the 1960 election read carefully and complete the tasks in red

13
The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED.

Upload: dulcie-kelley

Post on 12-Jan-2016

213 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED

The 1960 ElectionThe 1960 Election

Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED.Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED.

Page 2: The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED

The state of America in 1960The state of America in 1960

Economic prosperity of the 50s continues The “50s” don’t end until 1964!

The civil rights movement continued to intensify in 1960; sit-ins and boycotts

The Cold War continues to be dangerous, as the U.S. and U.S.S.R. continue to “talk tough” and build more nuclear weapons Cuba had just become Communist; U-2 incident

had chilled U.S./Soviet relations

Economic prosperity of the 50s continues The “50s” don’t end until 1964!

The civil rights movement continued to intensify in 1960; sit-ins and boycotts

The Cold War continues to be dangerous, as the U.S. and U.S.S.R. continue to “talk tough” and build more nuclear weapons Cuba had just become Communist; U-2 incident

had chilled U.S./Soviet relations

Page 3: The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED

Richard Nixon: RepublicanRichard Nixon: Republican

47 years old Eisenhower’s Vice President Was able to run for President

touting the achievements of Ike

Had a growing reputation in foreign affairs following the famous “Kitchen Debate”

Eisenhower undermined him by joking about Nixon’s input into important decisions: "if you give me a week I might think of one."

47 years old Eisenhower’s Vice President Was able to run for President

touting the achievements of Ike

Had a growing reputation in foreign affairs following the famous “Kitchen Debate”

Eisenhower undermined him by joking about Nixon’s input into important decisions: "if you give me a week I might think of one."

Page 4: The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED

John F. Kennedy: DemocratJohn F. Kennedy: Democrat

Senator from Massachusetts Wealthy, powerful political family Only 42 years old (43 at inauguration) Roman Catholic- a controversial issue in

1960 Do a Google search for JFK biographical

information, fun facts, and photos of his family- what else should we know about this interesting man from a powerful family? Use these links too:

http://www.jfklibrary.org/JFK/Life-of-John-F-Kennedy.aspx

http://www.biography.com/people/john-f-kennedy-9362930

http://www.whitehouse.gov/about/presidents/johnfkennedy

http://millercenter.org/president/kennedy/essays/biography/2

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/biography/kennedys-bio-john-fitzgerald/

Senator from Massachusetts Wealthy, powerful political family Only 42 years old (43 at inauguration) Roman Catholic- a controversial issue in

1960 Do a Google search for JFK biographical

information, fun facts, and photos of his family- what else should we know about this interesting man from a powerful family? Use these links too:

http://www.jfklibrary.org/JFK/Life-of-John-F-Kennedy.aspx

http://www.biography.com/people/john-f-kennedy-9362930

http://www.whitehouse.gov/about/presidents/johnfkennedy

http://millercenter.org/president/kennedy/essays/biography/2

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/biography/kennedys-bio-john-fitzgerald/

Page 5: The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED

More JFK biographical info/fun facts and pictures: what did you find?More JFK biographical info/fun facts and pictures: what did you find?

Page 6: The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED

The Great DebateThe Great Debate

1st televised Presidential debate in history

September 26, 1960: 70 million viewers

Do a Google and YouTube search for the first 1960 debate. Watch a few clips. Why was it so significant?

1st televised Presidential debate in history

September 26, 1960: 70 million viewers

Do a Google and YouTube search for the first 1960 debate. Watch a few clips. Why was it so significant?

Page 7: The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED

Civil Rights in 1960Civil Rights in 1960

Sit-ins spread: churches, beaches, motels, libraries, theaters (50,000 people participate)

Boycotts of national chain stores like Woolworths

“Jail, not bail;” non-violent passive resistance

Sit-ins spread: churches, beaches, motels, libraries, theaters (50,000 people participate)

Boycotts of national chain stores like Woolworths

“Jail, not bail;” non-violent passive resistance

Page 8: The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED

JFK’s electoral “tightrope”JFK’s electoral “tightrope”

To win, he needed the support of the southern segregationists who were largely Democrats AND northern African Americans

Vice Presidential choice from the South to reassure Southern Democrats: Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson, Texas

JFK provides moderate support: endorses the sit-ins and promises to sponsor a civil rights bill when elected

October, 1960: Martin Luther King, Jr. forces the two candidates to take a side: he gets arrested during closing days of the campaign at a sit-in in Atlanta; sentenced to four months of hard labor for violating his probation

To win, he needed the support of the southern segregationists who were largely Democrats AND northern African Americans

Vice Presidential choice from the South to reassure Southern Democrats: Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson, Texas

JFK provides moderate support: endorses the sit-ins and promises to sponsor a civil rights bill when elected

October, 1960: Martin Luther King, Jr. forces the two candidates to take a side: he gets arrested during closing days of the campaign at a sit-in in Atlanta; sentenced to four months of hard labor for violating his probation

Page 9: The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED

What do the candidates do about the MLK situation?What do the candidates do about the MLK situation? Nixon does nothing JFK calls Coretta Scott King and his brother arranges

for his release on bail; King is released a day later Democrats print 2 million copies of pamphlet: “No-

Comment Nixon vs. a Candidate With a Heart, Senator Kennedy”

JFK wins 7 of 11 states in the South; 70% of African American vote- The African American vote decides the election in closest election of 20th Century (0.1%)

Nixon does nothing JFK calls Coretta Scott King and his brother arranges

for his release on bail; King is released a day later Democrats print 2 million copies of pamphlet: “No-

Comment Nixon vs. a Candidate With a Heart, Senator Kennedy”

JFK wins 7 of 11 states in the South; 70% of African American vote- The African American vote decides the election in closest election of 20th Century (0.1%)

Page 10: The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED
Page 11: The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED
Page 12: The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED

JFK’s Inaugural Address-listen!JFK’s Inaugural Address-listen!

In the history of the United States, from Washington to Obama, we have had 44 Presidents, and therefore 44 first-time inaugural addresses. In that time, only a handful of those addresses have stood the test of time, to be studied again and again: FDR, Reagan… and of course, JFK. It is a wonderfully written speech full of powerful rhetoric that deserves to be analyzed almost like a piece of literature, to decipher, read between the lines, and figure out what he really meant. It is also significant for what he says, but also what he doesn’t say. Remember that the two big issues facing the country in 1961 were the ongoing Cold War conflict and competition with the Soviet Union and the escalating civil rights movement here at home.

 Listen to it here and read along: http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/jfkinaugural.htm

In the history of the United States, from Washington to Obama, we have had 44 Presidents, and therefore 44 first-time inaugural addresses. In that time, only a handful of those addresses have stood the test of time, to be studied again and again: FDR, Reagan… and of course, JFK. It is a wonderfully written speech full of powerful rhetoric that deserves to be analyzed almost like a piece of literature, to decipher, read between the lines, and figure out what he really meant. It is also significant for what he says, but also what he doesn’t say. Remember that the two big issues facing the country in 1961 were the ongoing Cold War conflict and competition with the Soviet Union and the escalating civil rights movement here at home.

 Listen to it here and read along: http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/jfkinaugural.htm

Page 13: The 1960 Election Read carefully and complete the tasks in RED

JFK’s Inaugural (cont.)JFK’s Inaugural (cont.)

Your 3 favorite lines:

# of references to The Cold War: # of references to the civil rights movement:

Your 3 favorite lines:

# of references to The Cold War: # of references to the civil rights movement: