Read this article, which takes its name from John Kenneth Galbraith's book about the postwar economic boom and political culture. It was undoubtedly an unprecedented time in American history, but it ultimately did not quite match mainstream expectations.
Primary Sources
1. Migrant Farmers and Immigrant Labor (1952)
During
the labor shortages of World War II, the United States' launched the
Bracero ("laborer") program to bring Mexican laborers into the United
States. The program continued into the 1960s and brought more than a
million workers into the United States on short-term contracts.
Undocumented immigration continued, however. Congress held hearings and,
in the selection below, a migrant worker named Juanita Garcia testifies
to Congress about the state of affairs in California's Imperial Valley.
Beginning in 1954, Dwight Eisenhower's administration oversaw, with the
cooperation of the Mexican government, "Operation Wetback," which
empowered to the Border Patrol to crack down upon illegal immigration.
2. Hernandez v. Texas (1954)
Pete
Hernandez, a migrant worker, was tried for the murder of his employer,
Joe Espinosa, in Edna, Texas, in 1950. Hernandez was convicted by an
all-white jury. His lawyers appealed. They argued that Hernandez was
entitled to a jury "of his peers" and that systematic exclusion of
Mexican Americans violated constitutional law. In a unanimous decision,
the United States Supreme Court ruled that Mexican Americans - and all
"classes" - were entitled to the "equal protection" articulated in the
Fourteenth Amendment.
3. Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954)
In
1896, the United States Supreme Court declared in Plessy v. Ferguson
that the doctrine of "separate but equal" was constitutional. In 1954,
the United States Supreme Court overturned that decision and
4. Richard Nixon on the American Standard of Living (1959)
As
Cold War tensions eased, exhibitions allowed for Americans and Soviets
to survey the other's culture and way of life. In 1959, the Russians
held an exhibition in New York, and the Americans in Moscow. A
videotaped discussion between Vice President Richard Nixon and Soviet
Premier Nikita Kruschev, the so-called "Kitchen Debate," won Richard
Nixon acclaim at home for his articulate defense of the American
standard of living. In the following extract from July 24, 1959, Nixon
opened the American Exhibition in Moscow.
5. John F. Kennedy on the Separation of Church and State (1960)
American
Anti-Catholicism had softened in the aftermath of World War II, but no
Catholic had ever been elected president and Protestant Americans had
long been suspicious of Catholic politicians when John F. Kennedy ran
for the presidency in 1960. (Al Smith, the first Catholic presidential
candidate, was roundly defeated in 1928 owing in large part to popular
anti-Catholic prejudice). On September 12, 1960, Kennedy addressed the
Greater Houston Ministerial Association and he not only allayed popular
fears of his Catholic faith, he delivered a seminal statement on the
separation of church and state.
6. Congressman Arthur L. Miller Gives "the Putrid Facts" About Homosexuality (1950)
In
1950, Representative Arthur L. Miller, a Nebraska Republican, offered
an amendment to a bill requiring background checks for employees of the
Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA). Miller proposed to bar
homosexuals from working with the ECA. Although his amendment was
rejected, his views of homosexuality revealed much about postwar
American views.
7. Rosa Parks on Life in Montgomery, Alabama (1956-1958)
In
this unfinished correspondence and undated personal notes, Rosa Parks
recounted living under segregation in Montgomery, Alabama, explained why
she refused to surrender her seat on a city bus, and lamented the
psychological toll exacted by Jim Crow.
8. Little Rock Rally (1959)
In
1959, photographer John Bledsoe captured this image of the crowd on the
steps of the Arkansas state capitol building, protesting the federally
mandated integration of Little Rock's Central High School. This image
shows how worries about desegregation were bound up with other concerns,
such as the reach of communism and government power.
9. "In the Suburbs" (1957)
Redbook
made this film to convince advertisers that the magazine would help
them attract the white suburban consumers they desired. The "happy go
spending, buy it now, young adults of today" are depicted by the film as
flocking to the suburbs to escape global and urban turmoil. Redbook
Magazine, "In The Suburbs" (1957). Via The Internet Archive.