ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

20 jobs popular in the 1950s that are almost gone today

America in the 1950s was a very different place than today.

sock hop 1950s
  • To get a sense of how the economy has changed over the last seven decades, we used Census data to find 20 industries that used to be huge employers in 1950 that are a fraction of their size today.
  • Many of the industries are in manufacturing.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories .

America in the 1950s was a very different place than today.

Pop culture as we know it was just beginning to emerge with widespread adoption of TV. The US had been on the winning side of World War II, and had a much higher share of the global economy than today, with much of the rest of the industrialized world in ruins.

American society was much different in an era before the Civil Rights, gay rights, and feminist movements opened opportunities to wide swaths of the population traditionally denied those opportunities.

ADVERTISEMENT

The US economy has dramatically changed since that time as well. To get a sense of how much things have changed, we found 20 jobs that employed hundreds of thousands of people in 1950 that are only a fraction of that size today.

Using data from the 1950 Census and the 2017 American Community Survey assembled by the Minnesota Population Center's Integrated Public Use Microdata Series project, we looked at what industries had the biggest percent drops in employment between then and now, among industries with at least 100,000 employees in 1950.

For our analysis, we used industries as classified by the Census Bureau in 1950 . Entirely new sectors of the economy, like the modern information technology industry, have emerged since that time as new inventions have taken hold.

Most of the industries on the list are in manufacturing, a sector that has radically transformed over the last 70 years. Other areas, like agriculture, have seen huge changes through technological development, leading to much lower employment.

Here are the industries, along with the number of employees in 1950 and 2017:

ADVERTISEMENT

Reuters

What the industry does: Manufactures tractors and other agricultural equipment.

ADVERTISEMENT

AP

What the industry does: Manufactures products made of rubber.

ADVERTISEMENT

Reuters/Carlos Garcia Rawlins

What the industry does: Sells petroleum products at wholesale to other businesses.

Ron Heflin / AP

ADVERTISEMENT

What the industry does: Sells raw materials produced on farms at wholesale to other businesses.

Reuters/Ilya Naymushin

What the industry does: Produces metal alloys and materials that don't include iron.

ADVERTISEMENT

Justin Sullivan/Getty

What the industry does: Sells fuel and ice to consumers.

ADVERTISEMENT

REUTERS/Olivia Harris

What the industry does: Employs workers like butlers, housekeepers, and cooks in private households.

ADVERTISEMENT

Reuters

What the industry does: Produces food and other crops.

Josef Mohyla/Getty Images

ADVERTISEMENT

What the industry does: Produces lumber from forestry activities.

Hollis Johnson/Business Insider

What the industry does: Cleans or dyes clothing.

ADVERTISEMENT

Anatolii Stepanov / REUTERS

What the industry does: Produces steel and iron alloys and materials.

ADVERTISEMENT

Thomson Reuters

What the industry does: Moves goods and people over bodies of water in ships.

ADVERTISEMENT

Reuters

What the industry does: Covers activities involving producing steel or other iron alloys and materials outside of the blast furnace, steel works, and rolling mills industry.

Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images

ADVERTISEMENT

What the industry does: Manufactures clothing and accessories.

Associated Press

What the industry does: Manufactures tobacco products like cigarettes.

ADVERTISEMENT

Associated Press

What the industry does: Transports goods and people over railroads using trains.

ADVERTISEMENT

Shutterstock

What the industry does: Produces yarn and other textiles.

ADVERTISEMENT

Shoshy Ciment/Business Insider

What the industry does: Produces shoes and other footwear.

Reuters/Laszlo Balogh

ADVERTISEMENT

What the industry does: Mines coal for power generation or other industrial processes.

Bastiaan Beentjes/Getty Images

What the industry does: Manufactures knit clothing and other goods.

ADVERTISEMENT

See Also:

Enhance Your Pulse News Experience!

Get rewards worth up to $20 when selected to participate in our exclusive focus group. Your input will help us to make informed decisions that align with your needs and preferences.

I've got feedback!

JOIN OUR PULSE COMMUNITY!

Unblock notifications in browser settings.
ADVERTISEMENT

Eyewitness? Submit your stories now via social or:

Email: eyewitness@pulse.ng

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT