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American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the...

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American History Chapter 16 Section 3
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Page 1: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

American History Chapter 16 Section 3

Page 2: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

Poverty

Poverty Line • Many Americans prospered

during the 1950s. • However, more than 30

million Americans lived below the poverty line, the lowest income needed to support a family.

Who’s Living in Poverty?• People living below the

poverty line in the 1950s included single mother, elderly, minority immigrants, black and white rural Americans, inner city residents, and Native Americans.

Page 3: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

The Other America

• In 1962, Michael Harrington published The Other America, a book about the rundown and hidden communities of the country.

Page 4: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

Movin to the Suburbs

• In the cities, middle class families left and moved to the suburbs.

• American cities began to deteriorate because middle class families took tax dollars away from the urban (city) areas.

Page 5: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

African Americans Living in Poverty

• Many were African Americans living below the poverty, some of the approximately 3 million who had moved north after 1940.

• They came to find work and better lives but found racial discrimination, few jobs, and low pay.

Page 6: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

Inner City

• The cities failed to offer adequate housing, schools, or medical care.

• Government urban renewal programs built new public housing but often increased crime and poverty and destroyed more homes than they built.

Page 7: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

Braceros

• Hispanics in the United States also faced poverty.

• Nearly 5 million Mexicans came to work on farms and ranches during the 1950s and 1960s.

• Called braceros, these people worked long hours for low pay.

Page 8: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

Native Americans

• Native Americans were the poorest group in the nation.

• The government’s termination policy forced many to move off of reservations and into cities and made them subject to the same laws and conditions as other Americans.

Page 9: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

Appalachia

• Many white families in Appalachia also faced difficulties, the backbone of the Appalachian economy before the 1950s was coal mining.

• However, work, doctors, and nutritious foods were all scarce there.

Page 10: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

Delinquency

• Another problem facing the nation was juvenile delinquency, or the antisocial and criminal behavior of young people.

• Juvenile crime rose by 45 percent between 1948 and 1953.

• A 1954 book titled 1,000,000 Delinquents claimed that by 1955 one million young people would get into trouble. T

• he book was correct. Americans searched for the causes.

Page 11: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

Causes of Delinquency

• Experts blamed juvenile delinquency on several causes.

• They blamed it on a lack of religion and discipline.

• Others claimed that television, movies, and comic books were the causes.

• A number of experts pointed the finger at the rising divorce rate and fears of the military draft.

Page 12: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

Boring Children

• Some critics said that young people were just acting out against tradition.

• Bishop Fulton J. Sheen stated that Americans were raising bored children.

• He claimed children were looking for new ways to have fun. Many tried to link delinquency with poverty.

Page 13: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

Who to Blame

• However, delinquency involved children from all classes and races in American society.

• Most teens were not involved in crime or drugs, but the public came to think of all young people as juvenile delinquents.

• Many parents thought that improving the nation’s schools was the solution to delinquency.

Page 14: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

1950s Schools

• In the 1950s, the baby boomers began entering the school system.

• The number of school children increased by 13 million.

• School districts struggled to pay for new schools and new teachers.

Page 15: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

Sputnik

• Americans became even more concerned and worried about education after 1957.

• In that year, the Soviet Union launched the world’s first satellites.

• Americans were afraid of falling behind their Cold War enemy.

Page 16: American History Chapter 16 Section 3. Poverty Poverty Line Many Americans prospered during the 1950s. However, more than 30 million Americans lived below.

Improving Math & Science

• They believed that schools lacked technical education.

• Improvements to the educational system included new efforts to improve math and science education.


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