Soaring
to Prosperity
This story ran in The Seattle Times on August 11,
1996
AFTER A DIFFICULT POSTWAR READJUSTMENT, THE ECONOMY
HIT ITS STRIDE IN THE 1950S, rolling up a 50 percent increase in the gross
national product.
Many
Americans enjoyed this broad national affluence, as real wages and employment
rose despite recessions, strikes and inflation.
Fifties
consumers went on a spending spree, eagerly buying television sets, power
mowers, decorator telephones, poodle skirts, flashy cars and the ubiquitous
barbecue grill.
On New
Year's Day 1956, a Seattle Times front-page story ticked off the state's
economic good news: The 1955 demand for lumber had been solid; plywood and
paper manufacture was thriving; hydroelectric and natural-gas construction
projects rushed ahead to meet demand; Hanford was booming; the aluminum
industry was expanding capacity; the Port of Seattle raced to accommodate
increasing cargo tonnage -- up nearly 40 percent above the previous year. But
Boeing was the real success story.

Above, a B-52 Stratofortress long-range bomber
flies above the clouds. Photo Credit: The Boeing Co.
IN 1956, THE BOEING PAYROLL PUMPED NEARLY $8.5
MILLION into the local economy every
two weeks. About 35,000 King County men and women worked for The Big B
-- slightly more than half of all manufacturing employees in the metropolitan
area. Only curmudgeons fretted about local dependence on one company.
Seattle
was just plain happy to be Boeing's company town, proud of the industry giant
that had grown from modest 1916 beginnings in the old Heath shipyard on
Lake Union.
The Times
provided eager coverage of Boeing's resurgence as a Cold War military
contractor -- for B-47 Stratojet and B-52 Stratofortress jet bombers -- and as
a developer of jetliners for the commercial airlines. Longtime Boeing-watcher
Bob Twiss followed the home-grown success story for Times readers, rooting for
the company all the way. After all, "As Boeing goes," the local joke
ran, "so goes Seattle. And Bellevue. And Bothell. And Renton. And so
forth."
From 1955
on, the race between Boeing 707 Stratoliners and Douglas Aircraft Company DC-8s
to win the commercial jet transport market made monthly headlines in The Times.
In 1959,
1.5 million air travelers passed through Seattle-Tacoma Airport, putting to
rest earlier fears that air travel would remain a luxury and the airport would
be an empty failure. Instead, commercial jet flight was a raging success: Twiss
noted in a 1959 year-end economic review that Boeing had booked orders for
nearly 200 707s.

At right, a Bomarc missile streaked skyward at an
Air Force test center. Photo Credit: The Boeing Co.
PRESIDENT EISENHOWER'S PROPOSED DEFENSE BUDGET FOR
BOEING PROJECTS in 1960 made headlines in Seattle. The contracts totaled more
than $1 billion and included 72 LC-135 jet tanker-transports, 40 B-52H
Stratofortress bombers, a secret number of Superbomarc missiles and nearly
$500,000 for the DynaSoar, Boeing's candidate for the manned space program.
The
aerospace giant's military contracts were a big story, but so was the 707
jetliner. In 1956, Boeing had depended on federal money for
98 percent of its business but in 1960, more than
50 percent of the company's revenue would come from commercial sales.
Outside
the Seattle area, most state residents earned their living in agriculture and
resource-based industries. And those people were doing well, too: In 1959,
Washington wages exceeded $6 billion -- a record to that date.
In
Seattle, local retail sales nearly doubled and the average family income
increased from $5,255 to $7,042 -- a 34 percent jump -- during the boom between
1951 and 1960.
Seattle's
streets and shops were bustling: its theaters, restaurants and cultural
institutions more sophisticated and cosmopolitan. The Alaskan Way viaduct was
completed along the waterfront, and the Washington, Logan and Norton buildings
changed the city's skyline. Seattle had grown north to 145th Street, and new
residential subdivisions followed. New shopping malls, such as Northgate and
Bellevue Square, drew branches of downtown department stores.
Confident, the metropolitan area tackled some of its enduring problems:
the argument over a north-south superhighway through town and another on the
Eastside; the issue of a second floating bridge; cleaning up a polluted Lake
Washington; what to do about King County's antiquated system of government.
There was
even enough optimism to consider holding a world's fair.
Critics
have called these years the Fatuous Fifties, deriding the complacent culture of
materialism, respectability and conformity. But local prosperity didn't just
drive the purchase of decorator phones and big-finned cars -- it encouraged a
surge of civic energy that transformed the city.
Historians Sharon Boswell and Lorraine McConaghy teach at local universities and do research, writing and oral history. Original newspaper graphics courtesy of the Seattle Public Library.