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1960’s

1960’s. Culture and Significant Events in the United States. Moving on from the 50’s…. Age of Youth: baby boomers became teenagers Movement away from the conservatism of the 1950’s. Not content with the life of the previous generation, CHANGE was desired!

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1960’s

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  1. 1960’s Culture and Significant Events in the United States

  2. Moving on from the 50’s… • Age of Youth: baby boomers became teenagers • Movement away from the conservatism of the 1950’s. • Not content with the life of the previous generation, CHANGE was desired! • These changes would affect every aspect of politics, culture, entertainment, etc…

  3. Some stats about the 60’s • Population: 177,830,000 • Average Salary: $4,743 • Teacher’s Salary: $5,174 • Minimum Wage: $1.00 an hour • 850,000 Freshmen were entering college each year. Temporary shelters had to be constructed on many college campuses!

  4. Popular Books • To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee • The Feminine Mystique by Betty Freidan • Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak • In Cold Blood by Truman Capote • The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath • Silent Spring by Rachel Carson

  5. Youth Culture • There were 70 million teenagers in the 1960’s • Barbie Dolls and GI Joe became popular • Skateboarding began in CA and spread across the country by 1963 • Bouffant hairstyles for women • Go-go boots, bell bottom jeans and peasant skirts were all the rage in fashion

  6. JFK and Golden Age of the 60’s • Youngest president ever elected • “Camelot”: Charisma of JFK and his pretty wife and young children. • Foreign Policy: dealt with communism in Cuba, Germany, Israel, Vietnam • "Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country.” • Civil Rights issues, space exploration and the formation of the Peace Corps.

  7. “The New Frontier” • [W]e stand today on the edge of a New Frontier -— the frontier of 1960s, the frontier of unknown opportunities and perils, the frontier of unfilled hopes and unfilled threats. ... • “Beyond that frontier are uncharted areas of science and space, unsolved problems of peace and war, unconquered problems of ignorance and prejudice, unanswered questions of poverty and surplus”

  8. Kennedy Continued • JFK was assassinated on November 22, 1963 in Dallas Texas by Lee Harvey Oswald. • JFK was not able to fulfill many of the domestic and foreign policy promises that he had made in the short time that he was in office. • The U.S. chose to fight a war in Vietnam instead of eradicating poverty. But Apollo 11 did reach the moon in 1969.

  9. Johnson and “The Great Society” • Most reforms since the New Deal during the Great Depression. • Civil Rights Act of 1964: banned discrimination based on race and gender and ended segregation in public facilities. • Wilderness Protection Act • Major funding for America’s public schools • Medicare/Medicaid • National Endowment for the Arts • Voting Rights Act of 1965: banned literacy tests and other discriminatory methods of denying suffrage to African Americans • Immigration Act ended discriminatory quotas based on ethnic origin

  10. War in Vietnam • Conflict in SE Asia had been going on since the 1950’s. • President Johnson gets approval to use all force necessary to stop the Viet Cong (communist forces) in Vietnam. • Within days the draft began. • First war to be televised-Americans saw soldiers being killed on the news over dinner. • The Tet Offensive in 1968 really showed the Americans that the war in Vietnam would be impossible to win. • War dragged on through the 1970’s with Richard Nixon pulling troops out and ending the war.

  11. Anti-War Protests • Draft Dodgers-usually went to Canada to avoid being drafted • Draft card burning-usually done en masse at a public protest. • College-campuses are the main location for the protests. • Draft age was 18, but voting age was 21. • Toward the end of the decade, campuses all over the country erupted in violent protests: weapons, bombs and the National Guard.

  12. Fight for Civil Rights • The beginning of the movement can be traced back to Greensboro, NC-where 4 African American students sat at a whites only lunch counter and demanded to be served. • “Sit-ins” became a popular form of protest. • SNCC-Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee is formed with Dr. King as the leader. • Freedom Riders: Buses/people from the North that would go to the South to join the protests. • March on Washington DC: August 1963: 200,000. Dr. King delivers his famous “I Have a Dream Speech”. • Selma to Montgomery march was the culmination of the civil rights movement.

  13. Selma to Montgomery

  14. Cesar Chavez • Created the United Farm Workers to gain equal rights (and pay) for Hispanic farm workers. • Best known Hispanic civil rights leader • Promoted unionism and non-violent tactics • “Si, se puede” was his slogan (yes, it can be done).

  15. Stonewall Rebellion • Catalyst for the LGBT movement in the United States. • There were not many places in the US where you could be openly gay and NY state had laws against public homosexuality. • On June 28, 1968, a group of people at a popular Greenwich Village (NY) bar called the Stonewall Inn, became angry about the harassment from police and took a stand against the abuse. • Riots broke out all over the country “Gay Power” became the anthem and the first chapters of gay rights groups/organizations formed in nearly every major American city.

  16. Black Power • A split in the Civil Rights movement when a more radical group was frustrated by the slow methods of Dr. King’s non-violent protest. • Ready to adopt violent methods and black separatism to initiate quicker change. • Black Panthers was the prime example-lead by Malcolm X. • “By any means necessary”

  17. Counter Culture • Anti-establishment movement • Gained momentum in association with the Civil Rights movement and Vietnam War protests. • Massive number of young, affluent who had many different versions of the American Dream. • Youth culture promoted creativity, experimentation and a Bohemian lifestyle.

  18. “Hippies” • LSD: drug which produced psychological effects • Some people dropped out of political life altogether. • Grew their hair long and practiced “free love” • Some even moved to communes, far removed from the turbulence of every day life. • Woodstock: in 1969, 400,000 young people gathered in upstate NY for a 3 day music festival that represented the best of the “peace and love generation”.

  19. Space Race • U.S wanted to show it’s superiority in technology, space was the next frontier • Another (less dangerous) way to compete against the Soviet Union • The Soviets actually launch the first satellite into space called “Sputnik” in 1957, US follows in 1958 with Explorer I. • JFK predicted a “man on the moon”, which finally happened with Apollo 11 in 1969. • Neil Armstrong or Buzz Aldrin were the first men to walk on the moon.

  20. “Death of the 60’s” • John F Kennedy: assassinated in Nov in 1963 • Malcolm X: assassinated in Feb of 1965 at a public speaking event in NY. • MLK: assassinated April 4th, 1968 in Memphis Tennessee. • Massive protests broke out around the country • RFK: Robert F Kennedy (brother to President JFK) and the leading Democratic candidate for president in 1968. Assassinated in June of 1968 at the Democratic primary in CA.

  21. Background on Cuba • Fulgencio Batista was president from 1940-44 and ran again for president in 1952. • When it became clear that he wasn’t going to win, he cancelled elections and seized power. • Many disliked Batista and his power grab—including Fidel Castro who began planning an overthrow of Bastista and the government. • Castro’s plan began with the attack on the Moncada barracks to get the weapons needed to take down Batista.

  22. Fulgencio Batista

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