
The Second World War was over. In Britain, the National Health
Service was newly created (1948) and the coal industry and the
railways were nationalised.
Advances in medicine, extensive immunisation programmes and
improvements in housing and hygiene put a spring in everyone's step,
and by 1957, British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan could
truthfully say "most of our people have never had it so
good".
Much of the drudgery of everyday life was removed by a new
sophisticated network of electricity and mod cons in the home, while
the arrival of mass car-ownership brought greater mobility and
independence.
June 2, 1953 marked the dawning of the new Elizabethan age in
Britain. A 25-year-old princess was crowned Queen Elizabeth II
amidst scenes of national celebration. The Coronation was the first
great television event in 20th century Britain with more than twenty
million watching the ceremony on their black and white televisions.
Yet in the early 50s there were few signs of the youthful
explosion that was to emerge in the Swinging
Sixties. Britain was
still a grey country dominated by austerity. Everything was still
rationed, from sweets to shoes, and clothes had to be bought with
coupons saved over many months.
The young found the post-war culture restricting and regimented.
Fathers and elder brothers who had spent several years in the armed
forces returned home and reasserted the old discipline that had been
relaxed while they were away. The sexual permissiveness and
loosening of moral standards that had been a feature of the war
years also ended abruptly when family life resumed.
Young men of the 1950s were confronted by the daunting prospect
of National Service; called up at the age of eighteen to undergo two
years of military training and duty - the first time compulsory
military service had been seen in Britain outside wartime. National
Service eventually became unpopular with the new breed of teenager
and was abolished in 1960.
The first youth explosion was rooted in the growing confidence
and affluence of the young generation. Wages had been gradually
improving since the early 50s and young people were beginning to
enjoy the fruits of their new-found affluence.
The driving force behind the new youth movement was music -
especially the rock 'n' roll music that was emanating from the
United States. It featured electric guitars and was loud, brash and
aggressive. It became the music of choice for a young generation.
To the old this music seemed discordant, disturbing and
dangerously sexual. But the explosive sounds of Elvis Presley and
Bill Haley captured the mood of the young and their yearning for
freedom and excitement.
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