1 / 35

1960s

1960s. JFK, Drugs, Rock, Space, & Vietnam. John “Jack” Fitzgerald Kennedy. Before politics: Family wealth: father made over $100 million in stock market during Depression WWII: served as a commander of a PT boat in S. Pacific 1943: boat rammed by Japanese boat and sunk

dessa
Download Presentation

1960s

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

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 1960s JFK, Drugs, Rock, Space, & Vietnam

  2. John “Jack” Fitzgerald Kennedy • Before politics: • Family wealth: father made over $100 million in stock market during Depression • WWII: served as a commander of a PT boat in S. Pacific • 1943: boat rammed by Japanese boat and sunk • Hurt back and saved crew member • Received various medals • Congressional career • 1946: elected to House • 1952: elected to Senate

  3. Election of 1960: JFK (D) v. Nixon (R)—Ike’s VP • Why JFK was popular: • Young, attractive, good speaker, WWII vet • Disliked due to Catholic—could he be trusted?

  4. Sept/Oct 1960: first TV debates ever • Nixon appears old, uncomfy, and “ugly” • JFK appeared healthy & young • Radio listeners thought Nixon won • TV viewers thought JFK won—gained momentum into election • Election results: JFK 303-219

  5. New Frontier: • Personal responsiblity • Increase gov’t spending to stop inflation & unemployment • Tried to force labor unions to let wages go down—stop inflation—angered the mafia • Blamed steel companies for causing prices to inflate • Cancelled gov’t contracts w/ steel companies • Area Redevelopment Act: aid to regions that were “backwards” (WV & KY)

  6. Flexible Response: have options besides nuclear option • Win the hearts & minds of 3rd world • Created Peace Corps—volunteers to 3rd world • Green Berets sent to 3rd world • Sent billions of $ to Africa & Latin America

  7. Bay of Pigs invasion: April 17, 1961 • JFK felt Castro taunted US over rise of Cuba • CIA trained anti-Castro refugees for invasion • 1500 rebels stopped instantly by Cuba • 1200 survivors taken prisoner • JFK changed mind over military use @ last second • Forced Cuba even closer to USSR

  8. Cuban Missile Crisis: Oct. 22, 1962 • N. Khrushchev sent missiles to Cuba (some nuclear) • U2 spy plane proved launch pads in place • JFK orders naval blockade of Cuba • Demands USSR remove missiles • Nuclear “Chicken” • Khruschev blinks • JFK promised never to invade Cuba again • MAD

  9. Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty: 1963 • Ended underwater & atmosphere testing • Created hotline btw leaders

  10. JFK’s personal life • Charisma of Kennedy family--Camelot • Married wife Jacqueline in 1953 • Jackie became epitomy of beauty & grace • Popularized many fashion trends • Caroline Kennedy & Jack Jr. (died in plane crash in 1990s) • Well-known womanizer • Marilyn Monroe

  11. JFK assassination: Nov. 22, 1963 • Dallas, TX • 12:30 PM: topless Presidential motorcade travels from airport through city—drives by Book Depository • Lee Harvey Oswald arrested • Shot by Jack Ruby 2 days later • 3 day funeral in DC followed

  12. Warren Commission: • Chief Justice Earl Warren • 10 month investigation • Oswald & Ruby acted alone • Conspiracy theories:

  13. 1960s culture • Counterculture: values that run counter to the main group • Hippie: • Find new meaning to life • Dress/appearance—vagrant style • Non-conformist • Non-violent pacifists • Supportive of civil rights

  14. Haight-Ashbury District (San Fran)—Golden Gate Park

  15. Drug Culture • Marijuana • LSD/Acid • Psychedelic/hallucinogen—alter thought processes • Tim Leary—writer, psychologist, professor • Icon of movement • “Turn on, tune in, drop out” • Free Love—sexual revolution • Love shouldn’t be “regulated” • Summer of Love (1967) • Gatherings in major cities (San Fran was epicenter) • Communal living

  16. Folk music • Simpler music—more reliance on acoustics—less “production” • Story-telling—Protest Songs • Rejects boundaries of rigid musical rules • Bob Dylan • Joan Baez • Janis Joplin

  17. British invasion: • 1964-1967 • Influx of rock and pop groups from UK • Impacted movies (Bond) and fashion (hair & clothes) • The Beatles • February 9, 1964 • CBS News • Jimi Hendrix • Performance on Dick Cavett

  18. Woodstock • August 15-18, 1969 • Dairy farm in Bethel, NY (near village of Woodstock) • 500,000 concert goers • 32 popular acts • Janis Joplin • Grateful Dead • CCR • Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young • Jimi Hendrix • Meant to be a “for-profit” event • Had to make it free due to demand of tickets • Minds were open and love was free • Criticism: • Lack of security • Traffic jams • Rampant drug use • Lack of sanitation

  19. Consequences to the Hippie Movement • Rise in drug use • Rise in civil liberties for LBGT’s • Rise in STDs • Longer hair styles & decrease in popularity of neck ties • Increased popularity in Eastern religions (Buddhism, Hinduism) • Increase in violent crimes

  20. Manson Family • Charles Manson • Life-long criminal • Song writer in Hollywood • Headed the “family”—communal group • Helter Skelter: term taken from Beatles—he defined as apocalyptic war btw blacks and whites • Beatles: confusion; loud nonsense

  21. Tate/LaBianca murders • Aug. 8-10, 1969: Helter Skelter begins • Went to LA home of actress Sharon Tate & director Roman Polanski • Bound, tortured, murdered, and mutilated 7 people • Randomly selected LaBianca household (Leno & Rosemary) • Manson & 4 family members arrested, convicted, and sentenced to death for murders • Sentence was commuted in 1970s to life in prison • Most members up for parole this or next year

  22. Motown/Soul • African American experience • Blues & gospel • Improvisational • Testifying quality • Aretha Franklin • James Brown • Ray Charles

  23. Other Cultural Phenomena • Pop Art—Andy Warhol • Books about race and gender & disillusionment—To Kill a Mockingbird, The Bell Jar, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest • Barbie & GI Joe • Cartoons: The Flintstones, The Jetsons, Alvin & the Chipmunks • Musicals became highly popular—Camelot, The Man of La Mancha • The MPAA was created—Hollywood ignored taboos on sex and vulgarity • Sports: Muhammad Ali, Super Bowl, & Jack Nicklaus

  24. 1964 election: LBJ (D) v. Barry Goldwater (R) • Johnson: carry on JFK policies • Goldwater: extremist conservative—wanted to fight Communism more aggressively • “Daisy” ad killed Goldwater campaign • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OKs-bTL-pRg • LBJ won 486-52

  25. LBJ’s policies • Great Society • “spirit of activism”: gov’t should be active to improve lives • War on Poverty • Job Corps • Head Start • Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA) • HUD • Medicare • Medicaid

  26. 1968 election • R. Nixon (R)—”law & order” • H. Humphrey (D)—continue Great Society & war on poverty • G. Wallace (Am. Ind.)—end desegregation • Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy (D) in CA (June 6, 1968) • RFK was JFK’s Attorney General • Senator after JFK’s death • Shot by SirhanSirhan • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lmc2EzkRDkI

  27. Chicago Democratic Convention • Dems in chaos—King/Kennedy shot; LBJ won’t run again • Tossup btw Humphrey & Eugene McCarthy • McCarthy’s followers were strongly antiwar • Humphrey had not run in any primary election • Antiwar voters were angered & walked out • Protests ensued • Chicago police violently put down protests • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrlYRWD_tnA • Nixon: 301 • Humphrey: 191 • Wallace: 46

  28. Important Supreme Court cases • Gideon v. Wainwright—1963 • Courts must provide lawyers if defendant cannot afford one • Pool room robbery • Miranda v. Arizona—1966 • Confession only stands up if you are notified of your right to have an attorney during interrogation • Ernesto Miranda was arrested for multiple rapes • Police “tricked” Miranda into confessing to crimes

  29. 1965: Cesar Chavez & UFW • Mexican-American farm laborer • Organized the United Farm Workers union • Protested lack of fair treatment for Hispanic laborers & low wages • Led nationwide grape boycott • Led various local strikes against farm owners • Fought against companies bringing in illegal immigrants to replace legal immigrants for less money

  30. Space Race • Apollo Mission 1961-1975 • Manned missions to moon • July 20, 1969—Neil Armstrong & Buzz Aldrin (11) • 5 other missions landed • Apollo 1—3 died in launch pad fire • Apollo 13—midair explosion crippled ship—all survived

  31. Vietnam War • Gulf of Tonkin Resolution • Aug. 1964: mistaken attack on US ship caused hostilities • Possible weather conditions caused sonar problems

  32. Operation Rolling Thunder: ‘65-’68 • Aerial bombings of North Vietnam • Plan was to destroy roads and morale of North • Many bombings used Agent Orange

  33. Tet Offensive: began Jan. 1969 • Tet: Vietnamese New Year • Surprise offensive • Attack US military & South Vietnamese civilians • Destroy morale and win war • Organized in 30 cities • Increased news coverage hurt US opinions

  34. Vietnamization (‘69-’75) • Plan to put S. Vietnam in charge of war efforts • Gradual troop withdrawals • Nixon caved into public pressure • We put more pressure on Cambodia & Laos—neighbors—bombings • Killed all public support for war • 1975: all US troops out—Ho Chi Minh took over South

  35. Effects On Vietnam On America Lack of trust & respect in gov’t Homeless vets—lack of support PTSD & drug abuse Over 50,000 dead • Countless civilians dead • Communism spread • Infrastructure of Vietnam destroyed • Increased refugees out of Vietnam—800,000 orphans • 200,000 disabled—Agent Orange

More Related