The Swinging Sixties 1960 1968 AP U S
- Slides: 31
The Swinging Sixties (1960 -1968) AP U. S. History
Election of 1960 } John F. Kennedy (D) § Catholic § Lyndon Johnson as VP Richard Nixon (R) } First nationally televised debate }
John F. Kennedy (D) (1961 -1963) } New Frontier § Expansion of social welfare § Clean Air Act (1963) § Peace Corps } } “Ask not what your country can do for you-ask what you can do for your country. ” 23 rd Amendment (1961) § Electoral votes for D. C. } Social and Cultural Developments § Civil Rights Movement Freedom Rides Stand in the Schoolhouse Door (June 1963) March on Washington (Aug 28, 1963) § Feminism The Feminine Mystique (1963) § } Silent Spring by Rachel Carson (1962) Foreign Developments § § § Bay of Pigs Invasion (1961) Berlin Wall Cuban Missile Crisis (1962)
John F. Kennedy (D) (1961 -1963) Flexible Response } Secretary of Defense Robert Mc. Namara § Develop conventional military strategies and policies § Nuclear weapon escalation as last phase } Alliance for Progress (1961) § Economic cooperation with Latin America Peace Corps (1961) } American University Speech (1963) } § Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (1963) } Vietnam (1963) § Military advisors for South Vietnam and Ngo Dinh Diem
Kennedy & Flexible Response (1961 -1963) Berlin Wall Berlin Crisis (1961) } Berlin Wall (1961) } § Checkpoint Charlie } “Ich Bin Ein Berliner” (1963) Premier Nikita Khrushchev and JFK (1961)
Kennedy & Flexible Response (1961 -1963) Cuba Bay of Pigs Invasion (1961) Cuban Missile Crisis (1962) Soviet missiles in Cuba
Kennedy’s Assassination } } } Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963 Warren Commission § Investigations and hearings ruled Lee Harvey Oswald as lone assassin § Conspiracy theories led to doubt of federal government Lyndon B. Johnson assumes office JFK moments before his assassination in Dallas Lee Harvey Oswald shot by Jack Ruby LBJ takes oath of office on Air Force One
Lyndon B. Johnson (D) (1963 -1969) } } } Great Society War on Poverty 24 th Amendment (1964) § Poll taxes unconstitutional } 25 th Amendment (1967) § Presidential succession } Social and Cultural Developments § Civil Rights Movement Civil Rights Act of 1964 March to Selma (March 1965) Voting Rights Act of 1965 § Counterculture Movement Free Speech Movement (1964) Woodstock Music Festival (1969) § Feminism National Organization for Women (NOW) (1966) } Foreign Developments § Vietnam § Gulf of Tonkin Incident
Election of 1964 } Democrats § Lyndon B. Johnson § Daisy Ad } Republicans § Barry Goldwater § Criticized welfare state policies
Lyndon B. Johnson (D) (1963 -1969) The Great Society } War on Poverty § Economic Opportunity Act/Office of Economic Opportunity Job Corps } § § Food Stamp Act (1964) § Civil Rights Legislation § Civil Rights Act of 1964 } Housing § } religion, sex, national origin in public accommodations Voting Rights Act of 1965 Prohibits racial discrimination in voting Prohibits literacy tests § } Immigration § driving awareness } } Elementary and Secondary Education Act (1965) Head Start (1965) § Preschool education for low-income children § § Higher Education Act (1965) Bilingual Education Act (1968) § } Wilderness Act Endangered Species Act Cultural Promotion § § Immigration Act of 1965 Education § Environmental Protection § § Abolished the national origins and quota system } National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act Safety belts, redesigns for protection, drunk Civil Rights Act of 1964 Prohibits discrimination in housing opportunities Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Department of Transportation § Prohibits discrimination based on race, color, § Medicaid Health services for low-income families Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) } Medicare Health services for elderly § Vocational training for young people Community Action Program Health Care National Historic Preservation National Endowment for the Arts AND the Humanities Public broadcasting (PBS) and public radio (NPR) Consumer Protection § § Fair Packaging and Labeling Act Wholesome Meat Act Child Safety Act Truth-in-Lending Act
The Warren Court (1953 -1969) } Equality § Brown v. Board of Education (1954) § Baker v. Carr (1962) } Criminal Justice § § } First Amendment § § } Mapp v. Ohio (1961) Gideon v. Wainwright (1963) Escobedo v. Illinois (1964) Miranda v. Arizona (1966) Engel v. Vitale (1962) Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969) Tinker v. Des Moines (1969) New York Times v. Sullivan (1964) Privacy § Griswold v. Connecticut (1965)
Lyndon B. Johnson (D) (1963 -1969) Vietnam Gulf of Tonkin (August 1964) § Incident - North Vietnamese fired upon U. S. warships § Resolution - Congress authorized combat troops through Johnson’s urging } Escalation § Operation Rolling Thunder § Troops increases from 1964 to 1969 540, 000 at most during Vietnam Conflict } Tet Offensive (January 1968) § Vietcong launch surprise attack § U. S. military victory but political and popular victory for Minh and North Vietnamese }
Johnson & Vietnam (1963 -1969) War and Tragedy
Space Race } National Aeronautic and Space Administration (NASA) (1958) § Response to Sputnik and Yuri Gagarin § Mercury Program Alan Shepard § First American in space (1961) John Glenn § First American to orbit Earth (1962) } Kennedy’s Race to the Moon § Apollo Program § Apollo 11 (1969) “One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind” - Neil Armstrong
Civil Rights Movement Background } Postwar Reconstruction } § 13 th Amendment § § § end slavery § 15 th Amendment black suffrage § § Freedmen’s Bureau Ku Klux Klan and White League Disenfranchisement Plessy v. Ferguson Separate, but equal Jim Crow Laws in the South } Progressive Era Gains § Booker T. Washington and W. E. B. Du. Bois § NAACP and National Urban League § Great Migration 1920 s Setbacks and Hope } Race riots after WWI Lynchings KKK returns Marcus Garvey Harlem Renaissance 1930 s Developments § New Deal Coalition § New Deal provided some relief programs § Limited civil rights legislation
Civil Rights Movement Beginning of Progress (1940 s) } March on Washington Movement Proposal § A. Philip Randolph and Bayard Rustin § Executive Order 8802 } Smith v. Allwright (1944) § Prohibit all white primaries Jackie Robinson and Baseball (1947) } Executive Order 9981 (1948) } § Desegregation of government and military
Civil Rights Movement Desegregation } Brown v. Board of Education (1954) § Desegregation of schools § Overrules “separate but equal” § “all deliberate speed” } White Southern Reaction § Southern Manifesto (1956) § Little Rock Nine (1957) Eisenhower orders National Guard to escort black students to Arkansas high school § Stand at Schoolhouse Door (1963) University of Alabama Governor George Wallace § “Segregation Now…”
Civil Rights Movement Rosa Parks and Montgomery Bus Boycott } Rosa Parks (Dec. 1, 1955) § Segregation on Montgomery, AL buses § Refused to give up her seat and arrested } Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955 -1956) § Supreme Court ruled bus segregation unconstitutional
Civil Rights Movement Martin Luther King Jr. } Passive Resistance § Bayard Rustin § "Since being in India, I am more convinced than ever before that the method of nonviolent resistance is the most potent weapon available to oppressed people in their struggle for justice and human dignity. ” } Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) § Network of churches to organize nonviolent civil rights demonstrations
Civil Rights Movement Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) Sit-Ins } Freedom Rides } } “By 1965, SNCC fielded the largest staff of any civil rights organization in the South. It had organized nonviolent direct action against segregated facilities, as well as voter-registration projects, in Alabama, Arkansas, Maryland, Missouri, Louisiana, Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Illinois, North and South Carolina, Georgia, and Mississippi; built two independent political parties and organized labor unions and agricultural cooperatives; and given the movement for women's liberation new energy. It inspired and trained the activists who began the "New Left. " It helped expand the limits of political debate within Black America, and broadened the focus of the civil rights movement. Unlike mainstream civil rights groups, which merely sought integration of Blacks into the existing order, SNCC sought structural changes in American society itself”. - Julian Bond
Civil Rights Movement Birmingham and Washington } Birmingham Campaign (1963) § Letter from Birmingham Jail } “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly… Anyone who lives inside the United States can never be considered an outsider anywhere within its bounds. ” March on Washington (8/27/63) § I Have a Dream } Civil Rights Act of 1964
Civil Rights Movement Selma March (1965) From Selma to Montgomery (Alabama) } Blood Sunday (March 7) } Voting Rights Act of 1965 }
Civil Rights Movement Malcolm X and Nation of Islam } Malcolm X § Promoted black separatism, black nationalism, black supremacy § “We don’t teach you to turn the other cheek. We teach you to obey the law… But at the same time, we teach you that anyone who puts his hands on you, you do your best to see that he doesn’t put it on anybody else. ” } Nation of Islam § Elijah Muhammad § Black separatism and black pride
Civil Rights Movement Black Power } Stokely Carmichael § SNCC } Black Panthers § Huey Newton and Bobby Seale § “Kill Whitey!” § “Burn, baby, burn!”
Civil Rights Movement Urban Riots } Los Angeles (1965) § Watts neighborhood § 34 deaths, over 1000 injured } Detroit (1967) § National guard and federal troops and tanks sent § 43 deaths, over 1000 injured } Kerner Commission § Frustration among impoverished urban blacks due to white racism § Attempt to improve inter-racial communications
Swinging Sixties New Left } Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) (1962) § Condemned corporatism, racism, poverty, Vietnam War (“The Establishment”) } Berkeley Free Speech Movement (1964 -1965)
Counterculture Movement } Hippies/Flower Children § § § } Non-violent anarchism Rejection of materialism Concern for the environment Youth International Party (Yippies) § Abbie Hoffman § Radical hippies known for theatrical protests and tactics } Sexual Revolution (1960 s-1980 s) § § § Kinsey studies, novels, magazines Contraception and premarital sex Abortion and Roe v. Wade (1973)
Music as Expression } Themes § § } Artists § § § } Anti-Establishment Anti-war Promotion of counterculture War - Edwin Starr Bob Dylan Jim Morrison Rolling Stones The Beatles Joan Baez Jimi Hendrix Woodstock (1969) § 500, 000 attend 3 -day rock concert
Vietnam Protests Self-immolation was an extreme form of protest. Here, Buddhist monk, Thich Quang Duc, before the U. S. escalation. A few Americans engaged in this extreme act of protest during Vietnam.
1968 The Year of Rage } } } } Tet Offensive (Jan. 30) My Lai Massacre (Mar. 16) LBJ Withdraws (Mar. 31) MLK Assassination (Apr. 4) Columbia University Protests (Apr. 23 -30) Robert Kennedy Assassination (June 5) Democratic National Convention Riots (Aug. 22 -30) Nixon wins election (Nov. 5)
Election of 1968 } Richard Nixon (R) § Law and Order § Southern Strategy } Hubert Humphrey (D) § National Convention Riots in Chicago } George Wallace § American Independent Party
- The turbulent sixties
- The sixties a decade of protest and change
- Chapter 15 the sixties vocabulary
- The sixties a decade of protest and change
- Types of rotors
- We wish you a swingin holiday
- Total mechanical energy of a swinging bungee jumper
- Warp knitting examples
- 8 locomotor movements
- Swinging monkeys
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- He is the author of icnofalangometrica
- Software crisis 1968
- 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976
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- We want you
- Spaulding 1968
- Kohlberg 1968
- Spss 1968
- Der große knall bitterfeld 1968
- Matanza de tlatelolco introduccion
- Orne and holland 1968
- Equivalence examples in translation
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- Edwin locke goal setting theory 1968
- Otto kade 1968
- 1968 programı
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