The 1950's
It Was A Great Time To Be Alive!
In 1950
- The population of the world is 2.52 billion
- 64% of Americans now live in cities
- There are 1,667,231 marriages to 385,144 divorces (23%). By 1998
there will be 2,256,000 marriages and 955,000 divorces (43%)
- Median age for 1st marriage is 22.8 years old for men and 20.3 for
women. By 1998, it will be 26.7 years old for men and 25 for women.
Noting statistics one above, you can assume older but no wiser. Marriage
prospects of single men and women.
- A.C. Nielsen's Audimeters track viewer watching.
- Walt Disney's Cinderella opens in theaters. Buy on VHS
- Sugar Pops are introduced.
- Antihistamines enter popular use for treatment of allergies and
head-colds.
- RCA 45 RPM record attachment - now you can play RCA’s new 45’s!
- includes 6 records - $12.95
- Zenith introduces "lazy bones" tuning - change all television stations
from the comfort of your easy chair. Hand held device plugs into TV.
- Silly Putty is introduced!
- And the winner is... Oscar stuff
- 21.6 percent of wives worked outside the home. By 1960, that number
hit 30.5 percent. The reason for the jump?
- The Pillsbury Company launches it's annual "Bake-off" to promote
flour.
- Pillsbury and General Mills introduce prepared cake mixes.
- CBS receives an FCC license to begin broadcasting in color.
- Ball-O-Fire gumballs arrive!
- KRAFT® Deluxe process cheese slices - the first commercially packaged
sliced process cheese - are introduced.
- North Korea invades South Korea. Truman orders the U.S. into the
war. 3 million soldiers and civilians will be killed or wounded before
it ends in 1953.
- 36.3% of all advertising dollars are spent on newspapers - 3.3%
on TV. See chart of all ad dollars.
- The U.S. will import 21,287 passenger cars. That number will climb
to 668,070 by 1959, which will be a stellar year for imports.
- Guys & Dolls opens on Broadway. Buy the Original Cast CD
- Albert Einstein warns against the hydrogen bomb, which President
Truman okays building.
- USSR announces they have developed the atomic bomb.
- Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel and the Port Authority open in NYC
- Swiss parliament refuses voting right for women. A pox on your clocks,
gentleman.
- Pulitzer prize awarded to Rodgers & Hammerstein for South Pacific.
Buy the Original Cast CD
- Hank Snow makes his first appearance on the "Grand Ole Opry" Buy
Snow on CD
- Hopalong Cassidy, starring William Boyd, debuted on TV and 600,000
Hoppy lunchboxes were sold in 1950 alone
- Seeburg begins selling jukeboxes which play 45 RPM records, which
would become the jukebox for soda shop, bowling alleys and bars.
- Nobel for literature awarded to William Faulkner
- Paul Harvey begins his national radio broadcast
- Death penalty abolished in Belgium
- Prince Rainier III becomes ruler of Monaco
- Brinks Robbery in Boston - 11 men - 2.8 million - 17 minutes
- Alger Hiss is convicted.
- Joseph McCarthy begins Soviet witch hunt.
- Leo Fender's guitar company introduced their Broadcaster and Esquire
models, the first mass-produced solid body electric guitars.
- Smokey the Bear gains national popularity.
- Minute Rice is launched with the first consumer advertising ever
put behind rice.
- The Open Kettle, a coffe and donut shop in Quincy Mass. is renamed
Dunkin' Donuts. The first franchise is offerred in 1955.
- PaperMate is the first leak-proof ballpoint pen in 1950.
- Haloid Corporation (later renamed Xerox) develops the first xerographic
copy machine.
- Tennis admits first Black woman, Althea Gibson.
- There are now 2,200 drive-in movie theatres, twice as many as in
1949.
- Diner's Club becomes the first credit card.
- Peanuts debuted on October 2, 1950.
- FBI institutes the 10 Most Wanted list.
- Cartoonist Hank Ketcham created one of the most enduringly irresistible
imps in the world., "Dennis the Menace." By 2000,Today the comic panel
appears in more than 1,200 newspapers in 48 countries and in 19 languages.
- There are 407 beer breweries in operation.
- Nobel peace prize awarded to Ralph J Bunche. This first Black recipient
was undersecretary of the U.N. at the time.
- Telephone Answering Machine created by Bell Laboratories and Western
Electric.
- Mother Teresa founded the first Mission of Charity in Calcutta,
India.
- President Harry Truman ordered the Army to seize control of the
nation's railroads to avert a strike.
- There are 10,500,000 TV sets in 10,400,000 homes.
- The first self-service elevator is installed by Otis Elevator in
Dallas
- There was a 34.3% business failure rate. Chart for 1946-1964
- There were 34,763 motor vehicle related deaths. While in the air,
there were 6 accidents resulting in 144 fatalities.
- Unemployment is 5.3%
- US GNP (Gross National Product) is $288.5 billion