Sounds of Poverty
Shifting
Rock N' Roll
Teenagers
The 60s
100

This economic system operates by landowners letting poor farmers use small areas of their land, and in return the farmers pay rent to the landowners through a share of the crop they cultivate

Sharecropping

100

This movement, occurring between 1910 and 1970, where over six million African Americans from the South headed towards cities including New York, Detroit, Los Angeles, and Chicago in search of a better life 

The Great Migration

100

After his death in 1977, his home Graceland became a spiritual mecca for music fans from all over the world looking to pay homage to the always larger-than-life King of Rock and Roll. 

Elvis Presley

100

The children born during the early years of this postwar era were becoming teenagers by the late 1950s

Baby boom

100

The song and feature film titled "Hard Days Night" was performed by this popular group of musicians

The Beatles

200

This musician is known for his distinctive, raspy growl

Howlin' Wolf

200

This musician recorded “I Be’s Troubled” and “Burr Clover Farm Blues” on the plantation he worked on full time 

Muddy Waters

200

The idea that every person who calls him or herself an American has the opportunity to achieve a better life

American Dream

200

A staff writer for the Vancouver Sun wrote in 1957 when this artist was slated to perform in his town, “If any daughter of mine broke out of the woodshed tonight to see them … I’d kick her teeth in.” 

Elvis Presley

200

The Beatles “arrived” in America, particularly through their launch on this show

The Ed Sullivan Show

300

This musician sang the song "Bridging the Gap", which discussed his Blues influences

Nas

300

These two musicologists travelled throughout the Mississippi Delta to interview locals and survey musical cultures in rural communities 

Alan Lomax and John Work

300

This musician became known as the “Man in Black,” a reference to his dark and somber suits 

Johnny Cash

300

According to a report in the 1955 Saturday Evening Post, this issue perpetrated by teenagers increased by a drastic 45% between 1950 and 1955

Crime

300

In the early to mid 1960s, this "epidemic" siezed the teenage population

Beatlemania

400

Farmers in the south often dealt with this bug destroying their crops

Boll Weevil

400

During much of the 20th century, these were places where many southern African Americans came together during their limited off-hours from work to relax, gamble, dance, and hear music.

Juke Joints

400

This song sprung to the top of the billboard charts because of the highly controversial movie Blackboard Jungle

“Rock Around the Clock”

400

In a public opinion poll referenced by the United States Children’s Bureau in 1960, this issue ranked third behind national defense and world peace as the American public’s greatest concern.

Juvenile delinquency

400

This three day festival happened in August 1969 where an estimated audience of over 400,000 people gathered near Bethel, NY 

Woodstock

500

This natural disaster threatened the already tough lives of Mississippi residents in 1927

The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927

500

This newspaper founded in 1905 served as a major tool of communication within the African-
American community during the Great Migration.

The Chicago Defender 

500

This musician's song “Maybellene,” provides an example of early Rock and Roll 

Chuck Berry

500

Elvis Presley starred in this movie from 1957 that discussed concerns about teenagers in the mid-1950s

Jailhouse Rock

500

Betty Friedan launches the modern feminist movement with her critique of the role of women in society with the publishing of this book

The Feminine Mystique

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