Baby Boomers
Almost exactly nine months after
World War II ended, “the cry of the baby was heard across the land,” as
historian Landon Jones later described the trend. More babies were born in 1946
than ever before: 3.4 million, 20 percent more than in 1945. This was the
beginning of the so-called “baby boom.” In 1947, another 3.8 million babies
were born; 3.9 million were born in 1952; and more than 4 million were born
every year from 1954 until 1964, when the boom finally tapered off. By then,
there were 76.4 million “baby boomers” in the United States. They made up
almost 40 percent of the nation’s population.
The Baby Boom
What explains this baby boom?
Some historians have argued that it was a part of a desire for normalcy after
16 years of depression and war. Others have argued that it was a part of a Cold
War campaign to fight communism by outnumbering communists. Did you know? In
1966, Time magazine declared that “the Generation Twenty-Five and Under” would
be its “Persons of the Year.” Most likely, however, the postwar baby boom
happened for more quotidian reasons. Older Americans, who had postponed
marriage and childbirth during the Great Depression and World War II, were
joined in the nation’s maternity wards by young adults who were eager to start
families. (In 1940, the average American woman got married when she was almost
22 years old; in 1956, the average American woman got married when she was just
20. And just 8 percent of married women in the 1940s opted not to have
children, compared to 15 percent in the 1930s.) Many people in the postwar era
looked forward to having children because they were confident that the future
would be one of comfort and prosperity. In many ways, they were right:
Corporations grew larger and more profitable, labor unions promised generous
wages and benefits to their members, and consumer goods were more plentiful and
affordable than ever before. As a result, many Americans felt certain that they
could give their families all the material things that they themselves had done
without.
Moving to the Suburbs
The baby boom and the suburban
boom went hand in hand. Almost as soon as World War II ended, developers such
as William Levitt (whose “Levittowns” in New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania
would become the most famous symbols of suburban life in the 1950s) began to
buy land on the outskirts of cities and use mass-production techniques to build
modest, inexpensive tract houses there. The G.I. Bill subsidized low-cost
mortgages for returning soldiers, which meant that it was often cheaper to buy
one of these suburban houses than it was to rent an apartment in the city. These
houses were perfect for young families–they had informal “family rooms,” open
floor plans and backyards–and so suburban developments earned nicknames like
“Fertility Valley” and “The Rabbit Hutch.” By 1960, suburban baby boomers and
their parents comprised one-third of the population of the United States.
The Baby Boom & The “Feminine Mystique”
The suburban baby boom had a
particularly confining effect on women. Advice books and magazine articles
(“Don’t Be Afraid to Marry Young,” “Cooking To Me Is Poetry,” “Femininity
Begins At Home”) urged women to leave the workforce and embrace their roles as
wives and mothers. The idea that a woman’s most important job was to bear and
rear children was hardly a new one, but it took on a new significance in the
postwar era. First, it placed the baby boomers squarely at the center of the
suburban universe. Second, it generated a great deal of dissatisfaction among women
who yearned for a more fulfilling life. (In her 1963 book “The Feminine
Mystique,” women’s-rights advocate Betty Friedan argued that the suburbs were
“burying women alive.”) This dissatisfaction, in turn, contributed to the
rebirth of the feminist movement in the 1960s.
The Boomer Market
Consumer goods played an
important role in middle-class life during the postwar era. Adults participated
eagerly in the consumer economy, using new-fangled credit cards and charge
accounts to buy things like televisions, hi-fi systems and new cars. But
manufacturers and marketers had their eyes on another group of shoppers as
well: the millions of relatively affluent boomer children, many of whom could
be persuaded to participate in all kinds of consumer crazes. Baby boomers
bought mouse-ear hats to wear while they watched “The Mickey Mouse Club” and
coonskin caps to wear while they watched Walt Disney’s TV specials about Davy
Crockett. They bought rock and roll records, danced along with “American
Bandstand” and swooned over Elvis Presley. They collected hula hoops, Frisbees
and Barbie dolls. A 1958 story in Life magazine declared that “kids” were a
“built-in recession cure.” (“4,000,000 a Year Make Millions in Business,” the
article’s headline read.)
The Boomer Counterculture
As they grew older, some baby
boomers began to resist this consumerist suburban ethos. They began to fight
instead for social, economic and political equality and justice for many
disadvantaged groups: African-Americans, young people, women, gays and
lesbians, American Indians and Hispanics, for example. Student activists took
over college campuses, organized massive demonstrations against the war in
Vietnam and occupied parks and other public places. Young people also
participated in the wave of uprisings that shook American cities from Newark to
Los Angeles in the 1960s. Other baby boomers “dropped out”
of political life altogether. These “hippies” grew their hair long,
experimented with drugs, and–thanks to the newly-accessible birth-control pill–practiced
“free love.” Some even moved to communes, as far away from Levittown as they
could get.
Baby Boomers Today
Today, the oldest baby boomers
are already in their 60s. By 2030, about one in five Americans will be older
than 65, and some experts believe that the aging of the population will place a
strain on social welfare systems.
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