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Summary

In the early 1950s, during a time called the Red Scare, Americans were very afraid that communism might take over their country.  This fear started back in the 1920s but got worse after World War II.  The Cold War between America and the Soviet Union made things tense, especially when the Soviets tested an atomic bomb in 1949.  Many Americans feared that they were losing the Cold War. 

At home, fears grew due to cases of Soviet spying, like the Alger Hiss trial and the execution of the Rosenbergs.  The government also played a role in spreading fear, investigating suspected communists, and the media sensationalised scary stories in the news and movies and even children's comics. 

Many Americans started to supported the Republican Party, which promised to fight communism, showing how big a part of life fear of communism was in the 1950s. 

 

 

Why was there such a fear of communism in early 1950s America?

 

In early 1950s America, in the period of McCarthyism often called the Red Scare, Americans became terrified that communism – which was seen as a direct threat to democracy and the American way of life – was on the verge of taking over. 

The roots of this fear go back to the ‘Red Scare’ of the 1920s, but events following World War II escalated the paranoia.  The Cold War had begun, and events were going against democracy.  In 1949, the Soviet Union had blockaded West Berlin and successfully tested its first atomic bomb, leading to an arms race that made the possibility of nuclear war terrifyingly real.  Also in 1949, communists took over China, and in 1950 North Korea invaded South Korea, almost conquering it.  These events made many Americans believe that communism was spreading rapidly and could soon reach the U.S. 

At home, fears were further stoked by cases of espionage.  Notable examples include Elizabeth Bentley and Whittaker Chambers, both former Soviet spies who accused several government officials of being involved in spying activities.  The case of Alger Hiss (1948), a government official accused of spying for the USSR, and the execution of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg (1953) for leaking nuclear secrets, only deepened the anxiety that communist spies had infiltrated the government. 

The government itself, too, played a role in heightening fears.  The House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) was set up in 1948 to investigate individuals suspected of disloyalty.  The Taft-Hartley Act of 1947 even required union leaders to swear they were not communists, reflecting the suspicion that unions were trying to undermine the country – a suspicion which seemed to be proved by a number of large-scale strikes in 1949. 

The media played a significant role in amplifying the fear.  Sensationalized stories about communist infiltration were common, and the popular culture of the time, including films about alien invasions and communist plots, often mirrored these anxieties.  At home, schoolchildren read comic books warning of the growth of Communism and the danger of a Communist takeover, and at school they practised ‘duck and cover’ in case of a nuclear attack.  The American Legion even staged a mock Communist coup in Mosinee, Wisconsin. 

In this atmosphere, many Americans turned to the more right-wing Republican Party, which highlighted anti-communist fears in the 1952 election.  This political shift, combined with the other factors, created an environment where the fear of communism dominated American life in the early 1950s. 

  

 


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