13. The Cold War and Civil Rights Years Years of Tension.

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13. The Cold War and Civil Rights Years

Years of Tension

Roots of the Cold WarO Ideological Differences. The

Soviet Union was communist; the U.S. was a democracy based on the free enterprise system.

O Soviet Occupation of Eastern Europe. The Soviet army occupied Eastern Europe at the end of WWII and set up local communist governments.

Iron CurtainO The Soviets cut-off Eastern Europe

from Western Europe.O Division of Germany into West and

East.O Berlin Airlift.

O Soviets blockaded BerlinO U.S. sent in supplies by airO Soviets end blockade

Attempts at containment in the Cold War

O Truman doctrine. 1947: Doctrine promised help to any nation resisting Communism.

O Marshall Plan, 1948: U.S. gave economic aid to reduce the appeal of communism.

O Creation of NATO: Alliance of U.S., Canada, and Western Europe. (Collective defense)

O Warsaw Pact. Pact of Soviet satellites created to counter the Threat of NATO.

Korean war (1950-1953)

O Cause. Communist North Korea invaded South Korea to reunify the country.

O Highlights. O U.S. enters war under U.N. resolution to defend

South Korea.O MacArthur’s landing at Inchon in North Korea turned

tide; fearing invasion, China entered the war.O War ended in a stalemate, as borders remained the

same as before the war.O Truman-MacArthur Controversy. Truman

dismissed General MacArthur for wanting to use atomic weapons against Communist China and for openly criticizing the President

Arms and Space RaceO Massive Retaliation. U.S. tries to

rely mainly on nuclear weapons for defense.

O Deterrent. Destructiveness of nuclear arms to act as deterrent to attack.

O Sputnik (1957). Soviet launch of Sputnik sets off a “space race”

Cold War and American Security

O House Un-American Activities Commission.

O Julius and Ethel Rosenberg Trials.

O Verona Papers. Confirmed the existence of some spies in American government.

O McCarthy Hearings: “ McCarthyism”

Truman and Eisenhower Administrations (1945-1960)

O Truman Presidency. Executive Order to desegregate armed forces and end unfair hiring practices for federal jobs (1948)

O Domestic Policy Developments.O Housing boom. G.I. Bill provided loans to

help veterans buy new homes and attend college

O Period of economic prosperityO Move to suburbs by many Americans

O Foreign Policy Developments.O Eisenhower Doctrine. Extended U.S.

containment policy to the Middle East.

Civil Rights MovementO Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)

O Allowed “separate but equal” facilities.

O Brown v. board of Education (1954)O Ended segregation in public schoolsO Separate facilities: “inherently

unequal”

Highlights of the Civil Rights Movement

O Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955)O Integration in Little Rock H.S.

(1957)O Civil Rights Act (1964)O Sit-ins and Freedom Rides

(1960s)O Voting Rights Act (1965)O Affirmative Action (1965)

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.O Major beliefs of Dr. King.

O Believe in non-violent, civil disobedience.O Modeled his actions after those of Thoreau and

GandhiO Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955). Ended

segregated buses in Montgomery. Raised Rosa Parks to national prominence.

O Letter from a “Birmingham Jail.”King explained why African Americans could no longer wait for equality.

O March on Washington (1963)O Delivered his “I Have a Dream” SpeechO Eventually led to passage of the Civil Rights Act

of 1964

Other Important IndividualsO George Marshall. Army chief of Staff (FDR);

Secretary of State (Truman); creator of the Marshall Plan.

O Douglas MacArthur. Led US forces in Pacific and Korea; Fired by Truman after public disagreement

O Joseph MacArthur. Held hearings on Communists he said infiltrated U.S. government.

O Thurgood Marshall. NAACP attorney; was first African American on Supreme Court.

O Rosa Parks. Montgomery bus boycott.O Southern Governors resisting integration: George

Wallace, Orval Faubus, and Lester Maddox.