Final Exam - Topic #1

Be able to discuss the most prominent ESP trends, issues and/or traditions established during the Gilded Age. How were these trends, issues and/or traditions challenged in the late 19th century as well as the early 20th century?

The Gilded Age: 1865-1900"Gilded" means something that looks good on the surface, but the appearance is deceptive (usually gritty underneath). Mark Twain coined the phrase, "The Gilded Age." The Gilded Age in America looked good on the outside: extravagant displays of wealth and excess among upper class, 2nd industrial revolution, labor union movements, etc. But underneath, there were problems: xenophobia (nativism), Indians killed and moved to reservations, and ex-slaves heavily discriminated. Inventions: Edison's light bulb, telephone (1876), early motorcar thing, steel industry, barbed wire (Joseph Glidden).

Political:
  • The Congress of the Gilded Age was known for being rowdy and inefficient. It was not unusual to find that a quorum could not be achieved because too many members were drunk or otherwise preoccupied with extra-governmental affairs. The Senate, whose seats were often auctioned off to the highest bidder, was known as a “rich man's club,” where political favors were traded like horses, and the needs of the people of the working classes lay far below the vision of those exalted legislators.

    The dominant fact concerning the American political parties between 1875 and 1900 was that the parties were quite evenly divided. It was also an era in which political corruption seemed to be the norm, and practices that today would be viewed as scandalous were accepted as a matter of routine. Businessmen wantonly bribed public officials at the local, state and national level, and political machines turned elections into exercises in fraud and manipulation. Because of the narrow division between Republicans and Democrats, both parties were hesitant to take strong stands on any issue for fear of alienating blocs of voters. The result was that little got done.

    During this period very little serious legislation was passed. All the same, there was wide voter participation, about an 80% turnout. Yet unprecedented dilemmas being created by industrialization, urbanization, and the huge influx of immigrants were met with passivity and confusion.

  • Presidents had little power and didn't do much. "Lilliputians" - Grant, Hayes, Garfield, Arthur, Cleveland, Harrison, Cleveland, McKinley.

  • Gilded Age politics were challenged at the turn of the century. During the Gilded Age, the US was isolated and indifferent to the outside world. In 1900, with McKinley and TR, foreign policy changed, America became imperialistic, "the age of empire." The 1900 Democratic platform clinged to the past, "We assert that no nation can long endure half republic and half empire, and we warn the American people that imperialism abroad will lead quickkly and inevitably to despotism at home." Also, TR brought something America hadn't seen in a while - strong leadership by the president. The federal government actually started doing stuff!!

Economic:

Social:

  • Nativist reactions to immigration, Darwin's evolution theory introduces a new plague to society, schools and colleges founded, prohibition movement, literature (Mark Twain and such), women. (American Pageant Chapter 25 basically).
  • Dawes Severalty Act 1887 - forced Indians to assimilate! Dissolved tribes, set up individual families w/ 160 acres, said they could become citizens if they behaved themselves.
  • People settled West, the frontier faded =>"The Significance of the Frontier in American History" - Frederick Jackson Turner. (This would lead to imperialism).
  • Social change: Progressive movement - muckraking - against the corruption in government and social evils. Conservation movement, Meat Inspection Act, settled coal strike (took side of workers and not business).

Final Exam - Topic #2

Analyze the successes and failures of Reconstruction.

Successes:
  • Freedmen's Bureau - educated 200,000 blacks
  • 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments
  • Wasn't too harsh
  • Got the Union back together

Failures

  • Black Codes
  • KKK
  • Failure to enforce 14th and 15th amendments (poll taxes, literacy tests, grandfather clause)
  • Weak executive branch
  • Women still couldn't vote
  • Southern whites unhappy! But Southern society wasn't destroyed - it was resurected - went back to the old society pretty much
  • Dispute over policy toward South - Congressional vs. Presidential
  • Extinguished Republican party from South for about 100 years

Final Exam - Topic #3

Analyze, compare and contrast FDR's New Deal with LBJ's Great Society.

New Deal:
Alphabet Soup

Great Society:
$2 billion for Office of Economic Opportunity, $1 billion to redevelop Appalachia.
2 new cabinet offices - Department of Transportation and Department of Housing and Urban Development (Robert C. Weaver - 1st black in cabinet)
Big 4: aid to education, medical care for old and poor, immigration reform, new voting rights bill.
Education aid to students, not schools -> funds could go to religious schools too.
Medicare for elderly, Medicaid for poor (1965)
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 - abolished quota system from 1921. Doubled number of immigrants allowed annually (200k), set limits on W Hemisphere immigrants (120k). Allowed admission for close relatives of US citizens outside these limits. Latin Americans and Asians mostly started immigrating.
Poverty declined, especially in elderly.
LBJ speech - "we shall overcome." Voting Rights Act of 1965 - outlawed literacy tests and sent federal voter registrars to South.

Similarities:

  • Killed by wars. New Deal ended w/ WWII, Great Society ended w/ Vietnam.
  • New Deal started bc of Great Depression, Great Society started because of poverty

Differences:

  • New Deal didn't focus on Civil Rights, while Great Society did
  • Great Society worked (brought poverty rate down to 11%, really low). New Deal hardly did.
  • Great Society focused on reform, while New Deal was mainly relief and recovery - temporary creation of jobs. The only New Deal permanent reform was Social Security, FDIC, TVA, and SEC.



Final Exam - Topic #4

a. Analyze, compare and contrast WWI and WWII home front issues and controversies.

WWI: Draft (socialists were against it cause it violated the 13th amendment - Schenck case)
War Bonds (loands/borrowed money/Liberty bonds). War Industries Board (Bernard Baruch). The Food Administration (Herbert Hoover). Committee on Public Information [propaganda] (George Creel). Limitations on Civil Liberties (habeus corpus, Espionage Act, Sedition Act, censorship). National War Labor Board (Taft). Great Migration (black people went North). Women (wanted suffrage, some of them backed the war, some didn't).

WWII: Women (SPARs, WAVES, WAACs). War Production Board. OPA (rations on meat and butter). War Labor Board (cielings for wage increases). Peacetime draft first, then reg draft.

b. Analyze, compare and contrast WWI and WWII post-war societies.

WWI: Red scare, urbanization, labor, standard of living, sexual revolution (Margaret Sanger, flappers), African American great migration north (Harlem Renaissance), Mexican immigration, religion (Scopes trial), radio (pop culture), KKK, immigration restrictions, prohibiiton, science and invention. Great economy.
WWII: GI Bill (education and money to VA for loans to Veterans). BABY BOOM!!!!!! Consumer boom. The economy was great! Civil Rights, CIA, Joint Chiefs of Staff. Nuclear weapons! Cold War started.

Final Exam - Topic #5

Examine the effectiveness of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s.

1950s:
  • Sweatt vs. Painter Thurgood Marshall ruled schools were not equal for blacks and whites.
  • 1955 Alabama Rosa Parks. MLK Montgomery bus boycott.
  • 1948, Truman ended segregation in armed forces (Korea)
  • Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas 1954 (integrated schools) overturned Plessy v. Ferguson. - got painful opposition from the South, integration very slooowly
  • 1957 Little Rock nine
  • 1957 Congress passed Civil Rights Act
  • MLK Southern Christian Leadership Conference SCLC 1957 - black churches for black rights
  • SNCC "sit in"
  • Emit Till case 1955

1960s:

  • JFK had put civil rights on the back burner, bc he needed support of the South for med and edu bills (those'd help blacks eventually...right?)
    Freedom Riders were attacked -> federal marshal protection
    JFK + MLK + SNCC = Voter Education Project (register disfranchised blacks)
    Integrated universities. Ole Miss - James Meredith - 400 marshals and 3000 troops to enroll him.
    MLK campaign Birmingham, Alabama -> campaigners were fought with attack dogs and hoses.
    June 1963 televised JFK speech "moral issue" - called for civil rights legislation
    Aug 1963, MLK peaceful "March on Washington" in support of JFK's speech - 200,000 - "I have a dream" speech
    Violence, little headway w/ civil rights bill
  • Blacks were still denied ballot a lot in the South - poll tax, literacy tests, intimidation. Jan 1964 - 24th amendment - abolished poll taxes
    1964- Mississippi "Freedom Summer" - 3 killed.
    1965 MLK voter registration campaign in Alabama - tear-gassed, some killed.
    LBJ speech - "we shall overcome." Voting Rights Act of 1965 - outlawed literacy tests and sent federal voter registrars to South.
  • Watts (a ghetto in LA) - blacks burned their own hood, many were killed.
    Black struggle changed to militant, N and W cities, led by radical/violent spokespersons, aimed at black separatism.
    Malcolm X - weird Islamo charismatic speaker -> separatism.
    "Black Power" slogan. Riots in big cities.
    MLK assassinated 1968 -> more ghetto gutting
    Voter registration and school integration shot upward in South.

Effectiveness:

Final Exam - Topic #6

Examine similarities and differences among the approaches taken in foreign policy initiatives during the Cold War. Consider the following presidential administrations when studying this theme: Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon.

Truman foreign policy is Truman Doctrine and the Containment Doctrine
Eishenhower foreign policy is Eishenhower Doctrine, Massive Retalation Theory, and Domino Theory
Kennedy and Johnson foreign policy is the Flexible Response Theory
Nixon foreign policy is Detente

Chapter 40: The Stalemated Seventies 1968-1980

Sources of Stagnation:
  • Economy stagnated! Why?
  • Shift from manufacturing to services
  • Vietnam War + Great Society welfare + no tax increases = inflation
  • Cost of living tripled in the 70s
  • Germany and Japan had modernized plants, America had not.
  • Stalemated war and Vietnam and economy in America

Nixon "Vietnamizes" the War:

  • "Vietnamization" - withdraw the 540,000 US troops from S Vietnam over time => Nixon Doctrine: honor existing defense commitments, but in the future, other countries had to fight their own wars.
  • "Doves" still protested - Oct. 1969 - Boston Common protest
  • Nixon speech Nov. 1969 - "silent majority" supported the war. VP Spiro Agnew went after anti-war media and protesters.
  • Vietnam War - long, costly, draftees were lower class (many blacks), low morale. To end war quicker, Nixon ordered attack on Cambodia.

Cambodianizing the Vietnam War:

  • April 1970, Nixon (w/o Congress) ordered US forces to clean out enemy sanctuaries in Cambodia => nationwide protests: arson, rock-throwing. Some killed in turmoil by National Guard.
  • Nixon withdrew troops from Cambodia June 1970, 2 months later.
  • Senate repealed Gulf of Tonkin "blank check." Gov reduced draft and period of draftability. 26th amendment - lowered voting age to 18.
  • 1971 New York Times published top-secret Pentagon Papers -lies of Kennedy and Johnson administrations. Leaked by Daniel Ellsberg.

Nixon's Détente w/ Beijing and Moscow:

  • Nixon and national security adviser Dr. Henry A. Kissinger decided to play off big Commies - China and USSR - against each other to pressure N Vietnam into peace
  • Feb 1972 - Nixon went to China - improved relations. May 1972 Nixon went to USSR - they were in need of food and afraid of US backed by China. The decided to back US, détente.
  • 1972 - great grain deal. 3 years, US sell $750 million in grain to USSR
  • Anti-ballistic missile (ABM) treaty - limited each nation to 2 clusters of defense missiles. Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) - freeze # of nuclear missiles for 5 years.
  • Both nations made MIRVs (more warheads to a rocket)

A New Team on the Supreme Bench:

  • Earl Warren Court - concern for the individual
  • (1965) Griswold v. Connecticut - right to use contraceptives - "privacy"
  • (1963) Gideon v. Wainwright - criminal defendant right to attorney
  • (1964) Escobedo and (1966) Miranda - right to remain silent
  • (1964) NY Times v. Sullivan - could only sue for libel if they could prove malice was intended.
  • (1962) Engel v. Vitale and (1963) School District of Abington Township v. Schempp - against required prayer and Bible-teaching in schools.
  • (1964) Reynolds v. Sims - state legislatures must be reapportioned according to human population.
  • 1969 - Nixon nominated Warren E. Burger to replace retiring Warren, by 1971 Nixon had appointed 4/9 conservative justices => new court actually remained quite liberal.

Nixon on the Home Front:

  • Continues welfare programs! Increased $$ for Food Stamps and Medicaid, AFDC (Aid to Families w/ Dependent Children [single mothers]). Supplemental Security Income (SSI) - poor, old, disabled. Raised SS w/ rising standard of living (inflation!). [Reduced poverty to 11%]
  • Philadelphia Plan of 1969: construction-trade unions needed timetables for hiring black people -> extended to all federal contracts. Affirmative action was taken to the next level. Griggs v. Duke Power Co. (1971) - prohibited intelligence tests that might be used to exclude minorities.
  • 1970 - Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) - reduced auto emissions and cleaned waterways. Rachel Carson - 1962 - Silent Spring.
  • Inflation! 1971 - 90-day wage and prize freeze. Took US off gold standard and devalued dollar.
  • "Southern strategy" for election of 1972.

The Nixon Landslide of 1972:

  • 1972 - N Vietnam invaded through DMZ w/ tanks -> Nixon launched bombing on cities and harbors. This stopped N Vietnamese offensive.
  • Democrats: George McGovern -> pull troops out in 90 days - tried to appeal to leftists and youth.
  • Republicans: Nixon -> winding down the war (had gone from 540,000 to 30,000 troops). "Peace is at hand"
  • Nixon won 520 to 17. Congress was Democrat majority.

Bombing North Vietnam to the Peace Table:

  • Met for peace, no settlement agreed, fighting -> Nixon launched intense 2-week bombing of N Vietnam to get 'em back to conference table.
  • Jan 1973 - cease-fire arrangements. US was to withdraw remaining troops, S Nam could still get support but no more troops. N Nam allowed to keep troops in S Nam.
  • Peace or American retreat?

Watergate Woes:

  • June 1972, burglary at Democratic HQ (Watergate apartments in DC)
  • Republican Committee for Re-election of the Prez - CREEP - raised $ unlawfully, sabotage against Democrats. 5 CREEPers arrested at Watergate.
  • White House aids and advisors in on the fraud. Illegal use of FBI and CIA and IRS to audit or harass political opponents. White House "enemies list"
  • 1973-1974: TV hearings. John Dean (former White House lawyer) testified that top dogs, including Nixon were involved in covering up Watergate.

The Great Tape Controversy:

  • July 1973 - aide reported White House and phone calls were wire-tapped. Wanted tapes to support Dean's testimony, Nixon refused on executive privilege (confidentiality)
  • VP Spiro Agnew forced to resign for taking bribes. 25th amendment. Gerald Ford replaced Agnew.
  • Oct 1973 "Saturday Night Massacre" - Archibald Cox ("Special prosecutor" for Nixon) issued subpoena for tapes. Fired Cox.

The Secret Bombing of Cambodia and the War Powers Act:

  • 1973, it was discovered that Nixon had ordered the Air Force to bomb Cambodia in 1969, 14 months before it went public
  • Nixon continued to bomb Cambodia after 1973 cease-fire -> compromised to end bombing and get approval next time.
  • Cambodia torn from blasts, economy, Pol Pot "killing fields"
  • Nov 1973 - War Powers Act - Prez must report to Congress 48 hours after committing troops or enlarging combat.
  • Draft had ended. Congress wanted to reduce troops abroad (Europe). Nixon said no.

The Arab Oil Embargo and the Energy Crisis:

  • Oct 1973 - Syrian and Egyptian attacks on Israel. Nixon had $2 billion in war materials air-lifted to Israel - worked!
  • Arab made oil embargo on US and Israel lovers.
  • => Energy crisis. Alaska pipeline, national speed limit.
  • Lifter embargo 1974, but quadrupled prices -> inflation! -> International Energy Agency

The Unmaking of a President:

  • Supreme Court made Nixon fork over the tapes -> proved he was involved in Watergate cover-up -> publicized
  • If impeached, his removal would be certain. If he resigned, hew would at least get retirement $$
  • 1974 boo-hoo farewell address
  • Showed that public opinion and self-government were legit in US

The First Unelected President:

  • Gerald Ford - some called him dumb
  • Pardoned Nixon - "buddy deal" accusers said. He just wanted to get on w/ it.
  • 1975 - Helsinki, Finland - détente agreements. Legitimizes Sov boundaries in exchange for more people and info exchange.
  • Sovs didn't suffice. One-way street. Criticized.

Defeat in Vietnam:

  • 1975 N Nam moved in and S Nam collapsed
  • Remaining Americans and many Vietnamese evacuated to America
  • Longest war. $118 billion. 56,000 dead. America lost face :( Pride wounded.

Feminist Victories and Defeats:

  • 1970 - Stride for Equality
  • 1972 - Title IX - prohibited sexism in fed-assisted education programs/activities -sports.
  • 1972 Equal Rights Amendments (ERA) - ratified by many states, but not enough to Consitutionalize. Phyllis Schlafly opposed. ERA died 1982.
  • (1971) Reed v. Reed, (1973) Frontiero v. Richardson - no sexism in employment
  • (1973) Roe v. Wade - legalized abortion
  • 1972, Nixon vetoed nationwide public day care
  • Family values? Divorces, baby-slaughter, yikes!

The Seventies in Black and White:

  • (1974) Milliken v. Bradley - ruled integration couldn't require students to move cross school-district lines => "white flight"
  • Affirmative action controversial. (1978) Allan Bakke didn't get into med school cuz they favored minorties. Supreme court rule no preference to any group - colorblind.
  • (1978) US v. Wheeler - active American tribes got limited sovereignty - national gov., not states

The Bicentennial Campaign and Carter Victory:

  • 1976. Repubs: Geral Ford
  • Democrats: James "Jimmy" Carter -> "I'll never lie to you." Georgian, Baptist, uncorrupt, "outsider"
  • Carter won 297 to 240. South and blacks. Democratic Congress.
  • Created Department of Energy, cut taxes 1978, pardoned draft evaders, rubbed Congress'
    "fur" the wrong way

Carter's Humanitarian Diplomacy:

  • Sept 1978 - Camp David, Maryland - Israel (Begin), Egypt (Sadat), and Carter (mediator). Signed accord: Israel agreed to relinquish territory from 1967 war, Egypt promised to respect Israel's borders.
  • 1979 - diplomatic relations w/ China
  • Give Panama Canal to Panamanians by 2000
  • Cuban and Sov commies went to Africa to support uprisings.

Economic and Energy Woes:

  • Inflation - soaring oil prices, America was dependent on international trade
  • Bank loans had 20% interest - small biz and construction failed.
  • Carter called for legislation for energy conservation (including stop makin gas guzzling cars). People and Congress didn't give a damn, so they didn't do anything.
  • 1979 Muslim extremists overthrew the westernized/secular Iranian gov. - hated US -no oil.
  • OPEC => prices up
  • July 1979 - Carter Camp David meeting w/ 100 leaders -> speech: America's too materialistic. (what the heck?)
  • Fired 4 secretaries in Cabinet. Got more Georgians.

Foreign Affairs and Iranian Imbroglio:

  • June 1979, Carter met w/ Sov leader Leonid Brezhnev to sign SALT II agreements - limist level of lethal weapons - stalled in Congress.
  • Nov 1979 - Islamo-crazies stormed US embassy in Iran and took occupants hostage - wanted exiled Shah back.
  • Sov army invaded Afghanistan - they fought back - Sov's Vietnam.
  • Carter wanted to negociate w/ Iran, but there was no government. -> Rescue mission - equipment failure, planes ran into each other, 8 rescuers died. Fail blog would have a field day with this.

Chapter 39: The Stormy Sixties 1960-1968

Kennedy's "New Frontier" Spirit:
  • Attorney General - bro, Robert Kennedy -> wanted to get FBI more active against organized crime and for civil rights (opposed by J. Edgar Hoover)
  • SoDefense - Robert S. McNamara (Ford president)
  • JFK proposed Peace Corps. Harvard. Youngest president. Seductive.

The New Frontier at Home:

  • New Frontier promoted medical assistance for old and increased federal aid to education (stalled in Congress)
  • Help economy: anti-inflation (steel industry agreed, then raised prices - JFK got mad). Tax-cut bill (conservative, supported free enterprise)
  • JFK supported multibillion dollar project to land on moon - 1969 it happened.
Rumblings in Europe:

  • 1961 JFK and Khrushchev met - threatened to cut off Berlin from W
  • Aug 1961 - Berlin Wall constructed - designed to prevent E Germans from going to W Germany -> division of Europe.
  • W Europe prospering. Common Market (free-trade area, later EU).JFK Trade Expansion Act 1962 - tariff cuts up to 50% to promote trade w/Common Market countries -> expanded US-Euro trade.
  • US wanted "Atlantic Community" w/ US dominant. Blocked by Charles de Gaulle (prez of France) - 1963 vetoed British application for Common Market - ousted US proposal for NATO to go nuclear. Made French atomic force (what a joke). Demanded independent Europe.
Foreign Flare-ups and "Flexible Response":
  • Colonies released from Europe. Congo violence -> UN peacekeeping force (US money, but not forces)
  • Laos Commie civil war -> Geneva Conference imposed shaky peace on Laos in 1962
  • SoDefense McNamara -"flexible response" (as opposed to "massive retaliation") - array of military options to match gravity of crisis -> increased spending on military, Special Forces (Green Berets)
Stepping into the Vietnam Quagmire:
  • S Vietnam (led by corrupt Diem) were threatened by N Vietnamese commies.
  • 1961 JFK increased troops to S Vietnam - to protect Diem and enact social reforms. Nov 1963 US coup against Diem.
  • US commitment -> 15,000 troops

Cuban Confrontations:

  • 1961 Alliance of Progress (Marshall Plan for Latin America) -> little impact on social problems
  • April 1961 invasion of Cuba at Bay of Pigs - 1200 exile invaders surrendered, jailed, ransomed for $62 million in humanitarian supplies
  • Sovs were giving Cuba missiles (shield Cuba and blackmail US into backing down at Berlin). 1962 JFK ordered "quarantine" of Cuba and immediate removal of missiles. Threatened Sovs with nukes. Khrushchev finally agreed to take missiles out of Cuba and US ended quarantine.
  • Sov and US military expansion
  • 1963 - treaty prohibiting nuke testing signed by US and Sovs.
  • Moscow-Washington "hot line" installed - immediate communication
  • 1963 JFK speech to coexist w/ Sovs => détente (relaxation)
The Struggle for Civil Rights:

  • JFK had put civil rights on the back burner, bc he needed support of the South for med and edu bills (those'd help blacks eventually...right?)
  • Freedom Riders were attacked -> federal marshal protection
  • JFK + MLK + SNCC = Voter Education Project (register disfranchised blacks)
  • Integrated universities. Ole Miss - James Meredith - 400 marshals and 3000 troops to enroll him.
  • MLK campaign Birmingham, Alabama -> campaigners were fought with attack dogs and hoses.
  • June 1963 televised JFK speech "moral issue" - called for civil rights legislation
  • Aug 1963, MLK peaceful "March on Washington" in support of JFK's speech - 200,000 - "I have a dream" speech
  • Violence, little headway w/ civil rights bill

The Killing of Kennedy:

  • Nov 22, 1963 - JFK shot in Dallas in a limo by Lee Harvey Oswald. Oswald shot by Jack Ruby. Many conspiracy theories and investigations.
  • LBJ sworn in, pledged to continue JFK's policies.

The LBJ Brand on the Presidency:

  • Liberal, egoist, FDR was his hero
  • Civil Rights Act of 1964 - (in honor of Kennedy) banned discrimination in privately-owned public facilities, govs enforcement in schools, created Equal Employment Opportunities Commission (EEOC). Conservatives added gender equality to stop bill, but that part ended up passing too.
  • 1965 "affirmative action" against discrimination.
  • LBJ "War on Poverty" -> "Great Society" - New Dealish economic and welfare measures.
  • Michael Harrington - The Other America - 1962 - 20% of whites in nation and 40% of blacks were in poverty
Johnson Battles Goldwater in 1964:
  • Democrats: LBJ -> liberal "Great Society" platform
  • Republicans: Barry Goldwater -> very conservative - against Social Security, TVA, civil rights, Great Society, "war-happy"
  • Aug 1964 - 2 American destroyers fired upon by North Vietnamese -> retaliatory air raid against N Vietnamese bases. "No wider war" LBJ boasted. Tonkin Gulf Resolution: blank-check power for prez to use further force in SE Asia.
  • LBJ won 486 to 52. Democratic maj. in Congress.

The Great Society Congress:

  • $2 billion for Office of Economic Opportunity, $1 billion to redevelop Appalachia.
  • 2 new cabinet offices - Department of Transportation and Department of Housing and Urban Development (Robert C. Weaver - 1st black in cabinet)
  • Big 4: aid to education, medical care for old and poor, immigration reform, new voting rights bill.
  • Education aid to students, not schools -> funds could go to religious schools too.
  • Medicare for elderly, Medicaid for poor (1965)
  • Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 - abolished quota system from 1921. Doubled number of immigrants allowed annually (200k), set limits on W Hemisphere immigrants (120k). Allowed admission for close relatives of US citizens outside these limits. Latin Americans and Asians mostly started immigrating.
  • Poverty declined, especially in elderly.
Battling for Black Rights:

  • Blacks were still denied ballot a lot in the South - poll tax, literacy tests, intimidation. Jan 1964 - 24th amendment - abolished poll taxes
  • 1964- Mississippi "Freedom Summer" - 3 killed.
  • 1965 MLK voter registration campaign in Alabama - tear-gassed, some killed.
  • LBJ speech - "we shall overcome." Voting Rights Act of 1965 - outlawed literacy tests and sent federal voter registrars to South.
Black Power:

  • Watts (a ghetto in LA) - blacks burned their own hood, many were killed.
  • Black struggle changed to militant, N and W cities, led by radical/violent spokespersons, aimed at black separatism.
  • Malcolm X - weird Islamo charismatic speaker -> separatism.
  • "Black Power" slogan. Riots in big cities.
  • MLK assassinated 1968 -> more ghetto gutting
  • Voter registration and school integration shot upward in South.
Combating Communist in Two Hemispheres:

  • April 1965 - Dominican Republic revolt - threatened by Commies - LBJ sent 25,000 US troops - condemned for it.
  • Vietnam: 1965 - American air based bombed -> retaliation -> "Operation Rolling Thunder" - regular attacks against N Vietnam.
  • US stayed to keep from "domino" Communism
  • 1968 - LBJ had half a million troops and $30 billion/year going to Nam
Vietnam Vexations:

  • While the US is busy w/ Nam, Sovs expanded to Egypt, Israel gained territory in Six-Day War (1967) against Egypt.
  • Nam protests, anti-draft. Senator William Fulbright aired TV anti-war hearings.
  • SoDefense McNamara against war, dismissed from cabinet.
  • 1966-1967 - bombing halts. More troops on both sides sent to S Vietnam.
  • LBJ ordered CIA to spy on antiwar activists in US (overstepping CIA's bounds). FBI "Cointerpro" - sabotaged peace groups.
Vietnam Topples Johnson:

  • 1968 N Vietnamese Tet Offensive - attacked 27 S Vietnamese cities - militarily defeated but political victory.
  • Military leaders requested 200,000 more US troops
  • Senator Eugen McCarthy - contender for 1968 Dems - antiwar students = his campaigners. Robert F. Kennedy also went for Dems - blacks, youngs, Hispanics.
  • March 1968 LBJ speech - freeze US troop levels, shift responsibility to S Vietnam, less aerial bombingg, wouldn't run 1968.
  • N Vietnam willing to talk peace - Paris meeting - slowwwwwwwwww progress
The Presidential Sweepstakes of 1968:
  • Antiwar democrats Kennedy and McCarthy fought for primaries. Robert Kennedy assassinated by Arab.
  • Aug 1968, Dems met at Chicago - "Fort Daley" - barricaded - militants chanted and attacked. "Police riot" - police fought back.
  • Former VP, Hubert H. Humphrey De. nominee - LBJ's bitch. Fight till Nam negotiates.
  • Repubs: Nixon - war-hawk, moderate domestic, "Victory in Vietnam and anticrime policy"
  • 3rd party: American Independent party - George C. Wallace - pro-segregation, bomb Nam.
Victory for Nixon:

  • Both parties called for "honorable peace"
  • Nixon won301 to 191 - Congress Democrat majority
  • Wallace got 46 electoral votes from the deep south - largest 3rd party popular vote ever
The Obituary of Lyndon Johnson:

  • Went back to TX and died 1973. Civil rights! Helped poor, blacks, and ill-educated. People's President. Nam sunk him. Couldn't please hawks and the doves.
The Cultural Upheaval of the 1960s:

  • The youth became filthy hippies
  • 1954 UC Berkeley "Free Speech Movement" - started it off
  • Trippy drugs, sexual revolution, homosexuals come outta the closet and fight for rights
  • Morals? Where are they?






Short Answer Test - Key Facts

Based on Cashion's Test Review on her site: http://twhs.conroeisd.net/Teachers/pcashion/0D9D32C0-00870B2F?object=Class_Cal&infobar=no&templates=RWD&ConfPosition=0&Calendar=1

This is also an outline for the study group Wednesday, 6'clock, Dickey's.

1) Neutrality Acts of 1935, 1946, and 1937: when President proclaimed existence of foreign war, no American could sail on a belligerent ship, sell or transport munitions to a belligerent, or make loans to a belligerent.

=> Neutrality Act of 1939: European democracies could buy American war matierals on a "cash-and-carry" basis - they would have to transport in their own ships (to avoid attacks on US ships), and they had to pay in cash (to avoid debt). President could forbid US merchant ships from "war zones"

  • FDR Lend-Lease Bill: lend American arms to democracies, and have them (or equivalents) returned once the war ended - "to further promote the defense of the US," "send guns not sons"
  • Won in Congress with great majorities. $50 billion worth of arms was sent by 1945.
  • This was an economic declaration of war, and abandonment of neutrality
  • 2) 1937 Chicago, FDR made "Quarantine Speech" - called for positive endeavors (economic embargoes) to quarantine agressors -> isolationist outraged, FDR retreated. REREAD.

    3) FDR eager to join Latin Americans to defend Western Hemisphere - enforced good neighbor policy, 1933 declared nonintervention

  • 1934 took marines out of Haiti, released Cuba from Platt amendment (but kept Gitmo), loosened grip on Panama
  • Mexican government seize US oil properties, FDR worked out a settlement instead of using armed intervention
  • 4) REREAD CHART!

    5) Office of Price Administration -kept war inflation prices down and had people ration foods like meat and butter.

    6) Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944 (GI Bill) - sent former soldiers to technical schools or colleges - $14.5 billion tax-dollars. Enabled Veteran's Administration $16 billion in loans for veterans to buy homes, farms, and small businesses.

    7) Feb. 1945, Stalin, FDR, and Churchill met at Yalta (along Black Sea)

  • Stalin agreed Poland, Bulgaria, and Romania should have representative gov. w/ free elections
  • Big Three announced plans for international peacekeeping organization - the United Nations
  • FDR wanted Stalin to enter war w/ Japan, Stalin agreed when FDR offered S Sakhalin Island (Japan), Kurile Islands (Japan), Manchurian railroads, ports Dairen and Port Arthur (China)
  • Critics said FDR sold out Chiang Kai-Shek and contributed to Communist overthrow 4 years later
  • Apologists said FDR was setting limits to Stalin
  • Yalta wasn't drafting peace settlement, just sketching intentions to test limits of others.
  • REREAD SUBSECTION

    8) Germany was divided into 4 zones (US, Britain, France, USSR). Germany was divided by east and west because of Soviets.

  • Berlin (on Soviet side) occupied by big 4, USSR tried to choke off Berlin (1948), but US delivered supplies by air.
  • USSR llifted blockade in 1949 - governments of East Germany and West Germany formally established (they would remain divided until 1990).

  • Berlin was often considered the center of the war - it was occupied by both the Soviets and Americans - and represented the division of Germany.

    9) Truman Doctrine: made policy of US supporting free people resisting Communist pressures. Against: "It's the US's job to defend any crackpot nation claiming to be resisting Commies?"... "How can polarizing the world promote peace?" For: spurred by fear of isolationism.

    SoS George C. Marshall => Marshall Plan: European nations create joint plan for economic recovery and US would give 'em money. Met in Paris, July 1947. (offered $ to USSR if they changed political stuff, but they refused of course).

    10) USSR llifted blockade in 1949 - governments of East Germany and West Germany formally established (they would remain divided until 1990).

    North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) signed in Washington April 1949 (attack on one=attack on all, respond w/ armed force if necessary). Senate approved July 1949

    Sept 1949, Soviets tested their atomic bomb. America developed the H-bomb (many times worse) in 1952. Soviets had one by 1953. Nuclear fear brought standstill.

    2 more world turning points in 1949?

    11) Why is Korean war considered a limited war ??

    Jerry's opinion (no I don't know who Jerry is): Both sides would have been glad if they could have conquered the other, of course, but they knew about the costs. As they were about the same strenght and still had large reserves, there was no sense in making it bigger than it was. Expanding it to other countries or even taking the nuclear option, as some militaries suggested, would have lead to world wide war without a winner. The experience of World War 2 was still very close.The limitation of the war on Korea (what was bad enough) and the final compromise was the result of politicians realizing, that it was not worth WW III and maybe killing all mankind.

    Max's opinion: Because we did not use all of our military assets (i.e. nuclear weapons) to win the war but mainly because we were only fighting to comply with the UN directive to repel the North Koreans from South Korean territory. We were not fighting to conquer or defeat the North Koreans or make them a subject people as had been done in previous wars. Considering what is there now this may have been a mistake but then again fighting the Chinese or worse yet the nuclear armed Soviets back then didn't seem like a wise idea either. I guess you can say they did the best they could with the information they had back then!

    12) Review and discuss people!!!

    13) 1948 election subsection - REREAD

    Chapter 38: The Eisenhower Era 1952-1960

    The Advent of Eisenhower (1952):
    • Democrats nominated Adlai E. Stevenson - weakened party
    • Republicans nominated Dwight D. Ewisenhower w/ anti-Commie Nixon
    • Nixon's "slush fund" surfaced, but theatrical "Checkers speech" on TV kept him in the running
    • TV- was it commercializing politics?
    • Eisenhower won (w/ pledge to go to Korea and end the war) 442-89 electoral votes. Small Republican majority in Congress.

    "Ike" Takes Command:

    • Dec. 1952, Ike flew to Korea - the war ended 7 months later after he threated atomic weapons, shaky armistice signed.
    • Korean War=50,000 Americans dead, 10s of billions dollars, returned to conditions of 1950, "contained" Communism.
    • Ike= sincere, fair, optimistic, people loved him, soothing, social harmony>social justice

    The Rise and Fall of Joseph McCarthy:

    • Senator Joseph McCarthy was the most ruthless red-hunter. 1950, made compelling speech accusing SoS Acheson of hiring Commies in State Department (not true).
    • Republicans and majority public commended his efforts
    • McCarthy went after ex-Sos George Marshall. Ike secretly hated him but didn't intervene.
    • McCarthy accused US army 1954 - finally Senate condemned him, died 3 years later.

    Desegregating the South:

    • Blacks in S had Jim Crow laws - segregated schools, toilets, bus seats
    • Some blacks still lynched
    • 1944 - Gunnar Myrdal - An American Dilemma - all men are created equal, but blacks are treated like this?
    • NAACP wanted legal action! 1944, Supreme Court ruled "white primary" unconstitutional. 1950 NAACP legal counsel Thurgood Marshall ruled schools for blacks' accomidations weren't equal (Sweatt v. Painter)
    • 1955 Alabama - Rosa Parks => black boycott of city busses
    • MLK Jr. - orator, nonviolent, biblical and constitutional justice

    Seeds of Civil Rights Revolution:

    • 1948, Truman had ended segregation in federal civil service AND armed forces (shortages in Korea forced integration)
    • Ike and Congress weren't interested in civil rights -> judiciary
    • Supreme Court Justice Earl Warren, interested in social progression (Ike against him) got much opposition.
    • Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas - Warren ruled black schools were unequal therefore unconstitutional => integration in schools.
    • This got painful opposition from the S, and verrrrry slowly implemented.

    Crisis at Little Rock:

    • 1957, Orval Faubus (gov. of Arkansas) used National Guard to prevent 9 black students from engrolling at Little Rock HS, Ike sent troops to escort kids to classes.
    • 1957 Congress passed Civil Rights Act ("mild") - established Civil Rights Commission to investigate violations of civil rights
    • MLK: Souther Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) 1957 - black churches for black rights
    • "sit-in" movement started by students => 1960 Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC "snick")

    Eisenhower Republicanism at Home:

    • Ike was a moderate conservative - "bland"
    • Tried to get away from "creeping socialism" - less defense spending, control of oil fields given to states, encouraged private company to compete with TVA.
    • Operation Wetback - deported 1 million Mexican illegal immigrants - 1954.
    • Tried to reverse Indian New Deal - assimilate! Abandoned 1961
    • Kept and embraced New Deal policies like Social Security, unemployment insurance
    • Interstate Highway Act - 1956 - $27 billion. Construction jobs and suburbanization. Robbed railroads, air quality, energy consumption.
    • 1957-1958, economic downturn, 1954 Democrat majority in congress. 1955 CIO and AFL merged.

    A New Look in Foreign Policy:

    • SoS John Foster Dulles: containment is not enough, we must roll back Commie gains and liberate captive peoples. But we need to cut military spending. How will that work? Dulles: 1954 - "boldness policy" - airfleet of superbombers (Strategic Air Command - SAC) with nuclear weapons.
    • Threatened Cina, 1955 tried to make peace w/ USSR (now under Khrushchev) - rejected, 1956 Hungary uprising against USSR- crushed, asked US for aid, but they now had too heavy a weapon.

    The Vietnam Nightmare:

    • 1954, US was financing $1 billion/year for French colonial war in Indochina
    • Commie Ho (emphasis on ho) Chi Minh trapped French garrison 1954, Ike held back to prevent another war
    • 1955, Vietname halved at 17th parallel. N - Ho Chi Minh. S - Hgo Dinh Diem (anti-commie). US promised to aid S and did.

    A False Lull in Europe:

    • W Germany joined NATO 1955 and contributed 1/2 million troops
    • E Euopre and Soviets signed Warsaw Pact - red counterweight to NATO
    • Arms-control agreements w. USSR and Soviets agreed to end occupation of Austria.
    • 1956, Hungarians revolted, brutally crushed by Sovs, US admitted 30 thousand Hungarian refugees.

    Menaces in the Middle East:

    • CIA managed coup to put Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi in charge of Iran, as former gov. was resisting Western oil compaines.
    • Nasser (Egypt) needed $$ for dam, US offered, then took it back when he flirted w/ Commies (their red may have been attractive but they don't put out - Nasser should have known that before he started flirting!!). Nasser nationalized the (Brit and French owned) Suez Canal.
    • SoS Dulles said no European or Sov intervention - but France, Britain and Israel staged assualt on Egypt 1956.
    • US refused to provied allies w/ oil and supplies -> they withdrew and UN police force maintained order
    • 1957 Eisenhower Doctrine - US will send military and economic aid to coutnries in Middle East threated by Commies (really to prevent nationalism - threat to US's oil).
    • 1960 Organization of Petrolium Exporting Countries (OPEC) - Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, Iran, Venezuela.

    Round Two for Ike:

    • 1956 Adlai vs. Eisenhower again, Ike won 457-73. Democrat Congress. Ike had fragile health and was now more laid back.
    • Labor union "Teamsters" chief Dave Beck imprisoned for embezzlement. Replacement James R. Hoffa doing some jury tampering.
    • => Landrum-Griffin Act - make labor leaders accountable for finaces and clean up labor union corruption.

    The Race with the Soviets into Space:

    • 1957 - Soviets launch Sputnik and Sputnik II. America gasped! How could the comies be sceintifically ahead of us? And do they have intercontinental ballistic missiles?
    • Eisenhowerr established NASA and billions for missile development.
    • 1957 - Vanguard blew up! 1958 - first US satelite
    • Education improvement. 1958 National Defense and Education Act (NDEA) - $887 million in loans to college student and grants for teaching improvements.

    The Continuing Cold War:

    • 1958 - Us and USSR suspension of developing nuclear weapons.
    • Lebanon was threated by Egypt and Commies - asked for US help - Ike sent troops to restore order (part of Eisenhower Doctrine)
    • 1959, Khrushchev met w/ Ike at Camp David, Maryland - talked about evacuating Berlin
    • 1960 American spy plane shot down in Russia -> Paris summit conference sollapsed.

    Cuba's Castroism Spells Communism:

    • US hadn't given much $$ to Latin America, but intervend (CIA coup ousted leftist gov in Guatemala 1954)
    • Fidel Castro - 1959 Cuban Revolution -> Commie land-distribution program. US stopped importing Cuban sugar, Cubans fled to Florida.
    • US tried to invoke Monroe Doctrine before Soviets could set up in Cuba. Khruschev: screw dat, touch Castro and I'll missile y'all.
    • Ike proposed "Marshall Plan" for Latin America -> gave em $500 million

    Kennedy Challenges Nixon for the Presidency:

    • 1960 Republicans: Nixon (stand up to Soviets) w/ Hunry Cabot Lodge Jr. (UN rep)
    • Democrats: John F. Kennedy w/ LBJ "New Fronteir"

    The Presidential Issues of 1960:

    • JFK had anti-Catholic sneers and Pope fears
    • Televised Nixon-Kennedy debates (JFK looked better, Nixon had a 5 o'clock shadow, etc.)
    • JFK won 303 to 219 (workers, Catholics, blacks)
    • Democrat Congress

    An Old General Fades Away:

    • Some said Ike "golfed" away his presidency, but he was very active
    • Alaska and Hawaii became states 1959
    • Ike didn't crusade for civil rights :(

    Changing Economic Patterns:

    • The computer! IBM
    • Aerospace - Strategic Air Command - 1957 Boeing 707 passenger jet - Air Force One
    • 1956 white collar revolution - fading out of labor unions - women opportunities in workplace
    • 1963 - Betty Friedan - The Feminine Mystique - being a housewife is boring, women should be able to work and this should be socially acceptable

    Consumer Culture in the Fifties:

    • McDonald's, Disneyland, credit card. TVs! - televangelists, sports.
    • Elvis Presley - rock and roll. Sexual-ness: Elvis, Marilyn Monroe, Playboy
    • Books about consumerist lifestyles, some leftist

    The Life of the Mind in Postwar America:

    • Fantastic and exaggerated war novels
    • Society books. Depressing poetry.
    • Books by blacks, southerners, Jews.

    Chapter 37: The Cold War Begins 1945-1952

    Postwar Economic Anxieties:
    • 1946 and 1947, economy slumped, GNP lowerd, prices inflated -> strikes!!!
    • 1947, Republican Congress passed Taft-Hartley Act: outlawed "closed shop," made unions liable for damages from disputes, and made them take non-communist oath. Slowed organized labor unions.
    • CIO - "operation Dixie" - to unionize the South -failed b/c fears of racial mixing, people too spread out. Labor's peak in 1950s, then decline.
    • Government sold war factories to private companies for cheap. 1946 Employment Act - maximum employment, production, purchasing power.
    • Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944 (GI Bill) - sent former soldiers to technical schools or colleges - $14.5 billion tax-dollars. Enabled Veteran's Administration $16 billion in loans for veterans to buy homes, farms, and small businesses.

    The Long Economic Boom, 1950-1970:

    • 1950 - Plateau of prosperity. 6% of world's people (Americans) enjoyed 40% of world's wealth.
    • Middle class = $3,000-$10,000/year. 60% of Americans were considered middle class. Owned homes, cars, washing machines, TVs.
    • New jobs (esp. service) went to women. 25%of work force. Culture still glorified feminine role of traditional homemaker and mother.

    The Roots of Postwar Prosperity:

    • War => America on top. Military budgets
    • Research and development
    • Cheap energy: oil from Middle East, gas, coal, hydroelectric
    • productivity (output/hour) increased. (result of more people being educated)
    • Agriculture achieved extreme productivity gains, consolidation of agribusiness, use of costly machinery.

    The Smiling Sunbelt:

    • After the war, people were on the move
    • 1945 - Dr. Benjamin Spock - The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care
    • "Sunbelt" (15 states from VA to CA) - population increased twise as fast as in the NE.
    • Better climate, lower taxes, jobs: electronics, aerospace, military installations
    • Area recieved most money from federal government
    • Population increase -> more congressional representation and influence: believed in unbridled individualism and unregulated economy

    The Rush to the Suburbs:

    • Whites fled from cities to suburbs (motivated by FHA and VA home-loans AND tax deductions for interest payments on mortgages. highways for commuters)
    • Construction industry boomed "Levittowns"
    • Cities left black, brown, and broke (blacks from the South moved to the city)
    • FHA often refused loans to blacks or any other race
    • Only built houses for blacks in already black neighborhoods => segregation.

    The Postwar Baby Boom:

    • After the war: marriage -> babies!!! 1945-1964 baby boom years (peaked in 1957). Added 50 million babies to population. Following this boom was a birth dearth.
    • Elementary school enrollments boomed, then busted.
    • Industry booms followed the baby boomers at different age groups.
    • What's gonna happen when it's time for baby boomers to collect Social Security? Yikes.

    Truman: The "Gutty" Man from Missouri:

    • "The average man's average man," no college education, farmer then WWI veteran
    • He could tell people off
    • Loyal to "Missouri gang," even through corruption (much like Grant or Harding)

    Yalta: Bargain or Betrayal?

    • Feb. 1945, Stalin, FDR, and Churchill met at Yalta (along Black Sea)
    • Stalin agreed Poland, Bulgaria, and Romania should have representative gov. w/ free elections
    • Big Three announced plans for international peacekeeping organization - the United Nations
    • FDR wanted Stalin to enter war w/ Japan, Stalin agreed when FDR offered S Sakhalin Island (Japan), Kurile Islands (Japan), Manchurian railroads, ports Dairen and Port Arthur (China)
    • Critics said FDR sold out Chiang Kai-Shek and contributed to Communist overthrow 4 years later
    • Apologists said FDR was setting limits to Stalin
    • Yalta wasn't drafting peace settlement, just sketching intentions to test limits of others.

    The United States and the Soviet Union:

    • Mutual suspician. Communism vs. Capitalism
    • US terminated lend-lease to USSR in 1945 and refused plea for $6 billion reconstruction loan (when they gave Britain one)
    • Americans were agains tthe Soviet sphere of influence in Europe; they favored "open world" - decolonized, demilitarized, deomcratized, w/ international organization for peace
    • Both nations evangelical about their opposing doctrines
    • => Cold War(45 years long)

    Shaping the Postwar World:

    • Meeting at Bretton Woods, New Hamshire 1944 - Western Allies (Soviets refused) established International Monetary Fund (IMF) - encourage world trade by regulating currency exchnage rates. Also founded International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World Bank) - promote economic growth in war-torn areas. (US took the lead in both of these)
    • San Francisco 1945 - UN Conference (50 nations) -> UN Charter: Security Council (Big Five: US, Britain, USSR, France, China) and Assembly (smaller countries). Approved by Senate.
    • UN (in NYC) helped preserve peace in Iran and Kashmir, big role in creating Israel. UNESCO (UN Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization), FAO (Food and Agricultural Organization), WHO (World Health Organization).
    • 1946 US delegate (Bernard Baruch) called for worldwide authority over atomic energy, weapons, reserach. USSR proposed nuclear weapons outlawed everywhere. Couldn't agree, so they popped, locked, and dropped it.

    The Problem of Germany:

    • Allies joined in trying big 22 Nazis in Nuremberg, Germany for crimes against humanity (1945-1946), then went after smaller Nazis.
    • USSR wanted huge reparations from Germany.
    • Germany was divided into 4 zones (US, Britain, France, USSR). Germany was divided by east and west because of Soviets.
    • Berlin (on Soviet side) occupied by big 4, USSR tried to choke off Berlin (1948), but US delivered supplies by air.
    • USSR llifted blockade in 1949 - governments of East Germany and West Germany formally established (they would remain divided until 1990).

    Crystallizing the Cold War (THIS SECTION IS INTENSE):

    • 1946, Stalin broke agreement to remove troops from oily Iran. USSR's polivies in Germany, E Europe, Middle East were getting Americans mad.
    • 1947 - George F. Kennan - "containment doctrine"
    • 1947 - Britain had been defending Greece to save the whole Mediterranean from Commies, Britan wearing thin.
    • March 1947 - Truman asked Congress for $400 million to defend Greece and Turkey (part of Truman Doctrine). Congress approved.
    • Truman Doctrine: made policy of US supporting free people resisting Communist pressures. Against: "It's the US's job to defend any crackpot nation claiming to be resisting Commies?"... "How can polarizing the world promote peace?" For: spurred by fear of isolationism.
    • War-torn W. Europe (France, Italy, Germany) at risk for being internally overthrown by Communist parties.
    • SoS George C. Marshall => Marshall Plan: European nations create joint plan for economic recovery and US would give 'em money. Met in Paris, July 1947. (offered $ to USSR if they changed political stuff, but they refused of course).
    • Congress - Marshall Plan = $12.5 billion, 4 years, 16 countries. (After Soviet Commie coup in Czechoslovakia), Congress accepted April 1948.
    • => SUCCESS! EUROPEAN PROSPERITY!!!
    • Arabs were agianst Israel!! Europe, US, everyone wanted to keep Arabs happy b/c of oil, but Truman recognized and supported Israel from its birth (May 14, 1948).

    America Begins to Rearm:

    • Cold War/Soviet Menace => 1947 National Security Act
    • Established Department of Defense - cabinet-member Secretary of Defense, and Joint Chiefs of Staff: SoNavy, SoArmy, SoAir Force
    • Established National Security Council (NSC) - advise President on security
    • Established Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) - coordinate government's foreign fact-gathering
    • 1948 - conscription of selected men 19-25
    • 1948 - France, Britain, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg signed defensive alliance, asked US to join.
    • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) signed in Washington April 1949 (attack on one=attack on all, respond w/ armed force if necessary). Senate approved July 1949; Greece & Turkey, and West Germany joined 1952 and 1955.
    • NATO objectives: keep Russians out, Germans down, Americans in

    Reconstruction and Revolution in Asia:

    • American army under MacArthur occupied Japan, war criminals tried (1946-1948)
    • 1946 - Constitution adopted that promoted Western democracy and renounced militarism
    • Chinese Nationalist government overthrown by Commie Mao Zedong, Jiang Jieshi forced to Taiwan.
    • Big loss for America during Cold War (1/4 of the world's population was now forced into Communism)
    • Sept 1949, Soviets tested their atomic bomb. America developed the H-bomb (many times worse) in 1952. Soviets had one by 1953. Nuclear fear brought standstill.

    Ferreting Out Alleged Communists:

    • 1947 - Loyalty Review Board - investigated federal employees, 3,000 were dismissed
    • 1949, 11 Commies imprisoned for violating Smith Act of 1940 (antisedition). Affirmed by Dennis v. US (1951)
    • 1938 House had established Committee of Un-American Activities (HUAC). Richard Nixon and Joseph McCarthy
    • 1948, Nixon got Alger Hiss 1950 for perjury
    • State and local conservatives witch-hunted debtors, drinkers, and gays as "security risks"
    • McCarran Internal Security Bill - authorized President to arrest and detain suspicious people during an "internal security emergency." 1950 Truman vetoed, Congress overruled.
    • Julius and Ethel Rosenberg (leaked atomic data to Moscow) convicted 1951 of espionage and electric chair'd. Too far?

    Democratic Divisions in 1948:

    • Republicans nominated Thomas E. Dewey
    • Democrats wanted war-hero Eisenhower, but when he refused they were stuck w/ Truman - in favor of civil rights for blacks, upset Southerners.
    • "Dixiecrats" nominated J. Strom Thurmond. States' Rights Party.
    • Former VP Henry A. Wallance ran under new Progressive party (former New-Dealers, liberals, Commies). Wallace was pro-Soviet.
    • With Democrats split 3 ways, seemed like sure victory for Dewey.
    • Truman won -> Dewey -> Thurmond -> Wallace, Democrats regained Congress.
    • "Point Four" in inagural address - US lend money to underdevloped lands to help them, prevent them from going communist - launched 1950 (Latin America, Africa, etc.)
    • "Fair Deal" => Housing Act 1949, extending beneficiaries in Social Security Act of 1950.

    The Korean Volcano Erupts (1950):

    • N Korea was occupied by USSR, S Korea occupied by US; both countries withdrew forces, leaving Korea divided.
    • June 1950, N Korea went S of 38th parallel and started pushing S Koreans into this tiny coastal confinement (Pusan). The N Koreans had gotten the O.K. from Stalin.
    • National Security council had written NSC-68: the US should spend 4x more on defense, put into effect w/ Korean crisis (SoS Acheson) -> 3.5 million men under arms and $50 bililon/yr for defense
    • UN Security Council met and called for UN members to render every assistance to restore peace
    • (Without asking Congress,) Truman ordered air and naval units to help S Korea (made MacArthur in charge). Even though it was UN thing, the US was taking the lead.

    The Military Seesaw in Korea:

    • MacArthur got back to the 38th parallel Sept 15, 1950, then crossed and pushed upward (SEE PICTURE)
    • China got pissed and started pushing them back down
    • MacArthur now wanted to attack China, but Truman refused and fired rebellious MacArthur. People got mad at Truman.
    • July 1951, truce discussions started that lasted two years while men died.

    Chapter 36: America in World War II 1941-1945

    The Allies Trade Space for Time:
    • America needed time! Race against the clock to pump out war materials, transport forces to spaced-out regions, send food and munitions to allies before Germany could take control of Europe and their scientists could make dangerous weapons like the atomic bomb

    The Shock of War:

    • America united against Japan (b/c of Pearl Harbor).
    • Immigrants weren't witch-hunted, minorities blended in.
    • Japanese (mostly on Pacific Coast) were feared -> government forcibly herded them in concentration camps (prejudice and post-war hysteria).
    • 1944, Supreme Court declared this constitutional Korematsu v. US
    • Enemy Aliens: Japanese, Germans, and Italians - internment camps
    • 1942 -> Conservative Congress, New Deal retired
    • WWII was no crusade, majority of people couldn't tell you what the Atlantic Charter said, many didn't know what we were fighting for.

    Building the War Machine:

    • War Production Board - American factories pumped out weapons, halted manufacture of cars, gas-rationing for rubber.
    • Farmers (using machinery) increased crop output.
    • Scarcity of goods -> inflation. Office of Price Administration kept prices under control w/ regulations like rationing meat and butter.
    • War Labor Board limited wage increases. Labor unions grew; labor walkouts hindered industries
    • 1943 Smith-Connally Anti-Strike Act: authorized federal government to seize and operate tied-up industries (took over coal mines and railroads). Strikes against gov-operated industry were criminal offenses.

    Manpower and Womanpower:

    • Draft=> 15 million meant, 216,000 women (WAAC, WAVEs, SPARs) (noncombat duties)
    • Industrial and ag workers exempted, but still huge shortages => Mexican agricultural workers "braceros"
    • Women worked in factories (gov daycares established), but many women still stayed home
    • After war 2/3 of women workers returned home for family obligations (to mother "baby boomers"

    Wartime Migrations:

    • War industries sucked people into boomtowns (LA, Detroit, Seattle). CALIFORNIA GREW!
    • South given $6 billion for industrial facilities => recovery of the South, became "sunbelt"
    • Blacks went North and West. Tensions over segregation. A. Philip Randolph threated a Negro March on Washington - demanded equal opportunities for black in war jobs and armed forces.
    • =>FDR forbid discrimination in defense industries, established Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC) to enforce this.
    • Blacks also drafted, but service branches. -> NAACP membership grew, Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) founded 1942.
    • 1944 mechanical cotton-picker invented -no need for blacks in Dixieland - dispersed! Became urban.
    • Native Americans moved from reservations to war industries and even joined the armed forces (code-talkers).
    • Race riots against Mexicans and blacks

    Holding the Home Front:

    • The war ended the depression, and double the GNP. Personal income doubled, even with taxes. Prices inflated
    • More government intervention than even the New Deal: people worked for gov. in armed forces, defense industries monitored by FEPC and WLB, gov sponsored day care, health plans
    • Wartime cost: $330 billion. Income tax expanded and tax rates rose up to 90%, but majority of money for war was borrowed -> national debt raised to $259 billion

    The Rising Sun in the Pacific:

    • Japan attacked Guam, Wake, British Hong Kong, and Malaya. Blocked Burma road (where US would supply China). Then took Dutch East Indies.
    • Philippines - US General MacArthur- defense at Bataan - held of Japanese until 1942
    • MacArthur ordered to Australia (aww the movieee!!) US surrendered in Philippines -> Bataan Death March to prisoner of war camps
    • Japan took control of Philippines

    Japan's High Tide at Midway:

    • Japanese invaded New Guinea, northern Australia, and Soloman Islands
    • May 1942 naval battle - Coral Sea - US and Aust. vs. Jap. (US VICTORY)
    • Japanese seized Midway Island (north of Hawaii). June 1942 battle - Chester W. Nimitz and Raymod A. Spruance - victory!!
    • Japanese took islands Kiska and Attu near Alaska -> US defense at Alaska!
    • 1942, Japan suffered "victory disease."

    American Leapfrogging Toward Tokyo:

    • Aug 1942 - US troops successfully drove Japanese out of Guadalcanal (Soloman Islands)
    • Aug 1944 - MacArthur managed to get New Guinea
    • American strategy to bomb Japanese strongholds - under Nimitz, Attu and Kiska retaken 1943, Gilbert Islands 1943, Marshall Islands 1944.
    • Air attacks on Marianas (Guam) and the Philippine Sea
    • US got Marianas => Nov 1944 started round-the-clock bombing of Japan.

    The Allied Halting of Hitler:

    • Trouble in Atlantic with German submarines
    • Ally antisubmarine tactics improved - cracked German codes
    • Air bombs on Germany. Germans under Marshal Erwin Rommel went into Egypt, but British Bernard Montgomery drove them back to Tunisia.
    • Russia launched crushing counteroffensive = 1943 Stalin had regained 2/3 of Soviet Union

    A Second Front from North Africa to Rome:

    • USSR was getting creamed w/ losses, wanted 2nd front to divert Germans westward
    • Assault on French N. Africa (Nov. 1942) led by Dwight D. Eisenhower -> mighty waterborne attack, German-Italian army surrendered. (May 1943).
    • Jan 1943 FDR and Winston Churchill met in Casablanca, Morocco. Agreed to step up Pacific war, invade Sivily, and insist upon "unconditional surrender" of enemy (controversial).
    • Allies victorious at Sicily, Italy surrendered unconditionally Sept 1943.
    • Germans stayed in Italy and Italy declared war w/ them 1943
    • Rome taken 1944. Italy was a sideshow that distracted both sides.

    D-Day: June 6, 1944:

    • FDR stopped in Cairo, talked w/ Churchill and Jiang Jieshi (China) about the war against Japan
    • Nov 28-Dec 1 1943 - Teheran Conference w/ FDR, Churchill, and Stalin: agreed to launch Soviet attacks on Germany from east and Allied assault from West
    • Brits and Americans under Eisenhower attacked French Normandy on D-Day. Sea and air attacks, crippled railroads, bombed gas plants. Lunged across France under George S. Patton. Aug 1944, Paris freed!!
    • Allies move to Germany. Aachen (1st important city) fell Oct 1944.

    FDR: The Fourth-Termite of 1944:

    • Republicans nominated Thomas E. Dewey - popular gov. of NY w/ isolationist running mate John W. Bricker. Platform called for prosecution of war and new League of Nation-like organization.
    • Aging FDR nominated for Democrats, but focus was put on VP -> Harry S (his full middle name was the letter S!) Truman. (past VP Wallace ditched b/c he was an unstable liberal)

    Roosevelt Defeats Dewey:

    • Dewey made speeches, "time for a change," won't alter basic strategy, but I'll fight the war better
    • CIO assisted in campaigning for FDR. He won 432 to 99 b/c the war was going well and he was experienced.

    The Last Days of Hitler:

    • German's last offensive- The Battle of the Bulge, Dec-Jan 1945
    • March 1945, Eisenhower's troops marched through Germany and met up w/ Soviet comrades. Saw the shocking realities of concentration camps.
    • April 1945 captured Berlin -> Hitler committed suicide Apr. 30
    • FDR died Apr. 12 1945 - cerebral hemorrhage -> Truman prez
    • May 7, Germany surrendered unconditionally. May 8, 1945 V-E Day (Victory in Europe).

    Japan Dies Hard:

    • US submarines destroyed 50% of Japan's merchant fleet
    • March 1945, fire-bomb raid on Tokyo
    • General MacArthur went to Philippines, huge battle at Leyte Gulf (Oct 1944) - Americans won.
    • Manila fell March 1945, Philippines conquered July.
    • March 1945 island Iwo Jima captured (heavy US losses)
    • Okinawa (Japanese Island) captured next (heavy US losses)
    • US navy damaged from suicide pilots "kamikazes"

    The Atomic Bombs:

    • Potsdam Conference (Berlin, July 1945). Truman, Stalin, and British leaders met and came up with ultimatum.
    • America warned Japan: surrender or be destroyed.
    • FDR ot Congress to make $2 billion available for atom bomb project (w/ Albert Einstein) -> feared Germnay would beat them to it.
    • Tested 1st atomic bomb near Alamogordo, NM (July 1945)
    • August 6, 1945 - atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima (killed 180,000)
    • August 8, 1945 - Stalin enters war against Japan -> overrun Manchuria and Korea in 6-day victory parade
    • Japanese stilll didn't surrender. August 9, dropped 2nd bomb on Nagasaki (80,000 killed)
    • Aug 10, Japanese said peace on the condition that they keep their emperor, Hirohito; Aug 14 Allies accept
    • Sept 2, 1945 V-J Day

    The Allies Triumphant:

    • REREAD!!!!!!!!!! IMPORTANTE

    Chapter 35: FDR and the Shadow of War 1933-1941

    The London Conference:
    • Summer 1933 - 66 nation London Economic Conference - wanted to stabilize values of national currencies to attack global depression
    • FDR, wanting inflation, and much more worried about America's domestic issues, withdrew US from the conference
    • This led to an unsuccessful conference, nationalism, and further US isolationism.

    Freedom for (from?) the Filipinos and Recognition for Russians:

    • The Philippines was an economic liability -> Tydings-McDuffie Act 1934: independence for Philippines after 12 years of economic protection/guidance from US (1946) - relinquish army bases but navy to be decided
    • Selfish move for US, Japan was now interested in the free Philippines and the fact that US had given up control in the east and shrunk into isolation
    • FDR recognized "diplomatically" the Soviet Union in 1933. Anticommies gasped, but he did it because they'd be good to trade with, and they were a friendly counterweight to Germany and Japan.

    Becoming a Good Neighbor:

    • FDR eager to join Latin Americans to defend Western Hemisphere - enforced good neighbor policy, 1933 declared nonintervention
    • 1934 took marines out of Haiti, released Cuba from Platt amendment (but kept Gitmo), loosened grip on Panama
    • Mexican government seize US oil properties, FDR worked out a settlement instead of using armed intervention

    Secretary Hull's Reciprocal Trade Agreements:

    • SoS Cordell Hull + FDR + Congress = Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act 1934 (to lift American export trade - relief and recovery), gave FDR power to lower tariff by up to 50% provided that the other country involved would have similar reductions.
    • 21 countries by 1939 participated in this reciprocal trade w/ the US -> US foreign trade increased!!

    Impulses Toward Storm-Cellar Isolationism:

    • Fascism in Europe: Hitler-Germany, Mussolini-Italy. Communism: Joseph Stalin-USSR. (spurred by bad economy and need for nationalism)
    • Japan militaristic - 1934 terminated naval disarmament agreement, started pumping out battleships.
    • America wanted to stay out! Remembering Allies' debts from WWI, 1934 Johnson Debt Default Act - prevent nations from borrowing further from US.
    • People wanted a constitutional amendment to keep out of war (except in case of invasion or popular referendum)

    Congress Legislates Neutrality:

    • Senate Committee (Sen. Gerald Nye) appointed to investigate munitions manufacturers being the cause for entry into war.
    • Neutrality Acts of 1935, 1946, and 1937: when President proclaimed existence of foreign war, no American could sail on a belligerent ship, sell or transport munitions to a belligerent, or make loans to a belligerent
    • Abandoned freedom of the seas. While neutrality was now legally ok, was it morally? By doing nothing, US allowed dictators to get pretty far; treated evil countries the same as poor victims, could have helped defeat totalitarians.

    America Dooms Loyalist Spain:

    • Fascist Fransisco Franco (aided by Hitler, Mussolini, and even Soviet Russia) overthrows Spanish democratic government in the Spanish Civil War 1936-1939
    • US had relations w/ Loyalist government, but Congress and FDR declared arms embargo to Loyalists and rebels alike.
    • US so determined to stay out of war, it allowed a fellow democracy to crash and burn. (FDR regretful). Also allowed US navy to decline in strength (for isolation and to spare tax-payer). Finally in 1938, Congress passes billion dollar Naval Construction Act. Late!!

    Appeasing Japan and Germany:

    • 1937 Japan invaded China - FDR said it wasn't legit war yet - didn't cut off munitions
    • 1937 Chicago, FDR made "Quarantine Speech" - called for positive endeavors (economic embargoes) to quarantine aggressors -> isolationist outraged, FDR retreated
    • Japanese sunk American boat Panay in Chinese waters. Tokyo apologized and payed indemnities (this made the Japanese hate Americans and hang them whenever they had a chance)
    • Hitler breaks Versailles Treaty, invades Rhineland, wipes out Jews w/ Holocaust, invades Austria, wanted Sudetenland (next to Czechoslovakia) next.
    • 1938 Conference in Munich, Germany. W European democracies "give" Hitler Sudetenland as a "concession" in hope he would stop there. He didn't. He invadee Czechoslovakia next.

    Hitler's Belligerency and US Neutrality:

    • Aug 1939 Hitler-Stalin pact
    • Hitler seizes Poland, Britain and France declare war
    • FDR issues neutrality proclamations. America firmly against Nazi and France and Britain desperately needed aid
    • => Neutrality Act of 1939: European democracies could buy American war materials on a "cash-and-carry" basis - they would have to transport in their own ships (to avoid attacks on US ships), and they had to pay in cash (to avoid debt). President could forbid US merchant ships from "war zones"
    • Improved moral and economic position (almost miraculously solved the unemployment of the depression)

    The Fall of France:

    • Soviets attack Finland (US gives them $30 million for "nonmilitary" supplies), but Finland got owned.
    • Hitler took Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, Belgium, then FRANCE!
    • Britain was all that was left (Winston Churchill) - what if Hitler got the British navy??
    • FDR put $37 billion into creating a two-ocean navy (to protect from Japan too), and airfleets.
    • Peacetime draft - 1.2 million troops and 800,000 reserves in training each year
    • Orphaned European colonies in Latin America - would Germany take control of them? -> Havana Conference 1940: US and those colonies must uphold Monroe Doctrine!

    Bolstering Britain with the Destroyer Deal (1940):

    • German air attacks on Britain - they needed help!
    • Interventionists (Defend America by Aiding the Allies) "all methods short of war" (majority of Americans) vs. Isolationists (America First) - America should concentrate on defending themselves (supported by aviator Charles Lindbergh)
    • FDR decided to give Britain 50 destroyers left over from WWI, in exchange for 8 defensive bases. (Didn't ask Congress).

    FDR Shatters the Two-Term Tradition (1940):

    • Republicans ran Wendell L. Willkie - novice in politics, dynamic personality, liberal. Platform against FDR's "dictatorship" and the New Deal (only opposed to inefficiencies and extravagances, not necessarily the idea of it). Made Bryan-like speeches.
    • FDR decided to go for 3rd term, mainly b/c of war - finish what he's started, switching mid-conflict would be difficult.
    • Both promised to stay out of war and strengthen national defenses (similar foreign policy)
    • FDR won, but it was closer than before (449 to 82)

    Congress Passes the Landmark Lend-Lease Law:

    • FDR Lend-Lease Bill: lend American arms to democracies, and have them (or equivalents) returned once the war ended - "to further promote the defense of the US," "send guns not sons"
    • Won in Congress with great majorities. $50 billion worth of arms was sent by 1945.
    • This was an economic declaration of war, and abandonment of neutrality
    • Germany recognized this as unofficial declaration of war - May 1941 sunk Robin Moor - US merchant ship

    Hitler's Assault on the Soviet Union Spawns the Atlantic Charter:

    • Hitler wanted to crush Stalin (get oil from USSR, etc.)
    • June 1941 attacked USSR. Wanting to keep Soviets and Nazis throat to throat as long as possible, US gave USSR billions in lend-lease.
    • Aug. 1941 - Atlantic Conference - Winston Churchill and FDR met on a warship in Newfoundland.
    • =>Eight-Poin Atlantic Charter (like Wilson's 14 Points): self-determination, people's right to choose their government, goals for disarmament and peace -> "general system of general security" (new League of Nations). Recognized by US, Britain, and later Soviet Union

    US Destroyers and Hitler's U-boats Clash:

    • FDR decided to have US warships escort British with lend-lease shipments (who'd get suck by German boats) as far as Iceland.
    • Greer taunted U-boat, was attacked. FDR proclaimed shoot-on-sight policy. Kearny battle. Reuben James sunk.
    • 1941 retracted Neutrality Act of 1939 - merchant ships could now be armed, could enter combat zones w/ munitions for Britain.

    Surprise Assault on Pearl Harbor:

    • Nazi-ally Japan depended on American steel, oil, gasoline, 1940 embargo on Japan-bound supplies.
    • 1941 negotiations. US: if you clear out of China, we'll renew limited trade relations. Japan: Hell no, we fight.
    • Dec 7, 1941 - Japanese attack Pearl Harbor, Hawaii :(
    • Dec 11, 1941 Germany and Italy declare war, US Congress unanimously accepts

    America's Transformation from Bystander to Belligerent:

    • Pear Harbor may have destroyed much of the Pacific fleet, but it blasted isolationists into silence and united Americans for war.
    • What led US to war? Supporting policies to help democracy and defeat dictatorship: British escorts=>German attacks. Japan embargoes=>retaliation.

    Alphabet Soup - New Deal Legislation

    RELIEF - solves immediate problems (helping the unemployed)
    • Emergency Banking Relief Act of 1933 - gave President power to regulate banking transactions and foreign exchange. Bank holiday, then reopening of banks. (FDR's "fireside chats" on the radio told people it was safe to put their money back in banks)
    • FERA (Federal Emergency Relief Act): Led by Harry L. Hopkins. Granted $3 billion to the states for direct dole payments, preferably for wages on works projects.
    • WPA (Works Progress Administration): part of FERA (Harry Hopkins). "boondoggling" - making up work. Payed workers directly from government for public works. Hired people in fine arts like artists, writers, and musicians!!!
    • NYA - National Youth Administration
    • CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps): most popular New Deal agency. Hired 18-25 year old single men for conservation jobs (worked with US army and US Forest services). They had to send money back to their parents to stimulate the economy.

    RECOVERY - recovery of economy during the Depression

    • PWA (Public Works Administration) -SoInterior Harold L. Ickes. $4 billion for projects like buildings and highways. Grand Coulee Dam built.
    • RFC (Reconstruction Finance Corporation) - continued from Hoover's time. Gave money to insurance companies, banks, big business in hopes of trickle down. Ickes was also in charge of this.
    • AAA (Agricultural Adjustment Administration) - "aritificial scarcity" to create "parity prices for basic commodities. Government payed growers to reduce crop acreage money for payments raised by taxing processors of farm products. Killed in 1936 by Supreme court decision Butler vs. US. Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act of 1936 - paid farmers to plant soil-conserving crops or leave fields fallow in the name of "conservation." 2nd AAA 1938: if farmers observed acreage restrictions on cotton and wheat, they'd be elligible for parity payments.
    • NRA (National Recovery Administration) - Codes of fair practice to promote "fair competition" (maximum hours, minimum wage) and right to collective bargaining. Killed by 1935 Schechter case (Supreme Court ruled it unconstitutional for federal government to regulate local businesses not involved in interstate commerce. => Wagner Act 1935: created National Labor Relations Board to reassert labor's right to organize and bargain collectively.
    • FHA (Federal Housing Administration) - lent money to states or communities to improve dwelling or make new ones. Shrank slums.

    REFORM - prevent future economic crises

    • FDIC (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation) (Glass-Steagall Act) - insured individual deposits up to $5000 to end bank failures.
    • Social Security Act - retired workers (65+) received regular monthly payments financed by payroll tax on employers and employees (you had to be employed to get coverage), unemployment compensation plan, aid to handicapped.
    • TVA (Tennessee Valley Authority) - Senator George W. Norris 1933 - agency to develop Tennessee River for reforming power monopoly and giving people jobs. Most revolutionary New Deal agency.
    • SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission) - Monitored stock market to prevent fraud and inside trading.

    Know for DBQ

    • Hoover's Policies to Great Depression vs. FDR's New Deal
    • How radical was the New Deal? TAKE AN OPINION!! Too liberal? Too conservative? Positives? Negatives? You should be able to answer something in each of these four categories. Also, be able to back up your opinion with facts. AND renounce it slightly to make it more believable. ex. The New Deal was extremely radical and involved excessive government control over the economy, but during the uncertain times of the Depression, the extreme amount of welfare was necessary.
    • The Collapse of Rugged Individualism - did the New Deal make people too dependent on the government? A bad case of the "gimmies"?
    • Was the New Deal halting businesses from succeeding...and in turn from people getting jobs?
    • The Depression social!!! What happened to the people? Conditions of living? Migrations (Dust Bowl victims)?
    • Demagogues - who were they? what did they believe in? how did they gain followers? how were they stopped?
    • The New Deal did not end the Depression. So what did it do?

    Chapter 34: The Great Depression and the New Deal 1933-1939

    FDR: Politician in a Wheelchair:

    • FDR: patience, tolerance, compassion, will power, could turn on charm like a faucet.
    • Eleanor Roosevelt: Most active first lady. Controversial, battled for the impoverished and oppressed.
    • FDR nominated at Democratic convention 1932 => repeal prohibition, blamed depression on Hoover, budget balance, economic and social reforms.

    Presidential Hopefuls of 1932:

    • FDR on the offensive. Preached "New Deal" for the "forgotten man" - speeches and New Deal legislation written by "Brain Trust" - intellectualist kitchen cabinet.
    • Hoover tried to campaign with "the worst is over" and they new ways of FDR would further depression, reaffirmed faith n free enterprise

    Hoover's Humiliation in 1932:

    • FDR won 472 to 59 (electoral)
    • Blacks (suffering from the depression) switched to the Democratic party
    • Last months in office, Hoover tried to get FDR to start working out stuff, but he refused. During this deadlock, depression worsened.

    FDR and the Three R's: Relief, Recovery, Reform:

    • Powerful inaugural address - wage war on the depression, "the only thing we have to fear is fear itself"
    • Democratic Congress met "Hundred Days" March-June 1933.
    • Congress was giving FDR blank-check powers - he alone could sign off on certain measures given to legislative branch - Congress was his bitch.
    • New Deal renewed old Progressive ideas: unemployment insurance, minimum wage, conservation, restrictions on child labor.

    Roosevelt Tackle Money and Banking:

    • Emergency Banking Relief Act of 1933 - gave President power to regulate banking transactions and foreign exchange and REOPEN BANKS!
    • FDR's "fireside chats" over the radio told people that it was now safer to put their money in a reopened bank than keep it under their mattresses.
    • Hundred Days Congress => Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Act: formed Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation - insured individual deposits up to $5000 to end bank failures.
    • Ordered all private gold-owner to give gold to Treasury in exchange for paper currency, took country off gold standard -> "managed currency"
    • Goal was inflation. Treasury purchased gold at increasing prices. Gold went from $21 to $35 an ounce in 1934 (it stayed at this rate for quite a while). It did increase the amount of dollars in circulation, got criticism though.
    • February 1934 - FDR had to return to limited gold standard for internation trade only. $35/ounce fixed rate. Gold still prohibited domestically.

    Creating Jobs for the Jobless:

    • 1/4 of workers unemployed when FDR took office - highest level of unemployment in US history - before and after.
    • Hundred Day Congress => creation of Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC): employment for 3 million uniformed men on government camps (reforestation, fire fighting, swamp drainage). Recruits required to send money home to their parents to stimulate the economy.
    • Federal Emergency Relief Act: FERAdministration (Harry L. Hopkins): granted $3 billion to the states for direct dole payments, pref. for wages on works projects.
    • Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA): millions $$ to help farmers meet their mortgages.
    • Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC): refinanced mortgages on nonfarm homes - helped about a million households.
    • Civil Works Administration (CWA): branch of FERA (Hopkins), designed temporary jobs - leafraking and make-work tasks. Criticized!

    A Day for Every Demagogue:

    • Father Charles Coughlin - Catholic priest who broadcasted anti-New Deal crap: anti-Semitic, fascistic.
    • Senator Huey ("Kingfish") Long - Louisiana - "share our wealth" program, every family was to receive $5000 from the prosperous. Assassinated 1935 cause he was radical and crazay.
    • Dr. Francis E. Townsend - senior citizen plan for everyone 60+ to receive $200/month.
    • Works Progress Administration (WPA) 1935: (Hopkins) - $11 billion on buildings, bridges, and road to create jobs (9 million!). Gave part-time jobs to artists and writers.

    A Helping Hand for Industry and Labor:

    • Hundred Day congress => National Recovery Administration (NRA). Designed to assist industry, labor, and the unemployed. "Fair competition" - reduced hours of labor (so work could be spread over more people), max hours, minimum wage, right of workers to bargain and organize collectively, antiumion laws forbidden, child labor restrictions. Symbol was a blue eagle. Businesses started hating "that damn Roosevelt buzzard" (Henry Ford).
    • 1935 Schechter decision - Congress could not delegate their powers to President AND Congressional control of interstate commerce couldn't apply to local business. Killed NRA.
    • Public Works Administration (PWA) - (SOInterior Harold L. Ickes) - $4 billion for project like buildings and highways. Grand Coulee Dam built - Columbia River.
    • Hundred Days Congress => legalized light wine and beer (alc. content 3.2% w/ $5 tax on every barrel. Stimulated liquor industry -> 21st amendment repealed prohibition.

    Paying Farmers Not to Farm:

    • Farm overproduction! => AAA: "artificial scarcity" could establish "parity prices" (1909-1914 prices) for basic commodities. Payed growers to reduce crop acreage, money for payments raised by taxing processors of farm products. Wasted food, gopt criticism. 1936, Supreme Court killed it (declared regulatory taxation unconstitutional)
    • Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act of 1936: paid farmers to plant soil-conserving crops or nothing at all in the name of "conservaation"
    • 2nd AAA - 193: if farmers observed acreage restrictions on cotton and wheat, they'd be eligible for parity payments.

    Dust Bowls and Black Blizzards:

    • Mississippi Great Plains: drough + wind = dust stroms. Okies and Arkies migrated to California, where there was crazy competition for jobs. Finally got jobs in WWII industries.
    • Frazier-Lemke Farm Bankruptcy Act 1934: suspended mortgage foreclosures for 5 years, changed to 3 years in 1935.
    • Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 ("Indian New Deal"): encouraged tribes to establish local self-governments and preserve native crafts and traditions.

    Battling Bankers and Big Business:

    • Hundred Days Congress=> Federal Securities Act = "Truth in securities" - required promoters to transmit info on stocks and bonds to investors.
    • 1934 Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC): monitored stock market to prevent fraud and inside trading.
    • 1935 Public Utility Holding Company Act: "death sentence" to bloated growth of business, except when economically needful

    The TVA Harnesses the Tennessee River:

    • Government thought electric-power industry was monopolistic.
    • Hundred Days Congress=> Tennessee VValley Authority (TVA) 1933 - (Sen. George W. Norris) - agency to develop Tenn. River for reforming power monopoly and giving people jobs. Most revolutionary thing of the New Deal!
    • Wanted to discover how much production and distribution of electricity cost, to test fairness of private company rates
    • Outcries - "creeping socialism!"
    • TVA project => employment, cheap power, low-cost housing, restored soil, reforestation; made the poverty-cursed area a flourishing region! Precedent for future federally built dams.

    Housing Reform and Social Security:

    • 1934 Federal Housing Administration (FHA) - established USHA to lend $$ to states or communities to improve dwellings or make new ones. Got opposition. Shrank slums.
    • Social Security Act of 1935: federal-state unemployment insurance. Retired workers receive regular monthly payments, financed by payroll tax on employers and employees - you had to be employed to get coverage.

    A New Deal for Unskilled Labor:

    • After the NRA blue eagle was chopped into poultry by the sick chicken case, the Wagner Act of 1935 (National Labor Relation s): created NLRBoard for admin purposes and reasserted labor's right to organize and bargain collectively.
    • John L. Lewis formed Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO). Not cool enough for AFL, so moved to auto industry w/ sit-down strikes -> recognized by GM as sole bargaining agency for employees.
    • 1935 - Fair Labor Standards Act (Wages&Hour Bill): industries involved in interstate commerce set up minimum wage and maximum hours. 40 cents/hour. 40 hrs/week. Child labor 16 and under prohibited.
    • CIO legitly broke away from AFL, became "Congress" instead of Committee, labor union feuding CIO vs. AFL.

    Landon Challenges "the Champ" in 1936:

    • FDR - Democrats- New Deal
    • Republicans - Alfred M. Landon - moderate who accepted some New Deal reforms (but not SS). Republicans (backed by Hoover) condemned New Deal, wanted to fight "socialistic schemes"
    • FDR won 523 to 8 (Vermont and Maine). Democrats had 2/3 of Congress. FDR got vote from BLACKS, poor (why would they bite the hand that feeds them?), South, immigrants, "the forgotten man"

    FDR's Court-Packing Scheme:

    • 6/9 Supreme Court justices were over 70, ultraconservative, hindering FDR's New Deal. 1937, FDR asked Congress to add a new judge in the Supreme Court for every justice over 70, with a maximum of 15 judges.
    • Congress, even the Democrats hated this!! They were like "hell no, Roosevelt"
    • Former Conservative justice Owen J. Roberts started voting liberal => Supreme Court start allowing New Deal legislation
    • Congress voted full pay for justices 70+ to retire
    • Congress passed Court Reform Bill only to lower courts
    • Death and resignations => FDR got to appoint 9 justices

    The Twilight of the New Deal:

    • 1937 - sharp turn downward in economy - "Roosevelt's Recession." SS biting into payrolls, admin cut back on spending for "balanced budget"
    • FDR started to embrace British economist John Maynard Keynes' idea of deficit spending.
    • More conservative Congress => Reorganization Act: gave FDR limited power for administrative reform
    • Hatch Act of 1939 - barred federal administration from active political campaigning and soliciting -> loopholes so ineffective.

    New Deal or Raw Deal, FDR's Balance Sheet, Varying Viewpoints:

    • PLEASE REREAD ALL OF THESE. THEY INCLUDE VITALLY IMPORTANT INFORMATION FOR ANALYSIS (NECESSARY FOR DBQ).

    A Smorgasbord of Lecture Notes

    WWI:
    • Conscription=draft! Socialists were against it, *gaspp* the 13th amendment!!
    • Bonds were the main way they raised money for war effort. They borrowed money through "Liberty loans". Income taxes were raised also, to where the average Joe (Buckles) got taxed too. Railroad tickets, telegram messages, etc. taxed.
    • War Industries Board - wealthy Bernard Baruch
    • Food Administration - Herbert Hoover - "wheatless Wednesdays," "victory gardens"
    • Committee on Public Information - George Creel "4-minute men" made speeches. Propaganda posters.
    • Schenck vs. United States 1919 - Charles Schenck (Secretary of American Socialist party) - mailed anti-draft literature (supported in his mind by the 13th amendment). Arrested for obstructing war efforts. Oliver Wendell Holmes ruled during peacetime it would be unconstitutional to restrict the 1st amendment in such a way, but because our nation is in "clear and present danger," it's perfectly ok to arrest Schenck for causing trouble.

    Red Scare:
    • Bolshevik Revolution, post-war paranoia and nativism led to fear of Communist take-over and spies.
    • Sacco and Vanzetti - atheist anarchist Italians -unfair trial and electric chair'd
    • Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer - Palmer Raids: investigated communists & other suspicious characters (Espionage Act hadn't been repealed and Wilson was incapacitated with his stroke and all, so Palmer ran free!) He had local law enforcement arrest anybody red, anarchist, etc. Palmer, along with some others, received mail bombs.
    • Quota system is a consequence of the Red Scare (remember BOTH the immigration restrictions)
    • KKK - reread paragraph in textbook

    Why didn't the US sign the Versailles Treaty?

    • Reread pages 718-725
    • Republican majority in Congressional elections of 1918 made Wilson not exactly able to speak for his country, like the other leaders could
    • Wilson went to Paris for the peace settlements himself, and didn't take any Republicans with him!! Henry Cabot Lodge would have been the logical choice, but they hated each other.
    • Irreconcilables are NOT necessarily Lodge reservationists. Some of them were Democrats and pacifists. They were ISOLATIONISTS!!!! They're likeeee "reservations or not, we ain't signing this League of Nations thang." Senators William Borah and the other one.
    • BIGGEST LODGE RESERVATION: He thought LoN could lead US into war without Congress declaring it! This would be catastrophicccccccccc!
    • Pobre Woodrow Wilson had a stroke and was unable to do stuff. His all-or-nothing attitude also led to the failure to agree on LoN bill. In the "Solemn Referendum", America voted for tuna-faced Harding, so that decided it.

    Roaring 20s:

    • 1st decade where majority of people live in suburban areas
    • Warren G. Harding - Teapot Dome Scandal, Washington Naval Disarmament
    • Calvin Coolidge - Kellogg-Briand
    • Herbert Hoover - the depression begins, Hoover-Stimson Doctrine
    • TARIFF WENT FROM HIGH TO HIGHER!
    • Know the Dawes Plan
    • Margaret Sanger - mother of birth control (and Planned Parenthood to kill the poor babies!)
    • African Americans - great migration north. 1920s Harlem Renaissance - birth of pride in African-American culture. Langston Hughes -poet. Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong - jazz. Marcus Garvey - quite a character...."back to Africa," etc.
    • Radio -preachers - Billy Sunday
    • Prohibition was epic fail. No enforcement...they were all bribed. And people liked to drank.
    • Henry Ford - first big industrialist w/ assembly line, treated workers well
    • Frederick Taylor - scientific management
    • John Dewey - education for life
    • Hoover - RFC (Reconstruction Finance Corporation) - helped banks and companies (bailout) in hopes prosperity would trickle down
    • Calvin Coolidge would not put up with Boston police strike