What happened in 1971? - USA
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What happened in 1971? - USA

Apollo 15: James Irwin beside the Lunar Module and Lunar Rover
James Irwin beside the Lunar Module and Lunar Rover. Apollo 15 was the first to use the LRV or Lunar Rover on the Moon Edgar D. Mitchell / NASA, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

We look at events, films, and music from 1971 in the USA.

In the news

  • February 5 - astronauts Edgar Mitchell and Alan Shepard from Apollo 14 walked on the moon.
  • March 1 - a bomb exploded in the Senate Wing of the US Capitol. A radical protest group calling themselves the Weather Underground, or the Weathermen, claimed responsibility.
  • May 30 - the United States launched Mariner 9, an unmanned spacecraft. It was able to send back pictures of Mars.
  • June 17 - the Japanese Foreign Minister, Kiichi Aichi and US Secretary of State, William P Rogers signed a treaty returning Okinawa and other Ryukyu islands to Japan after American occupation in the Second World War. The US retained eighty-eight military installations on the islands.
  • June 30 - The 26th Amendment, which lowered the voting age to eighteen, was ratified. The previous voting age was twenty-one.
  • July 26 - Apollo 15 crewed by David R Scott, James B Irwin and Alfred M Worden was launched. They were the first to drive the Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV or Lunar Rover) on the moon on July 31.
  • September 9 - prisoners at the Attica State Correctional Facility took over part of the jail and held thirty-two guards hostage. On September 13 one thousand New York State Troopers, sheriff deputies and prison officers retook the prison. Forty-three inmates and guards died in the siege.
  • November 13 - Mariner 9 orbited Mars. It was the first man-made satellite to orbit another planet.
  • December 22 - Austrian Kurt Waldheim succeeded U Thant as UN Secretary-General.

Source: Encyclopedia Year Book 1972, published by Grolier

Facts

  • The population of the USA was 207 million in 1971
  • President: Richard Milhous Nixon (Republican)
  • Vice President: Spiro Agnew (Republican)
  • Senate Majority Leader: Mike Mansfield of Montana (Democrat)
  • House of Representatives Majority Leader: Hale Boggs (Democrat)
  • Median family income in 1971 was $10,290 [2]
  • Smoking: in 1971 Americans smoked 533 billion cigarettes. 4,000 for every adult at a cost of $10 billion [1]
  • The best-selling cigarette was Winston made by R J Reynolds [1]
  • Automobiles: 83% of US families owned at least one automobile, 28% owned at least two [3]
  • Pocket calculators went on sale for the first time in the fall of 1971 [4]

Source: Statistical Abstract of the United States 1972, except where another reference is given

Films

The top twenty grossing films released in 1971 were:

  • Fiddler on the Roof
  • Billy Jack
  • The French Connection
  • Summer of '42
  • Diamonds are Forever
  • Dirty Harry
  • A Clockwork Orange
  • Carnal Knowledge
  • The Last Picture Show
  • Bedknobs and Broomsticks
  • Willard
  • The Hospital
  • Klute
  • The Andromeda Strain
  • Big Jake
  • Shaft
  • Nicholas and Alexandra
  • Escape From the Planet of the Apes
  • Le Mans
  • The Million Dollar Duck

Source: Box office report - retrieved from Wayback Machine

Television

All in the Family: Archie Bunker (Carroll O'Connor) and Lionel Jefferson(Michael Evans)
All in the Family was the top-rated US TV show of 1971: Archie Bunker (Carroll O'Connor) and Lionel Jefferson (Michael Evans) CBS Television, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

The top-rated TV shows of the 1971 to 1972 season were:

  • All in the Family
  • The Flip Wilson Show
  • Marcus Welby, MD
  • Gunsmoke
  • The ABC Movie of the Week
  • Sanford and Son
  • Adam-12
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show
  • Hawaii Five-0

Source: Staying Alive - The Life and Times of an American Baby Boomer Part 2:The Serendipitous '70s, by Gene Baumgaertner, published by Trafford Publishing 2011

TV facts

  • 96% of the US population had access to a television set [5]
  • There were 30,300,000 colour TV sets in the US [5]
  • There were 694 TV stations broadcasting in the US in 1971 [6]
  • 8.8% of the population subscribed to cable TV in 1971 [6]

Music

Pop group Three Dog Night
Three Dog Night's single 'Joy to the World' was the best-selling single of 1971 in the USA ABC Television, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

The best-selling pop records of 1971 in the USA were:

  • Joy to the World - Three Dog Night
  • Maggie May - Rod Stewart
  • It's Too Late - Carol King
  • One Bad Apple - Osmonds
  • How Can You Mend a Broken Heart - Bee Gees
  • Knock Three Times - Dawn
  • Brand New Key - Melanie
  • Go Away Little Girl - Donny Osmond
  • Family Affair - Sly & the Family Stone
  • Gypsys, Tramps and Thieves - Cher

Source: USA Top 1000 Singles compiled by Joe Whitburn, published by Guinness in 1986

Sport

Baseball: The Pittsburgh Pirates beat the Baltimore Orioles to win the 1971 World Series.

American Football: The Baltimore Colts beat the Dallas Cowboys to win the fifth Super Bowl on January 17 1971.

Boxing: On June 28 1971 the Supreme Court ruled that Muhammad Ali's conviction for draft-dodging was illegal. Ali failed to defeat Joe Frazier to regain the World Heavyweight title on March 8 1971. Ali regained the Heavyweight title in 1974 after beating George Foreman in the so-called 'Rumble in the Jungle'.

Golf: Lee Trevino won the British, Canadian and US Opens in 1971.

Horse racing: Canonero II won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes in 1971.

Source: Encyclopedia Year Book 1972, published by Grolier

References

[1]'The Guinness Book of Records', published by Guinness Superlatives in 1973, page 152

[2]'Money Income in 1971 of Families and Persons in the United States', published by the US Department of Commerce, July 1973 (P60 No. 83)

[3]'Source: Statistical Abstract of the United States 1972' page 547

[4]'The complete collectors' guide to pocket calculators' by Guy Ball and Bruce Flam, published by Wilson/Barnett Publishing in 1997, page 12

[5]'The Guinness Book of Records', published by Guinness Superlatives in 1973, page 103

[6]'Source: Statistical Abstract of the United States 1972' page 498-9

More on 1971

More on the 1970s

By Steven Braggs, May 2021

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