1 / 30

The American Odyssey

The American Odyssey. Chapter 21 – The Kennedy and Johnson Years Section 1 – New Frontier and Great Society. Main Idea of the Section.

daryl-lane
Download Presentation

The American Odyssey

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. The American Odyssey Chapter 21 – The Kennedy and Johnson Years Section 1 – New Frontier and Great Society

  2. Main Idea of the Section • The optimistic message of John F. Kennedy helped propel the nation into a new political era of social reform, both under Kennedy and his successor Lyndon B. Johnson.

  3. Key Vocabulary Terms • Mandate • Coalition • Pragmatist

  4. The Kennedy Years (p. 701-704)

  5. The Kennedy Years (p. 701-704) • In the eyes of most historians, Kennedy’s abruptly-ended term hardly amounted to a finished political record. • He came into office with such a narrow margin of victory that he could not claim a mandate. • He also faced a strong conservative coalition in Congress.

  6. The Kennedy Years (p. 701-704) • Kennedy was the first Catholic President. • Under the circumstances, Kennedy began his term in caution, rather than boldness.

  7. The Kennedy Years (p. 701-704) • Kennedy may not be remembered for sweeping legislative accomplishments. • However, he instilled Americans with renewed idealism called the New Frontier.

  8. The Kennedy Years (p. 701-704) • Despite the romantic aura surrounding Kennedy, he saw himself more as a pragmatist. • What does this mean? • To help him find practical solutions to the nation’s most pressing problems, Kennedy surrounded himself with what one journalist called “the best of the brightest.” • Camelot and Jacqueline Bouvier

  9. The Kennedy Years (p. 701-704) • Kennedy’s interests centered on foreign policy. • The Cold War and containment of communism • In a speech reaffirming his support for West Berlin after Communists built a wall between East and West Berlin. • Kennedy stated “Ich bin ein Berliner”

  10. The Kennedy Years (p. 701-704) • In August 1961, the Soviets constricted the Berlin Wall. • The Soviets were trying to stop East Berliners from fleeing to the West • This was a stunning sign communism was failing. • Kennedy underlined this when he noted that while democracy was not perfect – he did not need to build a wall to keep people in.

  11. Kennedy in Berlin

  12. The Kennedy Years (p. 701-704) • Domestically, Kennedy did manage to perk up the economy. • Funding for NASA and increased defense spending poured billions of dollars into government contracts, which in turn boosted employment .

  13. The Kennedy Years (p. 701-704) • Kennedy feared that the United States was trailing the Soviets in the space race. • In 1961 Yuri Gagarin became the first man to orbit earth. • Kennedy responded 9 months later by setting a goal for a man on the moon by 1970. • The Apollo Project • John Glenn orbited the earth in 1962 • Neil Armstrong first man on the moon in 1969.

  14. The Kennedy Years (p. 701-704) • Kennedy established the Peace Corps during his Presidency. • Sends volunteers to developing countries. • The volunteers live with locals and help with education and rural development.

  15. Hopes Cut Off(p.704-706) • REVIEW: • Bay of Pigs • Cuban Missile Crisis • Vietnam • In 1963 JFK assisted in the coup d'état of Ngo Dinh Diem’s government in South Vietnam. • He sent 16,000 soldiers to S. Vietnam to assist the new government.

  16. Hopes Cut Off(p.704-706) • Also, in 1963 Kennedy negotiated the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty • Banned all nuclear testing except underground and in outer space. • Initially, signed by the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union. • In 1963 JFK assisted the Baath Party in Iraq’s coup d'état, which enabled Saddam Hussein to come to power.

  17. Hopes Cut Off(p.704-706) • Kennedy’s hope to achieve a greater mandate for his programs in the 1964 election were ended by an assassin’s bullet in Dallas, Texas. • He was assassinated on November 22, 1963. • He was assassinated by Lee Harvey Oswald

  18. Hopes Cut Off(p.704-706) • Lee Harvey Oswald was assassinated by nightclub owner Jack Ruby . • This hampered the investigation of the assassination. • Some people felt the Warren Commission reached its conclusion too quickly and that perhaps Oswald had not acted alone, as the commission said.

  19. Hopes Cut Off(p.704-706) • The nation grieved as much for the President that John F. Kennedy might have become as for the leader he had been. • They mourned the unfinished promises – as well as the glamour – that had suddenly disappeared. • After the assassination of Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson became President.

  20. Kennedy’s Assassination in Dallas

  21. Lyndon B. Johnson

  22. Johnson’s Great Society(p. 706-709) • Lyndon B. Johnson carried forward Kennedy’s vision of New Frontier. • He went beyond Kennedy’s domestic programs to launch his vision the Great Society. • JFK was charming, but cautious and hesitant. • LBJ was “rough around the edges”, but very confident and decisive.

  23. Johnson’s Great Society(p. 706-709) • LBJ was great at building coalitions and at talking (or bullying) people into supporting his plans. • Johnson had none of the uncertainties of Kennedy – he was determined to do great things.

  24. Johnson’s Great Society(p. 706-709) • Johnson fused the ambition with a genuine desire to wipe out the hardships described in Michael Harrington’s book, The Other America. • On March 16, 1964, Johnson told Congress that he intended to wage war on poverty.

  25. Johnson’s Great Society(p. 706-709) • Johnson launched his war on poverty with the Economic Opportunity Act (EOA). • The most ambitious attempt to aid the poor in the nation’s history. • It established Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA) and funded Project Head Start.

  26. Johnson’s Great Society(p. 706-709) • LBJ saw education as the greatest cure for poverty. • He provided federal money to public school districts, especially poor districts. • Head Start • Helps poor children attend preschool so they can prepare for elementary school. • VISTA • Provides volunteer services in poor neighborhoods.

  27. Johnson’s Great Society(p. 706-709) • Additional significant legislation passed by LBJ: • Medicare • Health care for the elderly • Medicaid • The companion program to Medicare – it provides health care for those of whom are too young for Medicare. • He added the Housing and Urban Development Dept. to the Presidential Cabinet. • Model Cities Act of 1966 • Federal funding provided to poor cities, also helped with their comprehensive planning.

  28. Johnson’s Great Society(p. 706-709) • Civil Rights and LBJ: • Civil Rights Act of 1964 • It banned segregation in all public places. • Voting Rights Act of 1965 • Guaranteed that all Americans had the right to vote. • Immigration also became more lenient – he did away with the nation’s quota system, which has existed for more than 50 years.

  29. Johnson’s Great Society(p. 706-709) • The Great Society is often compared to the New Deal, but the two main goals of the two programs were somewhat different. • The Great Society • Sought far reaching social and political reform. • The New Deal • Provided relief to the unemployed and the poor to stimulate the economy.

  30. Johnson’s Great Society(p. 706-709) • The Great Society, as it turned out, was more successful in creating legislative programs than running them. • Part of the reason was the funding and energies that were increasingly redirected into the Vietnam War. • Vietnam destroyed the Great Society and LBJ’s Presidency.

More Related