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World War II at Home

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Title: World War II at Home Last modified by: Travis Gower Created Date: 3/6/2003 2:42:39 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) Other titles – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: World War II at Home


1
World War II at Home
2
Military Mobilization
  • 16 million men and women served
  • Selective Service
  • Men aged 18 65 must register
  • _at_ 72,000 conscientious objectors
  • _at_ 5,500 jailed for refusing to enlist
  • Women
  • Over 250,000 served (medical, flying equipment,
    decoding)
  • WACs (Womens Army Corp), WAVES (Women Appointed
    for Voluntary Emergency Service), WAFs (Womens
    Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron)
  • African Americans
  • Over 1 million served in segregated units
  • Other minorities enlisted
  • Native Americans Navajo code talkers
  • Japanese Americans Nisei soldiers

3
Economic Mobilization
  • Office for War Mobilization (OWM)
  • Created to supervise agencies for war production
  • War Production Board (WPB)
  • Regulated the use of raw materials
  • ½ of factory production went to war materials
  • Rosie the Riveter
  • Over 5 million women entered the work force
  • Propaganda films to encourage more Rosies
  • Wages increased (still less than 2/3rds that of
    men), family income swelled
  • Pressure to leave the workforce after the war is
    over
  • Demographic shift to the Sunbelt
  • Population shift to the Southwest and South

4
Economic Mobilization (cont.)
  • Attempts to control inflation
  • War Labor Board created to keep wages to go
    with standard of living increases
  • Office of Price Administration (OPA)
  • Froze prices _at_ March, 1942 levels
  • Rationing everything from cars and tires to
    meat, coffee, and sugar
  • Taxes
  • Taxes pay for most of the war
  • 1939 4 million paid taxes, 1945 50 million
  • National Debt
  • 1941 49 billion 1945 259 billion
  • New Deal WWII warfare welfare state
  • Smith-Connolly Antistrike Act (1943)
  • Govt could seize plants or mines if idled by a
    strike (1943 United Mine Workers strike)

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6
African Americans WWII
  • Massive migration to industrial areas
  • Detroit Race Riot (June, 1943) 47 other cities
    affected by racial violence
  • NAACP grows from 50,000 members to 500,000
    members during the war

7
A. Philip Randolph
  • African-Americans excluded from war-related
    industries (well paying)
  • 3 demands for FDR
  • Equal access to defense jobs
  • Desegregation of the armed forces
  • Desegregation in federal agencies
  • Proposed March on Washington (1941)
  • Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC)
  • FDR issues Executive Order 8802 in June, 1941
  • Govt agencies ended segregation
  • Randolph father of the Civil Rights movement

8
Mexican Americans WWII
  • Bracero Program
  • Need for increased farm production led to
    short-term work permits for Mexican workers
  • Zoot Suit Riots (L.A. 1943)
  • Young Mexican-Americans often attacked in L.A.
  • U.S. sailors attacked zooters while on leave
  • Radio reports blamed the zooters, but real
    issue was racism and need for more housing

9
Interment of Japanese Americans
  • Executive Order 9066 (2/19/1942)
  • FDR proclaims the West Coast as a war theater
  • 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry interned
  • 1/3 Issei foreign born, 2/3 Nisei American
    born
  • Interment Camps
  • 10 camps in 7 states headed by General john
    DeWitt
  • 48 hours to get rid of all belongings (most lost
    _at_ 95)
  • Camps were in desolate areas and conditions were
    harsh

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12
Japanese Relocation
  • Considered but didnt relocate German or Italians
  • Korematsu v. U.S. Supreme Court upholds
    internment but could be free once loyalty
    established
  • Labor business wanted Japanese removed
  • No act of sabotage ever discovered
  • 17,000 Nisei soldiers fought
  • Camps close in March, 1946
  • 1990 Congress pays 20,000 to each internee
    (1.25 billion total)
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