Atomic warfare • Scientists warn of potential for nuclear weapons, 1930s • Germany and others pursue a bomb • Germany secretly abandons program in 1942 to focus on explosive rockets • Manhattan Project • Bomb test, July 1945 • Harry S. Truman • Humble roots, briefly vice president before Roosevelt’s death • U.S. estimates 100s of 1,000s of U.S. casualities in Japan invasion (plus Japanese civilian casualties) • Hiroshima chosen to show destructive potential • 70,000 killed instantly, another 60,000 later Dropping the bomb • Was it right? • U.S. knows some Japanese officials are considering surrender before bombing • but not unconditional surrender • Intimidate Russia? • U.S. desire for unconditional surrender • Racism? • Bomb was developed for use against Germany • Should second bomb (Nagasaki) have been dropped? • Japanese assume Hiroshima is one-time attack • “V-J Day”: August 14, 1945 • End of war that claims 60 million lives Hot War into Cold War Yalta Conference • “Big Three” (Roosevelt, Stalin, Churchill) meet to discuss postwar world, 1945 • Tension, competition over plans for Europe • Stalin promises free elections in Eastern Europe • Instead, puppet governments • Takes territory (e.g. Poland) • United Nations agreement • 5 major powers (including U.S.) have veto power over U.N. action Truman and the beginnings of Cold War • Truman “get tough” policy on Soviet Union • Stalin suspicious • No reconstruction loans from U.S. • Growing tension, 1949: • Soviet Union tests nuclear weapon • “Loss” of China to Communists • “Containment”: U.S. support for any nonCommunist power • Military and economic aid, 1947 onwards • Marshall Plan (1947) • $12 billion for non-Communist Europe Early Cold War Tension • U.S. maintains large peacetime military • Hydrogen bomb development • U.S., Britain, France create “West Germany” Stalin closes access to West Berlin (1948) • Berlin airlift • Constant threat of nuclear war • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) • 12 non-Communist Western European nations • Warsaw Pact • Communist Eastern Europe Postwar America Avoiding a new Depression • End of war spending = return of Depression? • 15 million servicemen discharged • Economy shrinks in 1946-47 • GI Bill (1944) • $20/week for 1 year after discharge • Loan backing for home or small business • Education expenses • Many benefits denied to black veterans • Decline of ethnic prejudices between European-origin groups Truman and the election of 1948 • Harry Truman’s “Fair Deal”: revival of New Deal-type programs after war • Reformist Democrats lose ground after war • Truman backs civil rights for African-Americans • Treatment of black veterans • Wants laws against lynching, voter suppression, hiring discrimination • Southern white “Dixiecrats” break off from Democratic party • 1948 election: Truman beats the polls The Long Boom • U.S. economy strong after war • Continued government spending (military) • U.S. gross national product (GNP) grows 2.5 times 1945-60 • Broad benefits across social classes • Huge middle class, including unionized workers • Suburbanization • “white flight”: fear of declining property values • Baby boom • 2 child average in 30s … up to 3.5 in 50s • Hard to explain • Prosperity? “Security culture”? The new suburban and tech economy • Suburban construction drives economic growth • Interstate highway system (1950s-60s) – $100 billion • Hurts downtown businesses • New business in suburbs: motels, drive-ins, fast food, etc. • Tech-driven growth • Television: millions sold in 1950s • Transistors and integrated circuits (computers, IBM) • Medical technology: penicillin, vaccinations • 1950s as golden age • Though not just “simpler times”