Civil Rights and the 1950s: Crash Course US History #39 
                    
	Aug 9, 2023
 
                    
                    Civil Rights and the 1950s: Crash Course US History #39 
	In which John Green teaches you about the early days of the Civil Rights movement. By way of providing context for this, John also talks a bit about wider America in the 1950s. The 1950s are a deeply nostalgic period for many Americans, but there is more than a little idealizing going on here. The 1950s were a time of economic expansion, new technologies, and a growing middle class. America was becoming a suburban nation thanks to cookie-cutter housing developments like the Levittowns.  While the white working-class saw their wages and status improve, the proverbial rising tide wasn’t lifting all proverbial ships. A lot of people were excluded from the prosperity of the 1950s. Segregation in housing and education made for some serious inequality for African Americans. As a result, the Civil Rights movement was born. John will talk about the early careers of Martin Luther King, Thurgood Marshall, Rosa Parks, and even Earl Warren. He’ll teach you about Brown v Board of Education, the lesser-known Mendez vs Westminster, the Montgomery Bus Boycott, and all kinds of other stuff.https://www.commonlit.org/texts/emmet …https://www.commonlit.org/texts/rosa- …https://www.commonlit.org/texts/marti …https://www.commonlit.org/texts/showd …http://www.patreon.com/crashcourse http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashC …http://www.twitter.com/TheCrashCourse https://www.instagram.com/thecrashcou …
                    
    
                    Content 
                    0.16 ->  Episode 39: Consensus and Protest: Civil Rights
LOCKED
1.16 ->  Hi, I’m John Green, this is Crash Course
U.S. history and today we’re going to look
3.35 ->  at one of the most important periods of American
social history, the 1950s.
7.689 ->  Why is it so important?
8.689 ->  Well, first because it saw the advent of the
greatest invention in human history: Television.
12.91 ->  Mr. Green, Mr. Green!
14.37 ->  I like TV!
15.509 ->  By the way, you’re from the future.
16.65 ->  How does the X-Files end?
17.689 ->  Are there aliens or no aliens?
19.349 ->  No spoilers, Me From The Past, you’re going
to have to go to college and watch the X-Files
22.599 ->  get terrible just like I did.
24.32 ->  No it’s mostly important because of the
Civil Rights Movement We’re going to talk
26.7 ->  about some of the heroic figures like Martin
Luther King and Rosa Parks, but much of the
31.43 ->  real story is about the thousands of people
you’ve never heard of who fought to make
35.5 ->  America more inclusive.
36.82 ->  But before we look at the various changes
that the Civil Rights Movement was pushing
40.23 ->  for, we should spend a little time looking
at the society that they were trying to change.
43.93 ->  The 1950s has been called a period of consensus,
and I suppose it was, at least for the white
48.92 ->  males who wrote about it and who all agreed
that the 1950s were fantastic for white males.
54.93 ->  Consensus culture was caused first, by the
Cold War – people were hesitant to criticize
58.71 ->  the United States for fear of being branded
a communist, and, second, by affluence – increasing
64 ->  prosperity meant that more people didn’t
have as much to be critical of.
67.691 ->  And this widespread affluence was something
new in the United States.
70.84 ->  Between 1946 and 1960 Americans experienced
a period of economic expansion that saw standards
76.18 ->  of living rise and gross national product
more than double.
79.51 ->  And unlike many previous American economic
expansions, much of the growing prosperity
83.44 ->  in the fifties was shared by ordinary working
people who saw their wages rise.
87.47 ->  To quote our old friend Eric Foner, “By
1960, an estimated 60 percent of Americans
92.33 ->  enjoyed what the government defined as a middle-class
standard of living.”[1]
95.68 ->  And this meant that increasing numbers of
Americans had access things like television,
99.22 ->  and air conditioning, and dishwashers and
air travel.
102.99 ->  That doesn’t really seem like a bonus.
104.36 ->  Anyway, despite the fact that they were being
stuffed into tiny metal cylinders and hurdled
107.72 ->  through the air, most Americans were happy
because they had, like, indoor plumbing and
111.92 ->  electricity.
116.84 ->  intro
The 1950s was the era of suburbanization.
124.64 ->  The number of homes in the United States doubled
during the decade, which had the pleasant
128.28 ->  side effect of creating lots of construction
jobs.
130.729 ->  The classic example of suburbanization was
Levittown in New York, where 10,000 almost
135.47 ->  identical homes were built and became home
to 40,000 people almost overnight.
140.23 ->  And living further from the city meant that
more Americans needed cars, which was good
143.67 ->  news for Detroit where cars were being churned
out with the expectation that Americans would
147.98 ->  replace them every two years.
149.95 ->  By 1960, 80% of Americans owned at least one
car and 14% had two or more.
155.4 ->  And car culture changed the way that Americans
lived and shopped.
158.03 ->  I mean it gave us shopping malls, and drive
thru restaurants, and the backseat makeout
163.1 ->  session.
164.1 ->  I mean, high school me didn’t get the backseat
makeout session.
166.02 ->  But, other people did!
167.02 ->  I did get the Burger King drive thru though.
169.48 ->  And lots of it.
171.02 ->  Our whole picture of the American standard
of living, with its abundance of consumer
174.94 ->  goods and plentiful services was established
in the 1950s.
178.08 ->  And so, for so for many people this era was
something of a “golden age” especially
181.71 ->  when we look back on it today with nostalgia.
184.14 ->  But there were critics, even at the time.
186.13 ->  So when we say the 1950s were an era of consensus,
one of the things we’re saying is there
190.18 ->  wasn’t much room for debate about what it
meant to be an American.
194 ->  Most people agreed on the American values:
individualism, respect for private property,
198.74 ->  and belief in equal opportunity.
200.07 ->  The key problem was that we believed in equal
opportunity, but didn’t actually provide
204.3 ->  it.
205.3 ->  But some people were concerned that the cookie
cutter vision of the good life and the celebration
208.86 ->  of the middle class lifestyle was displacing
other conceptions of citizenship.
212.6 ->  Like the sociologist C. Wright Mills described
a combination of military, corporate, and
216.84 ->  political leaders as a power elite whose control
over government and the economy was such as
221.63 ->  to make democracy an afterthought.
223.72 ->  In The Lonely Crowd sociologist David Riesman
criticized Americans for being conformist
228.3 ->  and lacking the rich inner life necessary
to be truly independent.
232.24 ->  And John Kenneth Galbraith questioned an Affluent
Society that would pay for new cars and new
236.71 ->  missiles but not for new schools.
239.05 ->  And we can’t mention the 1950s without discussing
teenagers since this was the decade that gave
243.38 ->  us Rock and Roll, and rock stars like Bill
Haley and the Comets, Buddy Holly and the
248.02 ->  Crickets, and Elvis Presley and his hips.
249.92 ->  Another gift of the 1950s was literature,
much of which appeals especially to teenagers.
250.92 ->  Like, the Beats presented a rather drug-fueled
and not always coherent criticism of the bourgeois
251.92 ->  1950’s morals.
252.92 ->  They rejected materialism, and suburban ennui
and things like regular jobs while celebrating
253.92 ->  impulsivity, and recklessness, experimentation
and freedom.
254.92 ->  And also heroin.
255.92 ->  So you might have noticed something about
all those critics of the 1950s that I just
256.92 ->  mentioned: they were all white dudes.
257.92 ->  Now, we’re gonna be talking about women
in the 1950s and 1960s next week because their
260.16 ->  liberation movement began a bit later, but
what most people call the Civil Rights Movement
264.03 ->  really did begin in the 1950s.
265.21 ->  While the 1950s were something of a golden
age for many blue and white collar workers,
269.32 ->  it was hardly a period of expanding opportunities
for African Americans.
272.94 ->  Rigid segregation was the rule throughout
the country, especially in housing, but also
276.81 ->  in jobs and in employment.
278.75 ->  In the South, public accommodations were segregated
by law, while in the north it was usually
283.34 ->  happening by custom or de facto segregation.
286.28 ->  To give just one example, the new suburban
neighborhoods that sprang up in the 1950s
290.25 ->  were almost completely white and this remained
true for decades.
293.57 ->  According Eric Foner, “As late as the 1990s,
nearly 90 percent of suburban whites lived
298.35 ->  in communities with non-white populations
less than 1 percent.”
301.83 ->  And it wasn’t just housing.
303.25 ->  In the 1950s half of black families lived
in poverty.
306.62 ->  When they were able to get union jobs, black
workers had less seniority than their white
310.44 ->  counterparts so their employment was less
stable.
313.16 ->  And their educational opportunities were severely
limited by sub-standard segregated schools.
317.84 ->  Now you might think the Civil Rights Movement
began with Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus
321.3 ->  Boycott or else Brown v. Board of Education,
but it really started during WW2 with efforts
326.53 ->  like those of A. Philip Randolph and the soldiers
taking part in the Double-V crusade.
330.889 ->  But even before that, black Americans had
been fighting for civil rights.
333.99 ->  It’s just that in the 1950s, they started
to win.
337.09 ->  So, desegregating schools was a key goal of
the Civil Rights movement.
340.03 ->  And it started in California in 1946.
342.26 ->  In the case of Mendez v. Westminster the California
Supreme Court ruled that Orange County, of
347.47 ->  all places, had to desegregate their schools.
350.04 ->  They’d been discriminating against Latinos.
352.52 ->  And then, California’s governor, Earl Warren,
signed an order that repealed all school segregation
357.199 ->  in the state.
358.199 ->  That same Earl Warren, by the way, was Chief
Justice when the landmark case Brown v. Board
362.93 ->  of Education came before the Supreme Court
in 1954.
366.3 ->  The NAACP Legal Defense Fund under the leadership
of Thurgood Marshall had been pursuing a legal
371.27 ->  strategy of trying to make states live up
to the ruling in Plessy v. Ferguson that required
376.29 ->  all public facilities to be separate but equal.
379.49 ->  They started by bringing lawsuits against
professional schools like law schools, because
383.24 ->  it was really obvious that the three classrooms
and no library that Texas set up for its African
388.92 ->  American law students were not equal to the
actual University of Texas’s law school.
393.639 ->  But the Brown case was about public schools
for children.
396.07 ->  It was actually a combination of 5 cases from
4 states, of which Brown happened to be alphabetically
401.43 ->  the first.
402.43 ->  The Board of Education in question incidentally
was in Topeka Kansas, not one of the states
406.52 ->  of the old Confederacy, but nonetheless a
city that did restricted schooling by race.
410.63 ->  Oh, it’s time for the Mystery Document?
414.32 ->  The rules here are simple.
415.44 ->  I read the Mystery Document.
416.44 ->  If I’m wrong, I get shocked.
418.11 ->  "Segregation of white and colored children
in public schools has a detrimental effect
422.009 ->  upon the colored children.
423.509 ->  The impact is greater when it has the sanction
of the law, for the policy of separating the
427.74 ->  races is usually interpreted as denoting the
inferiority of the negro group.
432.33 ->  A sense of inferiority affects the motivation
of a child to learn.
436.53 ->  Segregation with the sanction of law, therefore,
has a tendency to [retard] the educational
441.32 ->  and mental development of negro children and
to deprive them of some of the benefits they
445.56 ->  would receive in a racial[ly] integrated school
system.
448.13 ->  [Footnote 10]"[2]
Stan, the last two weeks you have given me
450.54 ->  two extraordinary gifts and I am thankful.
453.12 ->  It is Earl Warren from Brown v. Board of Education.
456.18 ->  Huzzah!
457.18 ->  Justice Warren is actually quoting from sociological
research there that shows that segregation
462.139 ->  itself is psychologically damaging to black
children because they recognize that being
466.78 ->  separated out is a badge of inferiority.
468.539 ->  Alright, let’s go to the Thought Bubble.
470.75 ->  The Brown decision was a watershed but it
didn’t lead to massive immediate desegregation
475.4 ->  of the nation’s public schools.
477.09 ->  In fact, it spawned what came to be known
as “Massive Resistance” in the South.
481.36 ->  The resistance got so massive, in fact, that
a number of counties, rather than integrate
485.07 ->  their schools, closed them.
486.85 ->  Prince Edward County in Virginia, for instance,
closed its schools in 1959 and didn’t re-open
491.27 ->  them again until 1964.
492.75 ->  Except they didn’t really close them because
many states appropriated funds to pay for
497.539 ->  white students to attend “private” academies.
501.15 ->  Some states got so into the resistance that
they began to fly the Confederate Battle flag
504.89 ->  over their state capitol buildings.
506.35 ->  Yes, I’m looking at you Alabama and South
Carolina.
509.169 ->  On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks refused to
move to the back of a bus in Montgomery, Alabama
514.05 ->  and got arrested, kicking off the Montgomery
Bus Boycott that lasted almost a year.
518.029 ->  A lot of people think that Parks was simply
an average African American working woman
521.729 ->  who was tired and fed up with segregation,
but the truth is more complicated.
525.869 ->  Parks had been active in politics since the
1930s and had protested the notorious Scottsboro
530.129 ->  Boys case.
531.129 ->  She had served as secretary for the NAACP
and she had begun her quest to register to
535.309 ->  vote in Alabama in 1943.
537.839 ->  She failed a literacy test three times before
becoming one of the very few black people
541.529 ->  registered to vote in the state.
544.259 ->  And in 1954 she attended a training session
for political activists and met other civil
547.42 ->  rights radicals.
548.47 ->  So Rosa Parks was an active participant in
the fight for black civil rights long before
552.749 ->  she sat on that bus.
553.86 ->  The Bus Boycott also thrust into prominence
a young pastor from Atlanta, the 26 year old
558.05 ->  Martin Luther King Jr.
559.74 ->  He helped to organize the boycott from his
Baptist church, which reminds us that black
563.499 ->  churches played a pivotal role in the Civil
Rights Movement.
566.929 ->  That boycott would go on to last for 381 days
and in the end, the city of Montgomery relented.
572.24 ->  Thanks, Thought Bubble.
573.24 ->  So that was, of course, only the beginning
for Martin Luther King, who achieved his greatest
576.66 ->  triumphs in the 1960s.
578.319 ->  After Montgomery, he was instrumental in forming
the Southern Christian Leadership Conference,
582.079 ->  a coalition of black civil rights and church
leaders who pushed for integration.
586.009 ->  And they needed to fight hard, especially
in the face of Massive Resistance and an Eisenhower
590.31 ->  administration that was lukewarm at best about
civil rights.
593.569 ->  But I suppose Eisenhower did stick up for
civil rights when forced to, as when Arkansas
597.709 ->  Governor Orval Faubus used the National Guard
to prevent the integration of Little Rock’s
602.259 ->  Central High School by 9 black students in
1957.
605.009 ->  Eisenhower was like, “You know, as the guy
who invaded Normandy, I don’t think that’s
608.61 ->  the best use for the National Guard.”
610.449 ->  So, Eisenhower sent the 101st Airborne Division
(not the entirety of it, but some of it) to
614.98 ->  Little Rock, Arkansas, to walk kids to school.
617.769 ->  Which they did for a year.
620.089 ->  After that, Faubus closed the schools, but
at least the federal government showed that
624.209 ->  it wouldn’t allow states to ignore court
orders about the Constitution.
628.499 ->  In your face, John C. Calhoun.
630.639 ->  Despite the court decision and the dispatching
of Federal troops, by the end of the 1950s
635.139 ->  fewer than two percent of black students attended
integrated schools in the South.
639.11 ->  So, the modern movement for Civil Rights had
begun, but it was clear that there was still
643.019 ->  a lot of work to do.
644.1 ->  But the emergence of the Civil Rights Movement
shows us that the picture of consensus in
647.809 ->  the 1950s is not quite as clear-cut as its
proponents would have us believe.
652.399 ->  Yes, there was widespread affluence, particularly
among white people, and criticism of the government
657.239 ->  and America generally was stifled by the fear
of appearing to sympathize with Communism.
661.649 ->  But there was also widespread systemic inequality
and poverty in the decade that shows just
666.73 ->  how far away we were from living the ideal
of equal opportunity.
671.019 ->  That we have made real progress, and we have,
is a credit to the voices of protest.
675.779 ->  Next week we’ll see how women, Latinos,
and gay people added their voices to the protests
680.12 ->  and look at what they were and were not able
to change in the 1960s.
684.389 ->  Thanks for watching.
685.389 ->  I’ll see you then.
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709.629 ->  Now, my face moved, but you can still click
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711.279 ->  Thanks again for watching Crash Course and
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714.269 ->  be awesome.
715.269 ->  ________________
[1] Foner Give me Liberty ebook version p.
716.269 ->  992
[2] http://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/347/483/case.html
                    
                        Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S64zRnnn4Po