooded • Thousands lost homes, billions of dollars in damage • Railroads lost, businesses destroyed

  10. Kansas Floods

  11. More Weather Disasters • Drought from 1952 – 1956 • Reminded Kansas about soil conservation • 1958 – Federal Water Supply Act • Allowed water from reservoirs to be used for irrigation and drinking water • May 25, 1955 – deadliest tornado in Kansas history in Udall • 77 died, 400+ injured • Happened after the weatherman said all was clear – 0 trees left in the town

  12. 1955 Tornado

  13. Rapid Industrial Growth • Kansas businesses employed war factory workers in making goods Americans wanted • Wichita companies Beech, Boeing, Cessna, and Learjet built planes for businesses and airlines • Boeing continued to build planes for the military – needed B-52s for the Cold War • Kansas oil fields produced gasoline • New “drywall” material for houses was produced from gypsum near Medicine Lodge

More Related