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The 1940s decade ran from 1940 to 1949.
Events and trends
The 1940s were seen as a transition period between the radical 1930s and the conservative 1950s, which also leads the period to be divided in two halves:
The first half of the decade was dominated by World War II, the widest and most destructive armed conflict in human history. So consequential was this event and its brutal aftermath that it laid the foundation for other major world events and trends for decades to follow. This war was also the first modern civilian war.
The second half marked the beginning of the East-West conflict and the Cold War, together with major social upheaval caused by the destruction of the war, the large number of refugees, and soldiers returning home and demanding government recognition for their sacrifice, especially in colonies of European countries, many of which gained independence.
Technology
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The first nuclear weapon is built and tested in 1945.
- First cruise missile, the V-1 flying bomb (in 1940 or 1942), and the first ballistic missile, the V-2 rocket (in 1942) are invented.
- Colossus, the world's first totally electronic and digital computer is built in 1944.
- Chuck Yeager, a U.S. Air Force pilot, breaks the sound barrier in the Bell X-1 rocket-powered aircraft in 1947.
- Plutonium discovered in 1941 by Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg, Dr. Michael Cefola, Edwin M. McMillan, J. W. Kennedy, and A. C. Wahl.
War, peace and politics
Muslim League's 1940 Lahore Resolution calls for an autonomous Muslim state, eventually leading the formation of Pakistan in the Partition of India.
Nazi Germany loses the Battle of Britain 1940
Nazi Germany invades Denmark, Norway, Benelux, France, and the Soviet Union from 1940-1941.
The United States enter World War II after the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.
Germany and Japan suffer defeats at Stalingrad, El Alamein, and Midway in 1942 and 1943.
D-Day (June 6, 1944)
Germany surrenders May 7, 1945
Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (August 6 and August 9, 1945); Japan surrenders on August 15.
World War II officially ends on September 2, 1945.
The Holocaust (the shoah)
United Nations established in 1945
In 1946, former British PM Winston S. Churchill gives his famous "Iron Curtain" speech with US President Harry S Truman present.
Beginning of the Cold War (generally thought of as somewhere from 1946-1949)
Independence for some former colonies (including India and Pakistan in 1947, Israel in 1948, and Indonesia in 1949)
1948 Arab-Israeli War
The Irish Free State becomes a republic in 1948
NATO founded in 1949
The Chinese Civil War ends in victory for the Communists in 1949. The Nationalists government retreat to Taiwan.
The Berlin blockade in 1948.
Informbiro period in Yugoslavia begins
Truman Doctrine is created.
Soviets test their first nuclear bomb in 1949 (Soviet atomic bomb project). This is seen by some as the beginning of the Cold War.
Culture
Art
There were many changes in film when it came to the 1940s. More women showed up in films, and better storylines and plots began to show up. This also lead into more women turning their interests toward fashion, or at least the women who could afford it. People who had exceptional riches often showed up in films, because they were the ones who actually watched them most regularly. Thus, people who were not rich viewed the films as an amazing treat.
Film
The Philadelphia Story (1940)
Rebecca (1940)
Fantasia (1940)
The Great Dictator (1940)
Pinocchio (1940)
Sergeant York (1941)
Dumbo (1941)
The Wolf Man (1941)
Casablanca (1942)
Road to Morocco (1942)
Bambi (1942)
Lassie Come Home (1943)
The Ox-Bow Incident (1943)
Meet Me in St. Louis (1944)
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo (1944)
A Tree Grows In Brooklyn (1945)
Mildred Pierce (1945)
Anchors Aweigh (1945)
My Darling Clementine (1946)
It's a Wonderful Life (1946)
The Best Years of Our Lives (1946}
Duel in the Sun (1947)
Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
Anna Karenina (1948)
The Treasure of the Sierra_Madre (1948)
The Three Musketeers (1948)
Sands of Iwo Jima (1949)
All the King's Men (1949)
Twelve O' Clock High (1949)
Fashion
Many fashion houses closed during occupation of Paris during World War II, including the Maison Vionnet and the Maison Chanel. Several designers, including Mainbocher, permanently relocated to New York. In the enormous moral and intellectual re-education program undertaken by the French state couture wasn't spared. In contrast to the stylish, liberated Parisienne, the Vichy regime promoted the model of the wife and mother, the robust, athletic young woman, a figure who was much more in line with the new political criteria. Germany, meanwhile, was taking possession of over half of what France produced, including high fashion, and was also considering relocating French haute couture to the cities of Berlin and Vienna, neither of which had any significant tradition of fashion. The archives of the Chambre Syndicale de la Couture were seized, most consequentially the client list. The point of all this was to break up a monopoly that supposedly threatened the dominance of the Third Reich.
Due to the difficult times, the number of models in shows was limited to seventy-five, evening wear was shortened and day wear was much skimpier, made using substitute materials whenever possible. From 1940 onward, no more than thirteen feet (four meters) of cloth was permitted to be used for a coat and a little over three feet (one meter) was all that allowed for a blouse. No belt could be over one and a half inches (four centimeters) wide. Despite this, haute couture tried to keep its flag flying. Humor and frivolity became a way of defying the occupying powers and couture somehow survived. Although some have argued that the reason it endured was because of the patronage of the wives of rich Nazis, in actuality, records reveal that, aside from the usual wealthy Parisiennes, it was the wives of foreign ambassadors, clients from the black market, and a whole eclectic mix of people who carried on to frequent the salons, among whom German women were but a minority.
In spite of the fact that so many fashion houses closed down or moved away during the war, several new houses remained open, including Jacques Fath, Maggy Rouff, Marcel Rochas, Jeanne Lafaurie, Nina Ricci, and Madeleine Vramant. During the Occupation, the only true way for a woman to flaunt her extravagance and add to color to a drab outfit was to wear a hat. In this period, hats were often made of scraps of material that would have otherwise been thrown away, sometimes incorporating butter muslin, bits of paper, and wood shavings. Among the most innovative milliners of the time were Pauline Adam, Simone Naudet, Rose Valois, and Le Monnier.
Paris's isolated situation in the 1940s enabled the Americans to exploit the ingenuity and creativity of their own designers. During the Second World War, Vera Maxwell presented co-ordinates in plain, simply cut outfits and also introduced innovations to men's work clothes. Bonnie Cashin transformed boots into a major fashion accessory, and, in 1944, started to produce original and imaginative sportswear. Claire McCardell, Anne Klein, and Tina Leser formed a remarkable trio of women who were to lay the foundations of American sportswear, ensuring that ready-to-wear wasn't simply thought of as second best, but as an elegant and comfortable way for modern women to dress.
Among young men in the War Years the zoot suit (and in France the zazou suit) became popular. Many actresses of the time, including Rita Hayworth, Katharine Hepburn, and Marlene Dietrich, had a significant impact on popular fashion.
The couturier Christian Dior created a tidal wave with his first collection in February 1947. The collection contained dresses with tiny waists, majestic busts, and full skirts swelling out beneath small bodices, in a manner very similar to the style of the Belle Époque. The extravagant use of fabric and the feminine elegance of the designs appealed greatly to a post-war clientèle and ensured Dior's meteoric rise to fame. The sheer sophistication of the style incited the all-powerful editor of the American Harper's Bazaar, Carmel Snow, to exclaim 'This is a new look !'.
Literature
People
President İsmet İnönü (Turkey)
Prime Minister Winston Churchill (United Kingdom)
Prime Minister Clement Attlee (United Kingdom)
President Franklin D. Roosevelt (United States)
President Harry S. Truman (United States)
Governor Luis Muñoz Marín (Commonwealth of Puerto Rico)
President Getúlio Vargas (Brazil)
President Juan Peron (Argentina)
Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King (Canada)
Chancellor Adolf Hitler (Germany)
Prime Minister Benito Mussolini (Italy)
Sports figures
Alec Bedser
Denis Compton
Don Bradman
Joe Louis
Jackie Robinson
Joe DiMaggio
Keith Miller
Len Hutton
Ray Lindwall
Sammy Baugh
Satchel Paige
Stan Musial
Steve Van Buren
Sugar Ray Robinson
Ted Williams
Jeff Miller
Cool Papa Bell
Entertainers
Cab Calloway
Gary Cooper
Abbott and Costello
Bing Crosby
Marlene Dietrich
Walt Disney
Duke Ellington
Judy Garland
Betty Grable
Cary Grant
Clark Gable
Carl Stuart Hamblen
Rita Hayworth
Katharine Hepburn
Bob Hope
Lena Horne
Veronica Lake
Dorothy Lamour
Vivien Leigh
Carole Lombard
Vera Lynn
Danny Kaye
Gene Kelly
Ginger Rogers
Mickey Rooney
Jimmy Stewart
Spencer Tracy
Lana Turner
John Wayne
Orson Welles
Musicians
Louis Armstrong
Gene Autry
Count Basie
Mills Brothers
Les Brown
Nat King Cole
Perry Como
Bing Crosby
Duke Ellington
Ella Fitzgerald
Dizzy Gillespie
Benny Goodman
Dick Haymes
Betty Hutton
Harry James
Al Jolson
Sammy Kaye
Peggy Lee
Johnny Mercer
Glenn Miller
Charles Mingus
Vaughn Monroe
Charlie Parker
Bud Powell
Max Roach
Artie Shaw
Dinah Shore
Frank Sinatra
Kate Smith
Ink Spots
Ernest Tubb
Hank Williams
Bob Wills
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