American Decades
Overview
1950s Politics Sentimentalized.
Current baby-boomer nostalgia has, for the most part, washed over—and sanitized—the political history of the 1950s. When compared to the turbulent decades that would follow and the world war that had preceded in the 1940s, the 1950s would appear from the present, popular perspective to represent a peaceful interlude in twentieth-century power politics—a kind of return to innocence from which the American people would emerge the "children of Eisenhower." Indeed, two-term president Dwight D. Eisenhower, the decade's dominant political presence, was a paternal figure. Running on the 1952 Republican platform at the age of sixty-two, he was an international hero who had organized the Allied victory over the Nazis and briefly served as president of Columbia University. He had a kind face and a smile that beamed confidence and optimism. A high handicapper, he spent a good deal of time at the golf...
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1950's Government and Politics
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- Cold War: The Bomb
- Cold War: The Korean Conflict
- Cold War: Sputnik
- Government and Business
- Government and Education
- Nationagl Politics: Election 1950
- National Politics: Republican Primaries and Convention 1952
- National Politics: Democratic Primaries and Convention 1952
- National Politics: Election 1952
- National Politics: Election 1954
- National Pollitics: Democratic Primaries and Convention 1956
- National Politics: Republican Convention 1956
- National Politics: Election 1956
- National Politics: Election 1958
- The Press and the Presidency
- Spending and the Federal Government
- Spending at the State and Local Levels
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Government and Politics, 1950–1959
