Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Year 1950
Episode Date: November 7, 2025In the year 1950, the world was halfway through the 20th century. In the 25 years prior, the world had seen the greatest economic downturn in modern history and the greatest war the world had ever ...known. New technologies were being developed, and many previous technologies were making their way into the hands of regular people, radically transforming their lives. On top of all of that, the entire world was about to embark on a total reordering of the geopolitical order. Learn more about the world in the year 1950 and the changes that occurred over the previous 25 years on the 1,950th episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Stash Go to get.stash.com/EVERYTHING to see how you can receive $25 towards your first stock purchase. Newspaper.com Go to Newspapers.com to get a gift subscription for the family historian in your life! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In the year 1950, the world was halfway through the 20th century. In the 25 years prior,
the world had seen the greatest economic downturn in modern history and the greatest war
the world had ever known. New technologies were being developed, and many previous technologies
were making their way into the hands of regular people, radically transforming lives.
And on top of all that, the entire world was about to embark on a total reordering of the geopolitical
order. Learn more about the world in the year 1950 and the changes that the world.
that occurred over the previous 25 years on the 1,950th episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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family and wellness gurus down the right-wing cult spiral in a search for salvation.
My series on the state of the world on anniversary episodes of the podcast is now at 1950.
I began in the year 1500 and made updates every 100 episodes, but once we entered the 20th century,
I had to do it every 25 episodes because the rate of change had become so rapid.
So what happened since 2025?
Not much, just the greatest war the world had ever seen.
scene, which is exactly the same thing I said in the 1925 episode, and a thing called the Great Depression.
I'm not going to spend too much time on the Second World War because it's been the subject of so
many previous episodes of this podcast. Likewise, I'm not going to get into the details of the
Great Depression. Rather, I'm going to focus on how those events and others shape the world
as it was in 1950. There were a few major political changes in Oceana, Latin America, or Africa,
Most colonies in 1925 were still colonies in 1950.
One major exception was South Africa, which became fully independent of Britain in 1934, and implemented its system of apartheid in 1948, which enforced legal racial segregation and a system of legal racial preferences.
Japan, having lost the war, was occupied by the United States, which was to control the country for another two years.
In June of 1950, North Korean forces invaded South Korea, which began to, and then.
the Korean War. In 1949, China became the People's Republic of China, with the Communists
emerging victorious in a civil war with the nationalist forces, who then fled to the island of
Taiwan. Over the past 25 years, a host of countries in Asia actually became independent.
Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria all gained independence after mandates opposed
upon them following the end of the First World War. In one of the first major decisions made
by the United Nations, it approved the creation of the state of Israel in 1948, which
immediately led to war amongst its neighbors the very next day. In Europe, countries in the
East were under Soviet control, with puppet governments having been established after the war.
Iceland became formally free of Denmark in 1944, and Ireland became a republic in 1949.
The big trend of the post-war period was the end of colonization. By 1950, only a few countries had
become independent after having their colonial status lifted, but they were major ones.
In 1946, the Philippines gained independence from the United States.
India, the largest colony in the British Empire, was partitioned into two countries, India and
Pakistan, both of which became independent simultaneously in 1947.
Sri Lanka, formerly known as Ceylon, and Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, both gained
independence in 1948.
Indonesia forcefully gained its independence from Dutch rule and
in 1949 and was formally recognized as an independent nation in 1950.
These were only the first in what would become a flood of newly independent countries
over the next several decades.
Despite the incredible loss of life from the various wars over the last 25 years,
the world grew from roughly 2 billion people in the mid-1920s to about 2.5 billion by 1950.
Population growth accelerated during the last few years in the period due to a decrease in death
rates. Global life expectancy at birth rose from the late 30s in the 1920s to the mid-40s by
1950. However, life expectancy in developed nations was around 65 to 70 years. Gains came from
declines in infant mortality, wider vaccination and sanitation, antibiotics like penicillin
and streptomycin, and better nutrition. The Great Depression and World War II did cause
setbacks in some parts of the world, but overall the trend was upward. Many of the technologies
that had been developed earlier in the 20th century had now become widespread by 1950. In 1925,
most cities in the United States had electricity, but only about 1 in 10 farms did. New Deal
rural electrification programs flipped this ratio. By 1950, approximately 90% of U.S. farms had
access to electricity, and urban coverage was essentially universal. Western Europe's
cities were largely electrified by the late 1930s, with rural areas lagging and electrification
resuming after the war. Japan's urban electrification was high by the late 1930s as well.
Large parts of Asia, Africa, and Latin America still had limited rural access in 1950, although
the grids were expanding. Refrigerators were rare in the mid-1920s, but by 1950, roughly 80%
of U.S. households had one, thanks to reliable compressors and falling prices.
washing machines and vacuums were niche items in homes in the 1920s. By 1950, approximately two-thirds to three-quarters of all U.S. homes owned an electric washer and a vacuum cleaner.
Radio went from a novelty to near universal ownership by 1940. In the United States, passenger cars rose from the low 20 millions in the late 1920s to about 40 million by 1950, with wartime rationing causing a temporary dip. Paved roads,
harvest stations and suburban housing grew accordingly.
The global car fleet expanded from about 30 million in 1930 to approximately 50 million in
1950, as Europe rebuilt production after the war and new assembly plants emerged in Latin America
and parts of Asia.
Economically, the United States accounted for a disproportionately large share of the world's
industrial output in 1950.
Other industrial economies were in ruins or had been exhausted by the war.
The U.S. also ran the gold dollar anchor of the Bretton Wood system, which I covered in a previous
episode. In addition to the economic strength of the U.S., the country was experiencing the beginnings
of what would become known as the Baby Boom, which has impacted American demographics down to
the present day. In Western Europe, recovery accelerated under the Marshall Plan. Politics and
countries like Italy and France were balanced among Christian Democrats, socialist, and communist parties.
The European Convention on Human Rights was signed in 1950, marking a significant milestone in the establishment of a new legal framework.
The end of the war saw an increase in international and multilateral institutions. Most notably, the United Nations was formed in 1945, and the aforementioned Breton Woods Agreement was enacted in 1944.
The first step towards European unity also began in the post-war period.
After two great wars, most European countries were determined never to see another war in Europe again.
The Western Union Military Alliance was formed in 1948, but was replaced by NATO in 1949.
The Organization for European Economic Cooperation was founded in 1948, and the Council of Europe was founded in 1949.
Both of these were precursors to what would become the European community,
later the European Union.
1950 marked the beginning of the Cold War.
This was the conflict that would define most of the rest of the century.
The Berlin airlift in 1948 and 1949 marked the end of cooperation between the Soviet Union
and the Western Allies.
The Soviet Union detonated an atomic bomb in 1949, becoming the second nuclear power after
the United States.
The escalation in the Cold War began with the start of the Korean War, the first major
open conflict of the Cold War.
The first Indochina War began in 1946 between the Vietnamese Communist forces and France,
and this conflict would later evolve into one of the most significant hotspots in the entire history of
the Cold War. The late 1940s also saw the development of several technologies that had existed
by the year 1950, but were not yet widespread or well developed. The electrical numerical integrator
and computer, or ENIAC, was built in 1945, and is considered the first programmable general-purpose
electronic computer. But 1950 other programmable computers had been built. Manchester Baby was
completed in 1948 at the University of Manchester, which was the first computer to electrically store
its programs. Cambridge, England and Cambridge, Massachusetts, both had computers, and the
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Automatic Computer was launched at the University of Melbourne
in 1950. At the time, all of these computers were enormous and inefficient, but they were a precursor
of what was to come.
The transistor was developed in 1947 by a team at Bell Labs, which I covered in a previous
episode. The transistor would replace the vacuum tube and would go on to revolutionize electronics,
and was the basis for the integrated circuit, which would be developed several years later.
Another major technology that was just being rolled out in 1950 was the television.
Philo Farnsworth achieved all electronic image transmission in 1927.
BBC began regular TV service in 1936, and RCA showcased television technology at the 1939
New York World's Fair. After 1945, mass production, standards, and more powerful transmitters
transformed television into a household technology. By 1950, approximately 9% of U.S. households
owned a television, all of which were black and white, was screens ranging from about 10 to 12
inches in diameter. The number one show in 1950 was the Texaco Star Theater airing on NBC,
which achieved a Nielsen rating of about 61.6 during the 1950-51 season. Another major
revolution was about to transform culture and entertainment. The late 1940s saw the recording
of the first songs that could be considered rock and roll, or at least proto-rock and roll.
Good to Rockin' Tonight by Waioni Harris and Boogie Chillin by John Lee Hooker were released in 1948.
Rock the joint by Jimmy Preston, The Fat Man by Fats Domino, and Saturday Night Fish Fry by Lewis Jordan were all released in 1949.
While there's plenty of debate about whether these were early rock and roll songs, they certainly laid the foundation for the rock and roll revolution that would be unleashed in the 1950s.
Magnetic tape, which had been developed in Germany in 1928, was now.
being released for commercial use. The use of magnetic tape for recording music marked a fundamental
leap in the quality of musical recordings. Music recorded on magnetic tape from the early 1950s
can still be found on vinyl or compact disc, whereas lower quality recordings from before this period
are almost never made available. The movie industry was also on the verge of revolution.
While color films had been released as early as the 1930s, they were still rather uncommon. There was also
experimentation with anamorphic lenses and wide-format movies. This combination of color and wide-format
films ushered in a period of high-quality epic films in the 50s and 60s, such as Ben Hur and Lawrence of
Arabia. Still photography was also making massive strides. Photography advanced with 35-millimeter
cameras, coda-chrome color film in 1935, and the instant Polaroid Land camera in 1948.
These advancements made still photography something that most families could now afford so they could capture their memories.
Culturally, Jim Crow law still prevailed in much of the United States, however, the first steps were being taken in the struggle for civil rights.
In 1948, President Truman signed Executive Order 9981, which integrated the United States Armed Forces and abolished discrimination on the base of race, color, religion, or national origin in the military.
The year 1950 was a pivotal time in history.
The completion of the Second World War marked the end of one era and the start of another.
With new technologies and inventions, changes to culture, and a strengthening of the Cold War,
the world would undergo radical changes over the next 25 years.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
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your support helps make this podcast possible.
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