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Decade Study The 1950s

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Decade Study The 1950s. The American Influence. Australia was influenced by other nations, mainly the United States. The 1950s was the decade when the United States put itself on the world map – politically, militarily and culturally. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Decade Study The 1950s

Decade StudyThe 1950s

Page 2: Decade Study The 1950s

The American InfluenceAustralia was influenced by other

nations, mainly the United States.The 1950s was the decade when the

United States put itself on the world map – politically, militarily and culturally.

The United States exported its culture through advertising, film, music and tv.

Page 3: Decade Study The 1950s

TeenagersBefore the 1950s, people were either

children or adults.Teenagers became a separate, unique

and targeted market for advertisers.US rock’n’roll music and films like

“Rebel Without a Cause” gave teenagers their own music, language and fashion.

Page 4: Decade Study The 1950s

Teenagers were beginning to challenge conservative ideas, challenge their parents ideas and values.

Bright shirts and tight jeans, riding motorbikes and looser morals were concerning older people.

In Australia, rebellious boys were known as “bodgies” while the girls were called “widgies”.

Page 5: Decade Study The 1950s
Page 6: Decade Study The 1950s

Rock’n’RollBefore the 1950s, music had been

“nice”, sedate and white – Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra and Perry Como.

That changed with Bill Haley and the Comets – “Rock around the clock” 1954.

Elvis Presley really ignited the rock’n’roll revolution. He frightened white conservative people in the United States.

Page 7: Decade Study The 1950s

His music was seen as dangerous, sexual and black.

Australian artists copied Elvis, most notably Johnny O’Keefe, who was known as “The Wild One”.

Page 8: Decade Study The 1950s

Elvis Presley

Page 9: Decade Study The 1950s

Australian Rock’n’Roll star

Johnny O’Keefe

American actor James Dean

Page 10: Decade Study The 1950s
Page 11: Decade Study The 1950s

EntertainmentRock’n’roll was one obvious new style of

entertainment. The other was television, which arrived in Australia in 1956.

By the end of the 1950s, teenagers were watching up to 12 hours of television a week.

Televisions were expensive and required a licence, but by 1960 ½ of Sydney homes had one.

Page 12: Decade Study The 1950s

People would invite friends around for tv evenings or stand outside shops and watch the picture.

US programs like “I Love Lucy” were the most popular.

Australia was still a movie watching nation and films like “Ben Hur” and “South Pacific” ran for weeks.

Page 13: Decade Study The 1950s

American shows dominated Australian television.

Comedies such as I love Lucy, Gidget and Gilligan’s Island.

Westerns such as Bonanza and Rawhide.

Cop and legal shows such as Perry Mason, Hawaiian Eye and 77 Sunset Strip.

Page 14: Decade Study The 1950s

Bruce Gyngell First television broadcast in 1956

Graham KennedyComedian

King of Australian television

Australian family watching tv 1950s

Page 15: Decade Study The 1950s

SportIn the 1950s Australia was a sporting

giant.Australians excelled in Tennis, both at

Wimbledon and in the Davis Cup (Lew Hoad, Ken Rosewell).

The 1956 Melbourne Olympics showcased Australian athletic excellence – ranked third in the medal tally (Dawn Fraser, Murray Rose, Betty Cuthbert)

Page 16: Decade Study The 1950s

Jack Brabham won the Formula One Drivers Championship.

Jimmy Carruthers retired as undefeated World Bantamweight boxing champion.

Page 17: Decade Study The 1950s

VFL 1950s

Dawn Fraser Olympic Gold Medal winner

Ken Rosewell Test Cricket

Team 1950

Page 18: Decade Study The 1950s

Life in the 1950s – the Good and the Not so Good

GOOD NOT SO GOODParents seemed to have fewer worries about their children. Children usually got themselves to school and they could play in the street. There was little of the ‘stranger danger’ common today.

We now know that child abuse occurred in religious institutions and children’s homes like Fairbridge Farm, but was not raised as a mass media issue that it is today.

Children could be children. There was no pressure on them to grow up quickly as primary-school age children have today.

Children’s rights were unheard of. It was a case of ‘children should be seen and not heard’.

Page 19: Decade Study The 1950s

Families were larger and mum usually stayed at home to look after the children.

Women had few opportunities and were expected to marry young and raise a family. Women were second-class citizens in Australia.

Family life did not include takeaways eaten in front of the tv; children never had the chance to hide in their rooms. Meals tended to be eaten at home, with mum producing wholesome food rather than the US-inspired junk food of today.

It would take many years of immigration before Australians had the options of a wide, interesting choice of tastes. In the 50s it was often a case of “peas, potato, pumpkin and a chop”.

People were more resilient. If things went wrong you coped and did not run off to counselling or to sue someone

Not everybody could cope.

Page 20: Decade Study The 1950s

Family and school discipline was stronger, with much less school violence than today. Children respected their elders. If a student failed, he or she repeated the year.

School discipline was often brutal and callous. Age had to be respected, even if it did not merit respect.

Education was more firmly grounded in the basics of the Three Rs.

Students were taught to rote learn, there was little student-centred learning and sourced of knowledge were limited. Students had a strong diet of British kings and queens.

People felt safe and could travel on public transport at night and leave doors unlocked.

Homicide rates in Australia rose from 0.9% per 100,000 in 1949 to 1.5% by 1958. An increase of 66%

Page 21: Decade Study The 1950s

There was a great sense of community, with neighbours knowing each other and helping each other. Society seemed more cohesive. The impersonal and stressful nature of life today was largely absent.

Migrants were often subject to prejudice and discrimination. Indigenous people did not count, and many still lived under strict institutional supervision.

Life was slower, pubs and clubs were not open all hours, shops were allowed to close on Saturday afternoons and all day Sunday.

For much of the 1950s, pubs closed at 6.00 pm which gave Australia the ‘six o’clock swill.”

The 1950s was a period of seemingly higher moral values. There was certainly none of the profanity of today, there was a greater emphasis on modesty, and censorship attempted to maintain standards.

It was a time when domestic violence was brushed under the carpet, when great works of literature were banned and pregnant women had to undergo backyard abortions if they did not want to have a child.

Page 22: Decade Study The 1950s

Class rooms 1950s

Page 23: Decade Study The 1950s

PoliticsCold war: Space race. The Soviet Union

put the first man in space and Sputnik was the first craft in space.

Fear of communism.Robert Menzies was Prime Minister and

he was anti-communist.Korean War.

Page 24: Decade Study The 1950s

TransportThe most obvious change in Australian life in

the 1950s was the growing use and reliance on the motor vehicle.

In 1949, 130 people out of every 1000 had a car; by 1961 it was 271.

The dominate car of the 1950s was the Holden.The first Holden sold for 675 pounds plus tax.In 1953, Holden introduced the FJ. 170,000

were sold.

Page 25: Decade Study The 1950s

FJ Holden

FJ Holden Ute

Page 26: Decade Study The 1950s

Bibliography