1960s Fallout Shelters: Cramped Quarters For Nuclear Families

By | July 19, 2018

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Left: The National Museum of American History's recreation of the interior of a fallout shelter. Right: Model Mary Lou Minor demonstrates a $1250 backyard unit that 'doubles as utility room or guest house' in 1951. Sources: Smithsonian; Bettmann / Getty

Did we need fallout shelters? Cold War tensions were high at the start of the 1960s and many Americans felt as though a nuclear attack on U.S. soil was a very real possibility -- perhaps even imminent. Powerless to stop the super-powers from engaging in nuclear warfare, the average American turned their attention and energy into finding ways to survive if a bomb was dropped. Public drills to prepare citizens for a nuclear attack weren’t enough. So began the practice (and business) of building small bunkers for Americans to huddle in should the Soviets start bombing.

President Kennedy Urged The Building Of Fallout Shelters

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Although President Eisenhower actively promoting the construction of fallout shelters to protect Americans from a nuclear bomb attack during his administration, the idea really caught fire after President John F. Kennedy gave a speech on October 6, 1961. In this speech, Kennedy encouraged all Americans to build bomb shelters in their home, saying “We owe that kind of insurance to our families and our country.” Kennedy even asked Congress to set aside more than $100 million so the country could build a series of public fallout shelters. Congress, instead, voted to allocate $169 million to identify suitable public buildings, erect fallout shelter signs on them, and fully stock them with supplies.