The New Frontier: JFK and the Age of Camelot. Mr. Phipps American History

Similar documents
John F. Kennedy and the New Frontier

Republicans Richard Nixon Eisenhower s VP House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) From poor family; self-made Rode Eisenhower s coattails

American History 11R

THE ELECTION OF 1960

Election of Who is next? The Election of Do Now: Place the Presidents in the correct chronological order. First Television Debate

Chapter 28-1 /Chapter 28-2 Notes / Chapter Prepared for your enjoyment by Mr. Timothy Rhodes

American History 11R

The New Frontier and the Great Society

Flexible Response Kennedy s policy that involved preparing for a variety of military responses to

Kennedy & Johnson. Chapters 38 & 39

Notes: LG: Analyze how the 1960s changed America.

The New Frontier and the Great Society

The Sixties and Seventies. The Cold War cools down, Civil Rights get complicated, and the Baby Boomers come of age.

Politics of the Cold War

Communism. Soviet Union government State (government) controls everything Opposite of democracy and capitalism (USA)

History - The 1960's. Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

THE CAMELOT YEARS ASK NOT... THE NEW FRONTIER AND THE GREAT SOCIETY THE KENNEDY MYSTIQUE SECTION 2: THE NEW FRONTIER THE BEST AND THE BRIGHTEST

THE NEW FRONTIER KENNEDY AND JOHNSON LEAD AMERICA IN THE 1960S

The Stormy Sixties. Chapter 38

America at Midcentury. Ch 27

THE NEW FRONTIER AND THE GREAT SOCIETY

THE NEW FRONTIER AND THE GREAT SOCIETY KENNEDY AND JOHNSON LEAD AMERICA IN THE 1960S

The Confident Years The Confident Years A Decade of Affluence What s Good for General Motors Reshaping Urban America

Chapter 31 Lecture Outline

More interested in federal programs than in cutting deficit. Wants federal money to go to states for teacher salaries.

The Cold War Begins. After WWII

Harry Truman Dwight Eisenhower John F. Kennedy

THE STORMY SIXTIES,

Policymaking Process: A Primary Source Case Study

The Mobilization of Minorities

Ch 27-3 The Great Society

WWII served in Navy as a lieutenant commander won Silver Star in the S. Pacific Member of U.S. House of Representatives, United States

The 1960s ****** Two young candidates, Democrat John F. Kennedy and Republican Richard M. Nixon ran for president in 1960.

EOC Test Preparation: The Cold War Era

Know how Mao Zedong and the Communists win the Communist Civil War and took over China from Chang Kai Shek?

6.5 LBJ & THE GREAT SOCIETY. Unit 6 The Cold War and Cultural Change Section 5 LBJ and the Great Society

The Cold War

Early Cold War

The 1960s ****** Two young candidates, Senator John F. Kennedy (D) and Vice-President Richard M. Nixon (R), ran for president in 1960.

Mini Lesson Part I: Reading

5. Challenges and Change The Civil Rights Movement

The Stormy 60s. Chapter 38

* US-VA History SOL Review: Post World War II America and the Cold War

Chapter 28 New Frontier and Great Society I. Kennedy and the Cold War (Chapter 28, Section 1) a Election i. John F. Kennedy 1.

Chapter Thirty-One: The Ordeal of Liberalism

The Cold War TOWARD A GLOBAL COMMUNITY (1900 PRESENT)

THE IRON CURTAIN. From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic an iron curtain has descended across the continent. - Winston Churchill

netw rks Where in the world? When did it happen? The Vietnam Era Lesson 1 Kennedy s Foreign Policy ESSENTIAL QUESTION Terms to Know GUIDING QUESTIONS

United Nations. Marshall Plan. Israel. Mao Zedong. South Korea

APAH Reading Guide Chapter 29. Directions After reading pp , explain the significance of the following terms.

Liberalism At High Tide

SSUSH23 THE STUDENT WILL DESCRIBE AND ASSESS THE IMPACT OF POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS BETWEEN 1945 AND 1970.

1950s- 1980s Standards Overview

World History Unit 08a and 08b: Global Conflicts & Issues _Edited

The Great Society and the Warren Court. Social & Legal Reforms to Protect Americans

Unit 11 Civil Rights and Conservatism Present

The Eisenhower Years Rockin Fifties APUSH Review Guide for AMSCO chapter 27. (or other sources covering the 1950 s)

Guided Reading, The Eisenhower Years, , pp Name: Class Period:

Unit 8. 5th Grade Social Studies Cold War Study Guide. Additional study material and review games are available at at

MODULE 14 Era of Social Change

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Cold War Tensions (Chapter 30 Quiz)

Guided Reading, The Eisenhower Years, , pp

Learning Goal 17: Student will be able to explain how the Cold War started.

Unit XIII FOCUS QUESTIONS

Chapter 25 Cold War America, APUSH Mr. Muller

Section 4: How did the Cold War develop?

1) Read the article on American involvement in Vietnam

I Can Statements. Chapter 19: World War II Begins. Chapter 20: America and World War II. American History Part B. America and the World

2. A bitter battle between Theodore Roosevelt and his successor, William H. Taft, led to.

Lyndon Johnson and Vietnam. A Case Study

Top Ten Moments of the 60s.

Top Ten Moments of the 60s

Objectives: CLASSROOM IDEAS: Research human rights violations since World War II and the United Nations response to them.

Fighting the Cold War at Home

How did the United States respond to the threat of communist expansion? What are the origins of the Cold War?

Overview: The World Community from

Unit 4 Take-Home Test Answer Sheet

ANSWER KEY..REVIEW FOR Friday s QUIZ #15 Chapter: 29 -Vietnam

Modern World History Spring Final Exam 09

Russian History. Lecture #1 Ancient History The Romanov s

Endnotes. (4) Gottschling, Irimia R. "The U-2 Crisis." The U-2 Crisis. doi: /bdj.4.e7720.figure2f. 119

Unit 9. The Cold War,

The Early Cold War: Written by Ms. Susan M. Pojer and modified by J. Christie

Unit 12: The 1960s, Kennedy/Johnson Administrations, and the Vietnam War

POP QUIZ (COLD WAR) Take out 2 sheets of paper!

CP History Final Exam Study Guide

By: Maia Spieldenner, Michelle Henneke, Chloie Calderon. Creative Federalism (Picket Fence Federalism)

Chapter 20. The Vietnam War Era

The Cold War. Chapter 30

How Did President Nixon Get the United States Out of Vietnam?

On January 17, Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba of Congo, who Kennedy favored, is murdered in Katanga. The CIA keeps this fact from Kennedy, since they

netw rks Reading Essentials and Study Guide The Resurgence of Conservatism, Lesson 2 The Reagan Years

1. John F. Kennedy s New Frontier, pp

Making of the Modern World 15. Lecture #10 The Cold War and the American Century

OBJECTIVES. Describe and evaluate the events that led to the war between North Vietnam and South Vietnam.

Modern Republicanism,

Chapter 21 Section 4 Eisenhower s Policies. Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides.

Test - Social Studies US History Unit 09: Onset of the Cold War and the 1950s


The Vietnam War, Finish Vietnam Z Charts Start Vietnam Notes FYI: Vocab Quiz TOMORROW TEST MONDAY

Transcription:

The New Frontier: JFK and the Age of Camelot Mr. Phipps American History

Nevada State Standards 7.9 Students will compare and contrast the goals and accomplishments of the domestic policies between President Kennedy and President Johnson by utilizing one of the big 11 social studies skills

Part I: The 1960 Election The Election of 1960 marked a major change in the way Americans participated in politics. Politics became a televised event.

The New Generation Americans had hope for the future Had gotten through the Depression Had beaten Fascism in Europe and Japan Had rebuilt the world (especially the West) to be democratic Had the best nuclear arsenal in the world Had become more prosperous, lived healthier, and longer than ever

John Fitzgerald Kennedy Long established Massachusetts family, made wealthy from selling alcohol during Prohibition Considered nouveau riche, part of the newly monied Irish-Catholic, attended private schools, including Harvard Served in U.S. Navy during WWII, earned medals for valor and purple heart (back injuries)

Elected to Congress as a Democratic Representative for MA Represented the young Baby-Boomer generation Promoted Liberal ideas: government should work for the people JFK s Politics

Richard Milhous Nixon Long established Republican politician from California Pushed for strong political and economic conservatism Small government Traditional morality Tax cuts Strong on Communism

Gained experience as McCarthy s righthand man during HUAC trials Chosen as Ike s Vice President Represented the Old Guard conservative Republican Nixon

On the radio JFK lost, seemed less experienced with the issues Nixon won, more experienced with issues On the TV Nixon lost, looked sweaty, uncomfortable, and awkward JFK won, looked relaxed, poised, affable and charismatic The Debate

The 1960 Election JFK looked relaxed, young, handsome Made for TV, looked groomed, PR ready Nixon looked stiff, uncomfortable, and sweaty First televised debates in history Would be a very close election, decided by a few thousand votes

The Issues Kennedy s position: U.S. faced serious issues abroad and at home Needed to spend money to protect and help American interests, especially in Cuba Nixon s position: U.S. was just fine, after 8 years of Eisenhower/Nixon Needed to cut spending, because domestic spending was too expensive

Part II: The Age of Camelot JFK brought a distinctive style of leadership, organizing a young, ambitious Cabinet and attempting an overhaul of the inner-cities.

JFK won by narrow majority Youngest elected president in American history First Catholic president Assembled youngest Cabinets, many Harvard grads Brother, RFK was Attorney General Robert McNamara, Secretary of Defense The Results

The New Frontier Bold, new domestic programs Education Welfare Health Care Elderly Assistance Inner-Cities Continue FDR s social action

JFK s Problems Small Democratic majority in Congress Barely won the presidency Congress didn t support policies Christian Southern Conservative Democrats didn t like him Battled high inflation Contending in wars in Cuba, Berlin, Russia, and Vietnam Most legislation would NOT pass

The Warren Court Protect the citizen, protect the police department, protect the Constitution: Basic civil rights Baker v. Carr: Change voting laws, reapportion election process to be based on population (keep power in cities) Gideon v. Wainwright (1963): can t use evidence illegally gathered Escobedo v. Illinois (1964) and Miranda v. Arizona (1966): the right to remain silent, anything said can be used in a court of law, right to lawyer Engel v. Vitale (1962): No prayer in schools Griswold v. Connecticut (1965): Overturns ban on birth control

Part III: JFK s Foreign Policy As a result of the Berlin Wall, Russia s deployment of missiles to Cuba, and the threat of Communism spreading in Vietnam, JFK asked for a flexible response to make America safe.

Flexible Response Challenged Eisenhower s idea of massive retaliation Pushed for the use of conventional weaponry and military to combat Communism U.S. couldn t rely on nuclear arsenal to protect itself

Alliance for Progress JFK s pledge of support for Latin America Considered a Marshall Plan for brown people $20 billion to support internal improvements Supported education and schools Built hospitals and promote health care Helped distribute land Pros: helped some Cons: much abuse and corruption

The Peace Corps JFK s call for American international volunteerism The commitment: Spend 2 years in developing nations Specialize in education, agriculture, irrigation, sewage treatment, or health care Promote democracy and American influence Remains one of the most lasting legacy s of JFK s presidency

JFK s promise to be the first to the moon 1962: NASA sends John Glenn, first American in space Used Saturn V rocket to propel out of Earth s orbit 1969: Saturn V rocket launches Apollo 11 First, and only, successful moon landing Neal Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins The Space Race

The Bay of Pigs Invasion Considered JFK s first major foreign policy issue Intended to overthrow Fidel Castro, who had become too cozy with Khrushchev Eisenhower, before leaving office, had approved CIA training of Cuban exiles

JFK Starts the Invasion JFK hopes to start a revolution, authorizes invasion Total Failure: 1,400 armed Cubans, called La Brigada Runs aground on a coral reef JFK cancels air support, keep America s involvement secret Castro captured or killed almost all of La Brigada Exposed American covert operations (April 17, 1961)

Immediately following the Bay of Pigs fiasco JFK and Khrushchev meet in Berlin to discuss E. German refugees escaping to West Berlin JFK promises to continue support Khrushchev orders the construction of the wall The Berlin Wall (August 1961)

The Cuban Missile Crisis (Oct. 12, 1962) American spy plane discovers the construction of missile launching sites in Cuba Khrushchev had offered nuclear missiles to force JFK s concessions in Berlin Began 13 days of an intense stare down

Nuclear Chicken JFK pushes for naval blockade Goal: Seize any ships going into/out of Cuba Force the immediate removal of missiles The Problem: A direct attack on Soviets would be an act of war The existence of the missiles were an act of war

The Fallout (Oct. 28, 1962) Russia blinks! Russia removes missiles from Cuba U.S. removes missiles from Turkey Quarantine ends, but embargo begins The Problems: Khrushchev forced from office Kremlin begins nuclear expansion U.S. and Russia agree to test ban treaty Establish direct communication link: the red phone

Part IV: The Killing of a President November 22, 1963

The Arrival in Dallas JFK, LBJ, and families arrive in Dallas for a political rally The families separate for an escorted drive in downtown Dallas Shots fired: JFK shot in the head and the throat Eyewitnesses argue about the number and locations of shots

The Plot Thickens The Birth of a Conspiracy Lee Harvey Oswald had connections with Russia and supported the revolution in Cuba Arrested 80 minutes after the assassination Evidence found at the Book Repository, where he shot Kennedy Oswald shot by Jack Ruby, 2 days later

The Big Questions Why did Lee Harvey Oswald kill Kennedy? Why did Jack Ruby kill Oswald? Why is there conflicting evidence? Was this part of a larger conspiracy?

The Warren Commission Chief Justice Earl Warren starts federal investigation Goal: Prevent speculation about conspiracy Submits report, but remains inconclusive Fuels conspiracy LBJ immediately becomes president

The Legacy Devastated the country and shocked the world Seemed to end the dream of innocence of the 1950s Coincided with a broader wave of social change: the Civil Rights Movement, the Feminist Movement, escalation in Vietnam, and the Free- Speech and Anti-War Movements LBJ becomes president and will take a stronger position on Vietnam and Civil Rights

JFK Closure Please submit the following in writing: Takeaway: How did the information presented today impact the way you view JFK and America in the 1960s? How should Kennedy s accomplishments be viewed by history? Critique: What information was missing? What could be possible additions to the lesson?

Part V: LBJ and the Great Society Taking the presidency after JFK s assassination, LBJ was immediately confronted with an explosion of violence over Civil Rights, the need to engage more troops into Vietnam, and a need to improve conditions throughout American society.

Johnson s Background Experience as long-running conservative, Southern Democrat from Texas Known for building coalitions by strong-arm, handshake, drinks, and backslaps Immediately sworn in as president Continued JFK s social and domestic programs

Michael Harrington s The Other America Book published in 1962. Claimed that despite great wealth, approximately 25% of Americans still lived in poverty. Claimed that there was a culture of Poverty that was both a result and cause. Very influential to liberals (LBJ) in the 1960s.

Johnson Wins in 1964

The Great Society LBJ s political experience helped push many bills through Congress Firmly committed to social action Declared a War on Poverty Started Economic Opportunity Act to coordinate economic recovery Neighborhood Youth Corp: Helped youth graduate and get jobs Job Corps: Provide job training and placement for inner-cities VISTA (Volunteer Service to America): Domestic Peace Corps

Civil Rights Act of 1964 Most comprehensive Civil Rights Bill since Reconstruction. Banned racial discrimination in privately run accommodations for the public theatres, restaurants, hotels, etc. Authorized the attorney general to eliminate segregation in public places schools, hospitals, playgrounds, etc. Forbade discrimination in employment based on race, color, religion, and sex.

Creating a More Equitable Society Medicare (1965): Comprehensive health coverage for the elderly Medicaid (1965): Comprehensive medical insurance for low-income families

Education and Environment Project Head Start (1965): Fund preschool programs for low-income families The Water Quality Act and The Clean Air Act (1965): Increase regulations on industrial pollution

The Civil Rights Act of 1964: Banned discrimination of ANY kind The Voting Rights Act of 1965: Ensured voting rights to black Americans Equal Employment Opportunity Commission: Barred discrimination based on race OR gender in the workplace Civil Rights

The Johnson Treatment Johnson would use whatever means necessary to influence members of Congress to vote his way. His relentless, inyour-face method was referred to as The Johnson Treatment.

LBJ & Vietnam When LBJ takes over, America is already committed to supporting South Vietnam both economically and militarily. Johnson has great confidence in U.S. technological superiority and thinks that escalation of the war will defeat the primitive enemy. Gulf of Tonkin incident (1964) Congress gives LBJ unlimited authority to do what he wants in Vietnam.

Vietnam and the Downfall of LBJ LBJ s escalation of the Vietnam War proved to be very divisive to U.S. society Hawks v. Doves. An anti-war movement began to arise. The popular chant of protesters became; Hey, hey, LBJ. How many kids did you kill today?

Lyndon Johnson s Legacy Provided entitlement funds --out of the federal budget to disadvantaged groups Skyrocketed federal budget, causing stress on programs LBJ distracted by other domestic and foreign policy issues Vietnam Social Protest Anti-War Free Speech Feminism Hippies/Free Drug Movement Civil Rights

LBJ s Legacy 1. How should history view LBJ? Write an obituary for President Johnson. 2. LBJ lesson critique: What was missing (besides detail about Vietnam that s next week!) about LBJ?