Baby-boom Generation May 2026

: Enrollment nearly doubled, leading to "teaching in shifts" and classes held in barber shops or portable units to handle the overcrowding.

: Families migrated from cities to new suburban developments, sparking a building boom for housing and shopping malls. A Childhood of Freedom baby-boom generation

Growing up in the 1950s and early '60s meant a life lived largely outdoors. : Enrollment nearly doubled, leading to "teaching in

It began just nine months after World War II ended. In 1946, 3.4 million babies were born—a 20% jump from the year before. For nearly two decades, the "cry of the baby" was heard across the land, fueled by a booming postwar economy and a newfound confidence that families could support more children. It began just nine months after World War II ended

Because there were so many of them, the world had to physically change:

The Aftermath: The Last Days of the Baby Boom | by Frank Diana