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United States home front during World War II

The United States home front during World War II supported the war effort in many ways, including a wide range of volunteer efforts and submitting to government-managed rationing and price controls. There was a general feeling of agreement that the sacrifices were for the national good during the war.

United States Home Front
1942–1945
Service on the Home Front by Louis Hirshman and William Tasker.
LocationUnited States
IncludingNew Deal Era
Second Great Migration
President(s)Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Harry Truman
Key eventsAttack on Pearl Harbor
Double V campaign
Rationing
Internment policies
Conscription
G.I. Bill
Chronology

The labor market changed radically. Peacetime conflicts concerning race and labor took on a special dimension because of the pressure for national unity. The Hollywood film industry was important for propaganda. Every aspect of life from politics to personal savings changed when put on a wartime footing. This was achieved by tens of millions of workers moving from low to high productivity jobs in industrial centers. Millions of students, retirees, housewives, and unemployed moved into the active labor force. The hours they had to work increased dramatically as the time for leisure activities declined sharply.

Gasoline, meat, clothing, and footwear were tightly rationed. Most families were allocated 3 US gallons (11 L; 2.5 imp gal) of gasoline a week, which sharply curtailed driving for any purpose. Production of most durable goods, like new housing, vacuum cleaners, and kitchen appliances, was banned until the war ended.[1] In industrial areas housing was in short supply as people doubled up and lived in cramped quarters. Prices and wages were controlled. Americans saved a high portion of their incomes, which led to renewed growth after the war.[2][3]

Controls and taxes edit

Federal tax policy was highly contentious during the war, with President Franklin D. Roosevelt opposing a conservative coalition in Congress. However, both sides agreed on the need for high taxes (along with heavy borrowing) to pay for the war: top marginal tax rates ranged from 81–94% for the duration of the war, and the income level subject to the highest rate was lowered from $5,000,000 to $200,000. Roosevelt tried unsuccessfully, by executive order 9250,[4] to impose a 100% surtax on after-tax incomes over $25,000 (equal to roughly $422,788 today). However, Roosevelt did manage to impose this cap on executive pay in corporations with government contracts.[5] Congress also enlarged the tax base by lowering the minimum income to pay taxes, and by reducing personal exemptions and deductions. By 1944 nearly every employed person was paying federal income taxes (compared to 10% in 1940).[6]

Many controls were put on the economy. The most important was price controls, imposed on most products and monitored by the Office of Price Administration. Wages were also controlled.[7] Corporations dealt with numerous agencies, especially the War Production Board (WPB), and the War and Navy departments, which had the purchasing power and priorities that largely reshaped and expanded industrial production.[8]

 
Sugar rationing

In 1942 a rationing system was begun to guarantee minimum amounts of necessities to everyone (especially poor people) and prevent inflation. Tires were the first item to be rationed in January 1942 because supplies of natural rubber were interrupted. Gasoline rationing proved an even better way to allocate scarce rubber. In June 1942 the Combined Food Board was set up to coordinate the worldwide supply of food to the Allies, with special attention to flows from the U.S. and Canada to Britain. By 1943, government-issued ration coupons were required to purchase coffee, sugar, meat, cheese, butter, lard, margarine, canned foods, dried fruits, jam, gasoline, bicycles, fuel oil, clothing, silk or nylon stockings, shoes, and many other items. Some items, like automobiles and home appliances, were no longer made. The rationing system did not apply to used goods like clothes or cars, but they became more expensive since they were not subject to price controls.

To get a classification and a book of rationing stamps, people had to appear before a local rationing board. Each person in a household received a ration book, including babies and children. When purchasing gasoline, a driver had to present a gas card along with a ration book and cash. Ration stamps were valid only for a set period to forestall hoarding. All forms of automobile racing were banned, including the Indianapolis 500 which was canceled from 1942 to 1945. Sightseeing driving was banned.

Personal savings edit

Personal income was at an all-time high, and more dollars were chasing fewer goods to purchase. This was a recipe for economic disaster that was largely avoided because Americans—persuaded daily by their government to do so—were also saving money at an all-time high rate, mostly in War Bonds but also in private savings accounts and insurance policies. Consumer saving was strongly encouraged through investment in war bonds that would mature after the war. Most workers had an automatic payroll deduction; children collected savings stamps until they had enough to buy a bond. Bond rallies were held throughout the U.S. with celebrities, usually Hollywood film stars, to enhance the bond advertising effectiveness. Several stars were responsible for personal appearance tours that netted multiple millions of dollars in bond pledges—an astonishing amount in 1943. The public paid ¾ of the face value of a war bond and received the full face value back after a set number of years. This shifted their consumption from the war to postwar and allowed over 40% of GDP to go to military spending, with moderate inflation.[9] Americans were challenged to put "at least 10% of every paycheck into Bonds". Compliance was very high, with entire factories of workers earning a special "Minuteman" flag to fly over their plant if all workers belonged to the "Ten Percent Club". There were seven major War Loan drives, all of which exceeded their goals.[10]

Labor edit

The unemployment problems of the Great Depression largely ended with the mobilization for war. Out of a labor force of 54 million, unemployment fell by half from 7.7 million in spring 1940 (when the first accurate statistics were compiled) to 3.4 million by fall of 1941 and fell by half again to 1.5 million by fall of 1942, hitting an all-time low of 700,000 in fall 1944.[11] There was a growing labor shortage in war centers, with sound trucks going street by street begging for people to apply for war jobs.

Greater wartime production created millions of new jobs, while the draft reduced the number of young men available for civilian jobs. So great was the demand for labor that millions of retired people, housewives, and students entered the labor force, lured by patriotism and wages.[12] The shortage of grocery clerks caused retailers to convert from service at the counter to self-service. With new shorter women clerks replacing taller men, some stores lowered shelves to 5 feet 8 inches (1.73 m). Before the war, most groceries, dry cleaners, drugstores, and department stores offered home delivery service. The labor shortage and gasoline and tire rationing caused most retailers to stop delivery. They found that requiring customers to buy their products in person increased sales.[13]

Women edit

 
"Rosie the Riveter", working on an A-31 "Vengeance" dive bomber, Tennessee, 1943.

Women also joined the workforce to replace men who had joined the forces, though in fewer numbers.[citation needed] From 1890-1990, the percentage of married women in the workforce rose from 5% to 60%. Most of this change in workforce participation was during World War II.[14] Roosevelt stated that the efforts of civilians at home to support the war through personal sacrifice was as critical to winning the war as the efforts of the soldiers themselves. "Rosie the Riveter" became the symbol of women laboring in manufacturing. Women worked in defense plants and volunteered for war-related organizations. Women even learned to fix cars and became "conductorettes" for the train. The war effort brought about significant changes in the role of women in society as a whole. When the male breadwinner returned, wives could stop working.

Alice Throckmorton McLean founded the American Women's Voluntary Services (AWVS) in January 1940, 23 months before the United States entered the war. When Pearl Harbor was bombed, the AWVS had more than 18,000 members who were ready to drive ambulances, fight fires, lead evacuations, operate mobile kitchens, deliver first aid, and perform other emergency services.[15] By war's end the AWVS counted 325,000 women at work and selling an estimated $1 billion in war bonds and stamps.[16]

At the end of the war, most of the munitions-making jobs ended. Many factories were closed; others retooled for civilian production. In some jobs, women were replaced by returning veterans who did not lose seniority because they were in service. However, the number of women at work in 1946 was 87% of the number in 1944, leaving 13% who lost or quit their jobs. Many women working in machinery factories and more were taken out of the workforce. Many of these former factory workers found other work at kitchens, being teachers, etc.

The table shows the development of the United States labor force by sex during the war years.[17]

Year Total labor force (*1000) of which Male (*1000) of which Female (*1000) Female share of total (%)
1940 56,100 41,940 14,160 25.2
1941 57,720 43,070 14,650 25.4
1942 60,330 44,200 16,120 26.7
1943 64,780 45,950 18,830 29.1
1944 66,320 46,930 19,390 29.2
1945 66,210 46,910 19,304 29.2
1946 60,520 43,690 16,840 27.8
 
A female welder helping construct the
SS George Washington Carver at the Kaiser Shipyards in Richmond, California, April 1943.

Women also took on new roles in sport and entertainment, which opened to them as more and more men were drafted. The All-American Girls Professional Baseball League was the creation of Chicago Cubs owner Philip Wrigley, who sought alternative ways to expand his baseball franchise as top male players left for military service. In 1943, he created an eight-team league in small industrial cities around the Great Lakes. Night games offered affordable, patriotic entertainment to working Americans who had flocked to wartime jobs in the Midwest hubs of Chicago and Detroit. The league provided a novel entertainment of women playing baseball well while wearing short, feminine uniform skirts. Players as young as fifteen were recruited from white farm families and urban industrial teams. Fans supported the League to the extent that it continued well past the conclusion of the war, lasting through 1953.[18]

Farming edit

 
Victory garden poster

Labor shortages were felt in agriculture, even though most farmers were given an exemption and few were drafted. Large numbers volunteered or moved to cities for factory jobs. At the same time, many agricultural commodities were in greater demand by the military and for the civilian populations of Allies. Production was encouraged and prices and markets were under tight federal control.[19] Between December 1941 and December 1942 it was estimated 1.6 million men & women left agricultural work for military service or to get higher paying jobs in war industries.[20] Civilians were encouraged to create "victory gardens", farms that were often started in backyards and lots. Children were encouraged to help with these farms, too.[21]

The Bracero Program, a bi-national labor agreement between Mexico and the U.S., started in 1942. Some 290,000 braceros ("strong arms", in Spanish) were recruited and contracted to work in the agriculture fields. Half went to Texas, and 20% to the Pacific Northwest.[22][23]

Between 1942 and 1946 some 425,000 Italian and German prisoners of war were used as farm laborers, loggers, and cannery workers. In Michigan, for example, the POWs accounted for more than one-third of the state's agricultural production and food processing in 1944.[24]

Children edit

To help with the need for a larger source of food, the nation looked to school-aged children to help on farms. Schools often had a victory garden in vacant parking lots and on roofs. Children would help on these farms to help with the war effort.[25] The slogan, "Grow your own, can your own", also influenced children to help at home.[26]

Teenagers edit

With the war's ever-increasing need for able-bodied men consuming America's labor force in the early 1940s, industry turned to teen-aged boys and girls to fill in as replacements.[27][28] Consequently, many states had to change their child-labor laws to allow these teenagers to work. The lures of patriotism, adulthood, and money led many youths to drop out of school and take a defense job. Between 1940 and 1944, the number of teenage workers tripled from 870,000 in 1940 to 2.8 million in 1944, while the number of students in public high schools dropped from 6.6 million in 1940 to 5.6 million in 1944, about a million students—and many teachers—took jobs.[29] Policymakers did not want high school students to drop out. Government agencies, parents, school administrations and employers would cooperate in local "Go-to-School Drives" to encourage high school students to stay whether this be part or full-time.[30]

 
Recruitment poster for the Victory Farm Volunteers, 1943.

The Victory Farm Volunteers under the US Crop Corps accepted teenagers from 14–18 to work in agricultural jobs. However some states did lower their age limit with the youngest being 9. At the program's peak in 1944 there would be 903,794 volunteers which made it larger than the amount in the Women's Land Army, foreign migrant workers and the amount of prisoners of war who were laborers. These volunteers were mainly from the cities and urban areas. Volunteers mostly worked for three months in the summer and for a fourth if high schools decided to push starting dates back. To join, a volunteer needed the consent of their parent(s)/guardian(s). There were three types of work environments for the volunteers. The most common (80% of volunteers) involved them being transported to a worksite daily via buses or farming trucks and returned home at night. Another program involved where volunteers lived with farming families and worked alongside them with about 1 in 5 doing this. There was also camps set up which were not very common as only 4% of all VFV volunteers lived there between 1943 & 1945.[20]

Labor unions edit

 
Welder making boilers for a ship, Combustion Engineering Co., Chattanooga, Tennessee. June 1942.

The war mobilization changed the relationship of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) with both employers and the national government.[31] Both the CIO and the larger American Federation of Labor (AFL) grew rapidly in the war years.[32]

Nearly all the unions that belonged to the CIO were fully supportive of both the war effort and of the Roosevelt administration. However, the United Mine Workers, who had taken an isolationist stand in the years leading up to the war and had opposed Roosevelt's reelection in 1940, left the CIO in 1942. The major unions supported a wartime no-strike pledge that aimed to eliminate not only major strikes for new contracts but also the innumerable small strikes called by shop stewards and local union leadership to protest particular grievances. In return for labor's no-strike pledge, the government offered arbitration to determine the wages and other terms of new contracts. Those procedures produced modest wage increases during the first few years of the war but not enough to keep up with inflation, particularly when combined with the slowness of the arbitration machinery.[33]

Even though the complaints from union members about the no-strike pledge became louder and more bitter, the CIO did not abandon it. The Mine Workers, by contrast, who did not belong to either the AFL or the CIO for much of the war, threatened numerous strikes including a successful twelve-day strike in 1943. The strikes and threats made mine leader John L. Lewis a much-hated man and led to legislation hostile to unions.[34]

All the major unions grew stronger during the war. The government put pressure on employers to recognize unions to avoid the sort of turbulent struggles over union recognition of the 1930s, while unions were generally able to obtain maintenance of membership clauses, a form of union security, through arbitration and negotiation. Employers gave workers new untaxed benefits (such as vacation time, pensions, and health insurance), which increased real incomes even when wage rates were frozen.[35] The wage differential between higher-skilled and less-skilled workers narrowed, and with the enormous increase in overtime for blue-collar wage workers (at time and a half pay), incomes in working-class households shot up, while the salaried middle class lost ground.

 
Workers at Consolidated Aircraft, Fort Worth, Texas, 1942.

The experience of bargaining on a national basis, while restraining local unions from striking, also tended to accelerate the trend toward bureaucracy within the larger CIO unions. Some, such as the Steelworkers, had always been centralized organizations in which authority for major decisions resided at the top. The UAW, by contrast, had always been a more grassroots organization, but it also started to try to rein in its maverick local leadership during these years.[36] The CIO also had to confront deep racial divides in its membership, particularly in the UAW plants in Detroit where white workers sometimes struck to protest the promotion of black workers to production jobs, but also in shipyards in Alabama, mass transit in Philadelphia, and steel plants in Baltimore. The CIO leadership, particularly those in further left unions such as the Packinghouse Workers, the UAW, the NMU, and the Transport Workers, undertook serious efforts to suppress hate strikes, to educate their membership, and to support the Roosevelt Administration's tentative efforts to remedy racial discrimination in war industries through the Fair Employment Practices Commission. Those unions contrasted their relatively bold attack on the problem with the AFL.[37]

The CIO unions were progressive in dealing with gender discrimination in the wartime industry, which now employed many more women workers in nontraditional jobs. Unions that had represented large numbers of women workers before the war, such as the UE (electrical workers) and the Food and Tobacco Workers, had fairly good records of fighting discrimination against women. Most union leaders saw women as temporary wartime replacements for the men in the armed forces. The wages of these women needed to be kept high so that the veterans would get high wages.[38]

The South in wartime edit

The war marked a time of dramatic change in the poor, heavily rural South as new industries and military bases were developed by the Federal government, providing badly needed capital and infrastructure in many regions. People from all parts of the US came to the South for military training and work in the region's many bases and new industries. During and after the war millions of hard-scrabble farmers, both white and black, left agriculture for urban jobs.[39][40][41]

The United States began mobilizing for war in a major way in the spring of 1940. The warm sunny weather of the South proved ideal for building 60 percent of the Army's new training camps and nearly half the new airfields, In all 40 percent of spending on new military installations went to the South. For example, sleepy Starke, Florida, a town of 1,500 people in 1940, became the base of Camp Blanding. By March 1941, 20,000 men were constructing a permanent camp for 60,000 soldiers. Money flowed freely for the war effort, as over $4 billion went into military facilities in the South, and another $5 billion into defense plants. Major shipyards were built in Virginia, Charleston, and along the Gulf Coast. Huge warplane plants were opened in Dallas-Fort Worth and Georgia. The most secret and expensive operation was at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, where unlimited amounts of locally generated electricity were used to prepare uranium for the atom bomb.[42] The number of production workers doubled during the war. Most training centers, factories and shipyards were closed in 1945 and the families that left hardscrabble farms often remained to find jobs in the urban South. The region had finally reached the take off stage into industrial and commercial growth, although its income and wage levels lagged well behind the national average. Nevertheless, as George B. Tindall notes, the transformation was, "The demonstration of industrial potential, new habits of mind, and a recognition that industrialization demanded community services."[43][44]

Civilian support for war effort edit

 
A synagogue in New York City remained open 24 hours on D-Day (June 6, 1944) for special services and prayer.

Early in the war, it became apparent that German U-boats were using the backlighting of coastal cities in the Eastern Seaboard and the South to destroy ships exiting harbors. It became the first duty of civilians recruited for the local civilian defense to ensure that lights were either off or thick curtains drawn over all windows at night.

State Guards were reformed for internal security duties to replace the National Guardsmen who were federalized and sent overseas. The Civil Air Patrol was established, which enrolled civilian spotters in air reconnaissance, search-and-rescue, and transport. Its Coast Guard counterpart, the Coast Guard Auxiliary, used civilian boats and crews in similar rescue roles. Towers were built in coastal and border towns, and spotters were trained to recognize enemy aircraft. Blackouts were practiced in every city, even those far from the coast. All exterior lighting had to be extinguished, and black-out curtains placed over windows. The main purpose was to remind people that there was a war on and to provide activities that would engage the civil spirit of millions of people not otherwise involved in the war effort. In large part, this effort was successful, sometimes almost to a fault, such as the Plains states where many dedicated aircraft spotters took up their posts night after night watching the skies in an area of the country that no enemy aircraft of that time could hope to reach.[45]

The United Service Organizations (USO) was founded in 1941 in response to a request from President Franklin D. Roosevelt to provide morale and recreation services to uniformed military personnel. The USO brought together six civilian agencies: the Salvation Army, YMCA, Young Women's Christian Association, National Catholic Community Service, National Travelers Aid Association, and the National Jewish Welfare Board.[46]

Women volunteered to work for the Red Cross, the USO, and other agencies. Other women previously employed only in the home, or in traditionally female work, took jobs in factories that directly supported the war effort or filled jobs vacated by men who had entered military service. Enrollment in high schools and colleges plunged as many high school and college students dropped out to take war jobs.[47][48][49]

Various items, previously discarded, were saved after use for what was called "recycling" years later. Families were requested to save fat drippings from cooking for use in soap making. Neighborhood "scrap drives" collected scrap copper and brass for use in artillery shells. Milkweed was harvested by children ostensibly for lifejackets.[50]

Draft edit

 
A female factory worker in 1942, Fort Worth, Texas. Women entered the workforce because men were drafted into the armed forces.

In 1940, Congress passed the first peace-time draft legislation. It was renewed (by one vote) in summer 1941. It involved questions as to who should control the draft, the size of the army, and the need for deferments. The system worked through local draft boards comprising community leaders who were given quotas and then decided how to fill them. There was very little draft resistance.[51]

The nation went from a surplus manpower pool with high unemployment and relief in 1940 to a severe manpower shortage by 1943. The industry realized that the Army urgently desired production of essential war materials and foodstuffs more than soldiers. (Large numbers of soldiers were not used until the invasion of Europe in summer 1944.) In 1940–43 the Army often transferred soldiers to civilian status in the Enlisted Reserve Corps to increase production. Those transferred would return to work in essential industry, although they could be recalled to active duty if the Army needed them. Others were discharged if their civilian work was deemed essential. There were instances of mass releases of men to increase production in various industries. Working men who had been classified 4F or otherwise ineligible for the draft took second jobs.[citation needed]

In the figure below an overview of the development of the United States labor force, the armed forces and unemployment during the war years.[52]

Year Total labor force (*1000) Armed forces (*1000) Unemployed (*1000) Unemployment rate (%)
1939 55,588 370 9,480 17.2
1940 56,180 540 8,120 14.6
1941 57,530 1,620 5,560 9.9
1942 60,380 3,970 2,660 4.7
1943 64,560 9,020 1,070 1.9
1944 66,040 11,410 670 1.2
1945 65,290 11,430 1,040 1.9
1946 60,970 3,450 2,270 3.9

One contentious issue involved the drafting of fathers, which was avoided as much as possible. The drafting of 18-year-olds was desired by the military but vetoed by public opinion. Racial minorities were drafted at the same rate as Whites and were paid the same. The experience of World War I regarding men needed by industry was particularly unsatisfactory—too many skilled mechanics and engineers became privates (there is a possibly apocryphal story of a banker assigned as a baker due to a clerical error, noted by historian Lee Kennett in his book "G.I.") Farmers demanded and were generally given occupational deferments (many volunteered anyway, but those who stayed at home lost postwar veteran's benefits.)

Later in the war, in light of the tremendous amount of manpower that would be necessary for the invasion of France in 1944, many earlier deferment categories became draft eligible.

Religion edit

In the 1930s, pacifism was a very strong force in most of the Protestant churches. Only a minority of religious leaders, typified by Reinhold Niebuhr, paid serious attention to the threats to peace posed by Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, or militaristic Japan. After Pearl Harbor in December 1941, practically all the religious denominations gave some support to the war effort, such as providing chaplains. Typically, church members sent their sons into the military without protest, accepted shortages and rationing as a war necessity, purchased war bonds, working munitions industries, and prayed intensely for safe return and for victory. Church leaders, however, were much more cautious while holding fast to the ideals of peace, justice and humanitarianism, and sometimes criticizing military policies such as the bombing of enemy cities. They sponsored 10,000 military chaplains, and set up special ministries in and around military bases, focused not only on soldiers but their young wives who often followed them. The mainstream Protestant churches supported the "Double V" campaign of the black churches to achieve victory against the enemies abroad, and victory against racism on the home front. However, there was little religious protest against the incarceration of Japanese on the West Coast or against segregation of Blacks in the services. The intense moral outrage regarding the Holocaust largely appeared after the war ended, especially after 1960. Many church leaders supported studies of postwar peace proposals, typified by John Foster Dulles, a leading Protestant layman and a leading adviser to top-level Republicans. The churches promoted strong support for European relief programs, especially through the United Nations.[53][54]

Pacifism edit

The major churches showed much less pacifism than in 1914. The pacifist churches such as the Quakers and Mennonites were small but maintained their opposition to military service, though many young members, such as Richard Nixon voluntarily joined the military. Unlike in 1917–1918, the positions were generally respected by the government, which set up non-combat civilian roles for conscientious objectors. The Church of God had a strong pacifist element reaching a high point in the late 1930s. This small Fundamentalist Protestant denomination regarded World War II as a just war because America was attacked.[55] Likewise, the Quakers generally regarded World War II as a just war and about 90% served, although there were some conscientious objectors.[56] The Mennonites and Brethren continued their pacifism, but the federal government was much less hostile than in the previous war. These churches helped their young men to both become conscientious objectors and to provide valuable service to the nation. Goshen College set up a training program for unpaid Civilian Public Service jobs. Although young women pacifists were not eligible for the draft, they volunteered for unpaid Civilian Public Service jobs to demonstrate their patriotism; many worked in mental hospitals.[57] The Jehovah's Witness denomination, however, refused to participate in any forms of service, and thousands of its young men refused to register and went to prison.[58]

As part of the 1940 Selective Service and Training Act, the Civilian Public Service would be formed for conscientious objectors to do work considered to be of "national importance". What type of work varied based on the location of the camps and what was needed.[59] Overall, about 43,000 conscientious objectors (COs) refused to take up arms. About 6,000 COs went to prison, especially the Jehovah's Witnesses. About 12,000 served in Civilian Public Service (CPS)—but never received any veterans benefits. About 25,000 or more performed noncombatant jobs in the military, and did receive postwar veterans benefits.[60][61]

A rare but notable example of pacifism from within the government came from Jeannette Rankin's opposition to the war. Rankin voted against the war particularly because she saw women and peace to be 'inseparable',[62] and even actively encouraged women to do more to prevent the war in America.[63]

Suspected disloyalty edit

Civilian support for the war was widespread, with isolated cases of draft resistance. The F.B.I. was already tracking elements that were suspected of loyalty to Germany, Japan, or Italy, and many were arrested in the weeks after the attack on Pearl Harbor. 7,000 German and Italian aliens (who were not U.S. citizens) were moved back from the West Coast, along with some 100,000 of Japanese descent. Some enemy aliens were held without trial during the entire war. The U.S. citizens accused of supporting Germany were given public trials, and often were freed.[64][65][66]

Population movements edit

There was large-scale migration to industrial centers, especially the West Coast. Millions of wives followed their husbands to military camps; for many families, especially from farms, the moves were permanent. One 1944 survey of migrants in Portland, Oregon and San Diego found that three quarters wanted to stay after the war.[67] Many new military training bases were established or enlarged, especially in the South. Large numbers of African Americans left the cotton fields and headed for the cities. Housing was increasingly difficult to find in industrial centers, as there was no new non-military construction.

Transportation edit

 
Women cycling in Central Park in New York City, September 1942. Many Americans during World War 2 would end up bicycling instead of driving.

During the war, the Office of Defense Transportation (ODT) would be created to help regulate transportation. During the war people would reduce travelling for personal reasons. Those that drove cars would do less and carpool. People would end up walking and bicycling more often while bus and rail usages would increase to levels that were never seen until that point.[68]

When the United States entered World War II, it was a vastly motorized country as about 85% of all passenger travel came from private cars while all other forms of mass transit made up about 14% of passenger travel. Commuting by car would be limited by the ODT through car, tire and gasoline rationing, banning pleasure driving, regulating the movement of commercial vehicles, establishing a national 35 miles per hour (56 km/h) speed limit along with public campaigns and carpooling programs. What was defined as pleasure driving was ambiguous and the policy banning it was unpopular. The newly established speed limit was enforced by state and local level officials. Exemptions were made to the national speed limit for military and emergencies vehicles that were on duties that required speedier travel times.[68] During the war, taxis were also regulated by the ODT.[69]

Railroads previously saw a decline in travel during the 1920s and 30s with World War 2 reversing this decline as the amount of passenger travel dramatically increased. This gain in railroad travel largely came from soldiers who were travelling. During the war 43 million soldiers were transported at an average of 1 million per month.[69]

In 1941 prior to the United States entering the war, 3.4 million passengers were transported both across the Atlantic Ocean and throughout the United States. Many airlines ended up cancelling their regular flights and turned over the 200 out of 360 airlines to the military,[69] which would be placed under the Air Transport Command.[70] During the war "casual" air travel would practically disappear in the United States.[71]

Racial tensions edit

The large-scale movement of black Americans from the rural South to urban and defense centers in the North and the West (and some in the South) during the Second Great Migration led to local confrontations over jobs and housing shortages. The cities were relatively peaceful; much-feared large-scale race riots did not happen, but there was nevertheless violence on both sides, as in the 1943 race riot in Detroit and the anti-Mexican Zoot Suit Riots in Los Angeles in 1943.[72] The "zoot suit" was a highly conspicuous costume worn by Mexican American teenagers in Los Angeles. As historian Roger Bruns notes, "the Zoot suit also represented a stark visual expression of culture for Mexican Americans, about making a statement—a mark of defiance against the place in society in which they found themselves." They gained admiration from within their in-group, and "disgust and ridicule from others, especially the Anglos."[73]

Role of women edit

 
Riveting team working on the cockpit shell of a C-47 transport at the plant of North American Aviation. Office of War Information photo by Alfred T. Palmer, 1942.
 
Woman aircraft worker checking assemblies. California, 1942.
 
Woman standing next to a wide range of tire sizes required by military aircraft.

Standlee (2010) argues that during the war the traditional gender division of labor changed somewhat, as the "home" or domestic female sphere expanded to include the "home front". Meanwhile, the public sphere—the male domain—was redefined as the international stage of military action.[74]

Employment edit

Wartime mobilization drastically changed the sexual divisions of labor for women, as young able-bodied men were sent overseas and wartime manufacturing production increased. Throughout the war, according to Susan Hartmann (1982), an estimated 6.5 million women entered the labor force. Women, many of whom were married, took a variety of paid jobs in a multitude of vocational jobs, many of which were previously exclusive to men. The greatest wartime gain in female employment was in the manufacturing industry, where more than 2.5 million additional women represented an increase of 140 percent by 1944.[75] This was catalyzed by the "Rosie the Riveter" phenomenon.

The composition of the marital status of women who went to work changed considerably throughout the war. One in every ten married women entered the labor force during the war, and they represented more than three million of the new female workers, while 2.89 million were single and the rest widowed or divorced. For the first time in the nation's history, there were more married women than single women in the female labor force. In 1944, thirty-seven percent of all adult women were reported in the labor force, but nearly fifty percent of all women were employed at some time during that year at the height of wartime production.[75] In the same year the unemployment rate hit an all-time historical low of 1.2%.[76]

According to Hartmann (1982), the women who sought employment, based on various surveys and public opinion reports at the time suggests that financial reasoning was the justification for entering the labor force; however, patriotic motives made up another large portion of women's desires to enter. Women whose husbands were at war were more than twice as likely to seek jobs.[75]

Fundamentally, women were thought to be taking work defined as "men's work;" however, the work women did was typically catered to specific skill sets management thought women could handle. Management would also advertise women's work as an extension of domesticity.[77] For example, in a Sperry Corporation recruitment pamphlet the company stated, "Note the similarity between squeezing orange juice and the operation of a small drill press." A Ford Motor Company at Willow Run bomber plant publication proclaimed, "The ladies have shown they can operate drill presses as well as egg beaters." One manager was even stated saying, "Why should men, who from childhood on never so much as sewed on buttons be expected to handle delicate instruments better than women who have plied embroidery needles, knitting needles, and darning needles all their lives?"[77] In these instances, women were thought of and hired to do jobs management thought they could perform based on sex-typing.

Following the war, many women left their jobs voluntarily. One Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant (formally Twin Cities Ordnance Plant) worker in New Brighton, Minnesota confessed, "I will gladly get back into the apron. I did not go into war work with the idea of working all my life. It was just to help out during the war."[78] Other women were laid off by employers to make way for returning veterans who did not lose their seniority due to the war.

There are a few examples of reluctance of women to take on wartime jobs. For example, due to labour shortages the American government had to actively promote the war to civilians and the War Manpower Commission used propaganda to sell the war to American women. There was a change in attitudes regarding women in employment in wartime America, and the government started to promote women in work as part of nature, and those that resisted or were reluctant to find work were slackers.[79]

By the end of the war, many men who entered into the service did not return. This left women to take up the sole responsibility of the household and provide economically for the family.

Nursing edit

Nursing became a highly prestigious occupation for young women. A majority of female civilian nurses volunteered for the Army Nurse Corps or the Navy Nurse Corps. These women automatically became officers.[80] Teenaged girls enlisted in the Cadet Nurse Corps. To cope with the growing shortage on the homefront, thousands of retired nurses volunteered to help out in local hospitals.[81][82]

Volunteer activities edit

 
What Can I Do? The Citizen's Handbook for War U.S. Office of Civilian Defense 1942

Women staffed millions of jobs in community service roles, such as nursing, the USO,[46] and the Red Cross.[83] Unorganized women were encouraged to collect and turn in materials that were needed by the war effort. Women collected fats rendered during cooking, children formed balls of aluminum foil they peeled from chewing gum wrappers and also created rubber band balls, which they contributed to the war effort. Hundreds of thousands of men joined civil defense units to prepare for disasters, such as enemy bombing.

The Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) mobilized 1,000 civilian women to fly new warplanes from the factories to airfields located on the east coast of the U.S. This was historically significant because flying a warplane had always been a male role. No American women flew warplanes in combat.[84]

Baby boom edit

Marriage and motherhood came back as prosperity empowered couples who had postponed marriage. The birth rate started shooting up in 1941, paused in 1944–45 as 12 million men were in uniform, then continued to soar until reaching a peak in the late 1950s. This was the "Baby Boom".

In a New Deal-like move, the federal government set up the "EMIC" program that provided free prenatal and natal care for the wives of servicemen below the rank of sergeant.

Housing shortages, especially in the munitions centers, forced millions of couples to live with parents or in makeshift facilities. Little housing had been built in the Depression years, so the shortages grew steadily worse until about 1949 when a massive housing boom finally caught up with demand. (After 1944 much of the new housing was supported by the G.I. Bill.)

Federal law made it difficult to divorce absent servicemen, so the number of divorces peaked when they returned in 1946. In long-range terms, divorce rates changed little.[45]

Housewives edit

 
A World War II American home front diorama, depicting a woman and her daughter, at the Audie Murphy American Cotton Museum

Juggling their roles as mothers due to the Baby Boom and the jobs they filled while the men were at war, women strained to complete all tasks set before them. The war caused cutbacks in automobile and bus service and migration from farms and towns to munitions centers. Those housewives who worked found the dual role difficult to handle.

Stress came when sons, husbands, fathers, brothers, and fiancés were drafted and sent to faraway training camps, preparing for a war in which nobody knew how many would be killed. Millions of wives tried to relocate near their husbands' training camps.[45]

Racial politics of the war edit

Immigration policies during and after World War II edit

During World War II the trend in immigration policies was both more and less restrictive. The United States immigration policies focused more on national security and were driven by foreign policy imperatives.[85] Legislation such as the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 was finally repealed. This Act was the first law in the United States that excluded a specific group—the Chinese—from migrating to the United States.[85] But during World War II, with the Chinese as allies, the United States passed the Magnuson Act, also known as the Chinese Exclusion Repeal Act of 1943. There was also the Nationality Act of 1940, which clarified how to become and remain a citizen.[85] Specifically, it allowed immigrants who were not citizens, like the Filipinos or those in the outside territories to gain citizenship by enlisting in the army. In contrast, the Japanese and Japanese-Americans were subject to internment in the U.S. There was also legislation like the Smith Act, also known as the Alien Registration Act of 1940, which required indicted communists, anarchists, and fascists. Another program was the Bracero Program, which allowed over two decades, nearly 5 million Mexican workers to come and work in the United States.[85]

When World War II broke out in 1939, a common belief spread that Germany was planting spies and saboteurs in the US under the guise of immigrants. American consuls under the encouragement of US Assistant Secretary of State Breckinridge Long who was the head of visa related affairs in the US State Department to screen visa applicants so much to the point that few could ever pass "the endless criteria to prove they were not 'likely to become a public charge.'" Long was described as being anti-Semitic [86] and is credited with making it harder for Jewish refugees to come to the United States.[87][88]

After World War II, there was also the Truman Directive of 1945, which did not allow more people to migrate but did use the immigration quotas to let in more displaced people after the war.[89] There was also the War Brides Act of 1945, which allowed spouses of US soldiers to get an expedited path towards citizenship. In contrast, the 1952 Immigration and Nationality Act, also known as the McCarran-Walter Act, turned away migrants based not on their country of origin but rather whether they are moral or diseased.[90]

Repatriation of Americans abroad edit

When World War II began in Europe during 1939, the United States would attempt to repatriate approximately 100,000 Americans who were in Europe. The Special Division was created within the US State Department to handle matters involving the war and giving assistance to Americans who were abroad and being repatriated with Breckinridge Long being given responsibility of the Special Division. The US government would end up chartering 6 ships from United States Lines to repatriate Americans. On November 4, 1939 the Neutrality Act was signed into law which banned American ships from traveling to "'states engaged in armed conflict.'" and by early November 75,000 Americans had been repatriated from Europe.[91]

Internment edit

In 1942 the War Department demanded that all enemy nationals be removed from war zones on the West Coast. The question became how to evacuate the estimated 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry living on the Pacific Coast of the continental United States. Roosevelt looked at the secret evidence available to him:[92] the Japanese in the Philippines had collaborated with the Japanese invasion troops; most of the adult Japanese in California had been strong supporters of Japan in the war against China. There was evidence of espionage compiled by code-breakers that decrypted messages to Japan from agents in North America and Hawaii before and after the attack on Pearl Harbor. These MAGIC cables were kept a secret from all but those with the highest clearance, such as Roosevelt. On February 19, 1942, Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 which set up designated military areas "from which any or all persons may be excluded." The most controversial part of the order included American born children and youth who had dual U.S. and Japanese citizenship.

In February 1943, when activating the 442nd Regimental Combat Team—a unit composed mostly of American-born American citizens of Japanese descent living in Hawaii—Roosevelt said, "No loyal citizen of the United States should be denied the democratic right to exercise the responsibilities of his citizenship, regardless of his ancestry. The principle on which this country was founded and by which it has always been governed is that Americanism is a matter of the mind and heart; Americanism is not, and never was, a matter of race or ancestry." In 1944, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the legality of the executive order in the Korematsu v. United States case. The executive order remained in force until December when Roosevelt released the Japanese internees, except for those who announced their intention to return to Japan.

Fascist Italy was an official enemy, and citizens of Italy were also forced away from "strategic" coastal areas in California. Altogether, 58,000 Italians were forced to relocate. They relocated on their own and were not put in camps. Known spokesmen for Benito Mussolini were arrested and held in prison. The restrictions were dropped in October 1942, and Italy became a co-belligerent of the Allies in 1943. In the east, however, the large Italian populations of the northeast, especially in munitions-producing centers such as Bridgeport and New Haven, faced no restrictions and contributed just as much to the war effort as other Americans.

FEPC edit

The Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC) was a federal executive order requiring companies with government contracts not to discriminate based on race or religion. It assisted African Americans in obtaining defense industry jobs during the second wave of the Great Migration of southern blacks to Northern and Western war production and urban centers. Under pressure from A. Philip Randolph's growing March on Washington Movement, on June 25, 1941, President Roosevelt created the Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC) by signing Executive Order 8802. It said, "there shall be no discrimination in the employment of workers in defense industries or government because of race, creed, color, or national origin". In 1943 Roosevelt greatly strengthened FEPC with a new executive order, #9346. It required that all government contracts have a non-discrimination clause.[93] FEPC was the most significant breakthrough ever for Blacks and women on the job front. During the war, the federal government operated airfields, shipyards, supply centers, ammunition plants, and other facilities that employed millions. FEPC rules applied and guaranteed equality of employment rights. These facilities shut down when the war ended. In the private sector, the FEPC was generally successful in enforcing non-discrimination in the North and West but did not attempt to challenge segregation in the South, and in the border region, its intervention led to hate strikes by angry white workers.[94]

African Americans and the Double V campaign edit

 
Participants in the Double V campaign, 1942. From the collection of the National Archives and Records Administration.

The African American community in the United States resolved on a Double V campaign: victory over fascism abroad, and victory over discrimination at home. During the second phase of the Great Migration, five million African-Americans relocated from rural and poor Southern farms to urban and munitions centers in Northern and Western states in search of racial, economic, social, and political opportunities. Racial tensions remained high in these cities, particularly in overcrowding in housing as well as competition for jobs. As a result, cities such as Detroit, New York, and Los Angeles experienced race riots in 1943, leading to dozens of deaths.[95] Black newspapers created the Double V campaign to build black morale and head off radical action.[96]

Most black women had been farm laborers or domestics before the war.[97] Working with the federal Fair Employment Practices Committee, the NAACP, and CIO unions, these Black women fought a "Double V campaign"—fighting against the Axis abroad and restrictive hiring practices at home. Their efforts redefined citizenship, equating their patriotism with war work, and seeking equal employment opportunities, government entitlements, and better working conditions as conditions appropriate for full citizens.[98] In the South, black women worked in segregated jobs; in the West and most of the North, they were integrated. However, wildcat strikes erupted in Detroit, Baltimore, and Evansville, Indiana where white migrants from the South refused to work alongside black women.[99][100]

Racism in propaganda edit

Pro-American media during the war tended to portray the Axis powers in a negative light.

 
With the war in full swing, patriotically-themed comic books were an important source of propaganda.

Germans were portrayed as weak, barbaric, or stupid, and were heavily associated with Nazism and Nazi imagery. For example, the comic book Captain America No. 1 features the titular superhero punching Hitler. Similar anti-German sentiments existed in cartoons as well. The Popeye cartoon, Seein' Red, White, 'N' Blue (aired on February 19, 1943), ends with Uncle Sam punching a sickly-looking Hitler. In the Donald Duck cartoon Der Fuehrer's Face, Donald Duck is portrayed as a Nazi living in Germany, where the Nazi war effort is heavily satirized and caricatured.[101]

American media portrayed the Japanese negatively as well. While attacks on Germans were generally focused on high-level Nazi officials such as Hitler, Himmler, Goebbels, and Göring, the Japanese were targeted more broadly. Portrayals of the Japanese ranged from showing them being vicious and feral, as on the cover of Marvel Comics' Mystery Comics no. 32, to mocking their physical appearance and speech patterns. In the Looney Tunes cartoon Tokio Jokio (aired May 13, 1943), the Japanese people are all shown to be dim-witted, obsessed with being polite, cowardly, and physically short with buckteeth, big lips, squinty eyes, and glasses. The entire cartoon is also narrated in broken English, with the letter "R" often replacing "L" in pronunciation of words, a common stereotype.[102] Japanese slurs were commonly used, such as "Jap", "monkey face", and "slanty eyes".[103][104] These stereotypes are also seen in Theodor Geisel's comics created during the Second World War.[105]

Wartime politics edit

Prewar background edit

When World War 2 began, the United States was initially neutral until the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Polling done immediately after the war found over 90% opposed entering the war.[106] However, as time went on public opinion began to shift toward joining the war.[107] The most notable non-interventionist group was the America First Committee[106] which was formed in September 1940. Another smaller non-interventionist group was Keep America Out of War Congress (originally known as the Keep America Out of War Committee) or KAOWC which was a socialist-pacifist organization formed in March 1938 lasting until the Attack on Pearl Harbor.[108] With regards for pro-interventionist forces, one organization was the Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies (CDAAA) which was formed in May 1940.[106] After the attack on Pearl Harbor, the United States joined the war and this practically ended any debate about entering the war.[107]

Roosevelt easily won the bitterly contested 1940 election, but the Conservative coalition maintained a tight grip on Congress regarding taxes and domestic issues. Wendell Willkie, the defeated GOP candidate in 1940, became a roving ambassador for Roosevelt. After Vice President Henry A. Wallace became enmeshed in a series of squabbles with other high officials, Roosevelt stripped him of his administrative responsibilities and dropped him from the 1944 ticket. Roosevelt in cooperation with big-city party leaders replaced Wallace with Missouri Senator Harry S. Truman. Truman was best known for investigating waste, fraud, and inefficiency in wartime programs.[109]

Wartime events edit

Despite conspiracy theories saying FDR would cancel the 1942 elections, they went ahead as they previously had prior to the war.[110] Among the 80 million men and women eligible to vote, only 28 million did so. The election would not go well for FDR and his party as they lost 7 seats in the Senate and 47 in the House of Representatives; with a Conservative coalition of Republicans and Southern Democrats taking control of both houses on domestic issues. Reducing the draft age to 18, regulations & restrictions from the war along with rationing and a drift away from the New Deal are credited with hurting the Democrats that year.[109]

In the 1944 presidential election, Roosevelt would end up defeating Thomas Dewey who came from the conservative wing of the Republican Party in a close election. Several Republicans would run for the presidential nomination which were: Wendell Willkie, New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey and Ohio Governor John W. Bricker. Dewey would win the nomination selecting Bricker as his running mate. Willkie would mobilize liberal Republicans while Dewey and Bricker attracted Republicans from the conservative bloc of the party. Campaigning would carry out during the 1944 presidential election just like in previous ones.[109][111]

 
A soldier sealing his ballot, October 1944

Voting edit

During World War II, traditional means of voting were unavailable to soldiers drafted into the military along with women serving in auxiliary corps or volunteer organizations like the Red Cross; so instead those working/serving away from home had to cast absentee ballots if they chose to vote. Many states during the war did not have absentee voting laws and those that did, did not take into account the circumstance generated by the war. To solve this issue with absentee voting, US Congress would pass the 1942 and later 1944 Soldier Voting Acts.[112]

The Soldier Voting Act of 1942 would be enacted on September 16, 1942 allowing for men and women serving the country to cast an absentee ballot if they still lived in the United States. It would disregard any state voting registration requirement and prohibited the use of poll taxes for those covered by the act. However, turnout was low in the 1942 elections and of the 4 million men serving in the military along with "tens of thousands of women" 28,000 absentee ballots were cast making this a less than 1% turnout rate for those in the armed forces. Also because of the timing of the act, states did not have much time to prepare ballots. The Soldier Voting Act of 1944 would pass in April 1944. As part of the act a federal ballot was created that allowed for states that did not have adequate voting mechanisms and the act encouraged states to amend absentee voting laws. The 1944 elections did see a significant increase in the amount of absentee ballots cast by soldiers with an estimated 3.4 million absentee votes being cast or about 25% of those in the armed forces casting an absentee ballot.[112]

Propaganda and culture edit

 
Rural school children in front of homefront posters in San Augustine County, Texas. 1943

Patriotism became the central theme of advertising throughout the war, as large scale campaigns were launched to sell war bonds, promote efficiency in factories, reduce ugly rumors, and maintain civilian morale. The war consolidated the advertising industry's role in American society, deflecting earlier criticism.[113] The media cooperated with the federal government in presenting the official view of the war. All movie scripts had to be pre-approved.[114] For example, there were widespread rumors in the Army to the effect that people on the homefront were slacking off. A Private SNAFU film cartoon (released to soldiers only) belied that rumor.[115] Tin Pan Alley produced patriotic songs to rally the people.[116]

Posters edit

 
Fool the Axis Use Prophylaxis poster. 1942, Philadelphia
 
Government poster showing a friendly Soviet soldier, 1942

Posters helped to mobilize the nation. Inexpensive, accessible, and ever-present, the poster was an ideal agent for making war aims the personal mission of every citizen. Government agencies, businesses, and private organizations issued an array of poster images linking the military front with the home front—calling upon every American to boost production at work and home. Some resorted to extreme racial and ethnic caricatures of the enemy, sometimes as hopelessly bumbling cartoon characters, sometimes as evil, half-human creatures.[117]

Bond drives edit

A strong aspect of American culture then as now was a fascination with celebrities, and the government used them in its eight war bond campaigns that called on people to save now (and redeem the bonds after the war, when houses, cars, and appliances would again be available).[118] The War Bond drives helped finance the war. Americans were challenged to put at least 10% of every paycheck into bonds.[119] Compliance was high, with entire workplaces earning a special "Minuteman" flag to fly over their plant if all workers belonged to the "Ten Percent Club".[120]

Hollywood edit

Hollywood studios also went all-out for the war effort, as studios encouraged their stars (such as Clark Gable and James Stewart) to enlist. Hollywood had military units that made training films—Ronald Reagan narrated many of them. Nearly all of Hollywood made hundreds of war movies that, in coordination with the Office of War Information (OWI), taught Americans what was happening and who the heroes and the villains were. Ninety million people went to the movies every week.[121] Some of the most highly regarded films during this period included Casablanca, Mrs. Miniver, Going My Way, and Yankee Doodle Dandy. Even before active American involvement in the war, the popular Three Stooges comic trio were lampooning the Nazi German leadership, and Nazis in general, with a number of short subject films, starting with You Nazty Spy! released in January 1940 - the very first Hollywood film of any length to satirize Hitler and the Nazis[122] - nearly two years before the United States was drawn into World War II.

Cartoons and short subjects were a major sign of the times, as Warner Brothers Studios and Disney Studios gave unprecedented aid to the war effort by creating cartoons that were both patriotic and humorous, and also contributed to remind movie-goers of wartime activities such as rationing and scrap drives, war bond purchases, and the creation of victory gardens. Warner shorts such as Daffy - The Commando, Draftee Daffy, Herr Meets Hare, and Russian Rhapsody are particularly remembered for their biting wit and unflinching mockery of the enemy (particularly Adolf Hitler, Hideki Tōjō, and Hermann Göring). Their cartoons of Private Snafu, produced for the military as "training films", served to remind many military men of the importance of following proper procedure during wartime, for their safety. MGM also contributed to the war effort with slyly pro-US short cartoon The Yankee Doodle Mouse with "Lt." Jerry Mouse as the hero and Tom Cat as the "enemy".

To heighten the suspense, Hollywood needed to feature attacks on American soil and obtained inspirations for dramatic stories from the Philippines. Indeed, the Philippines became a "homefront" that showed the American way of life threatened by the Japanese enemy. Especially popular were the films Texas to Bataan (1942), Corregidor (1943), Bataan (1943), They Were Expendable (1945), and Back to Bataan (1945).[123]

The OWI had to approve every film before they could be exported. To facilitate the process the OWI's Bureau of Motion Pictures (BMP) worked with producers, directors, and writers before the shooting started to make sure that the themes reflected patriotic values. While Hollywood had been generally nonpolitical before the war, the liberals who controlled OWI encouraged the expression of New Deal liberalism, bearing in mind the huge domestic audience, as well as an international audience that was equally large.[124]

Censorship edit

Prior to entering the war, the US government had already done two years of planning in terms of how to conduct censorship. Censorship would officially begin one hour after the Attack on Pearl Harbor which took place on December 7, 1941 censoring all cable, radiotelephone and telegraphic messages between the rest of the United States and Hawaii. Control of censorship was temporarily placed under FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover from December 8 to the 19th when the Office of Censorship was created via a presidential executive order with Byron Price leading the office for the duration of the war. Censorship was both practiced mandatorily and voluntarily depending on the circumstance. International communication was subjected to mandatory censorship while the domestic press participated on a voluntary basis as the federal government decided mandatory censorship would not be needed as long as patriotic broadcasters and publishers withheld any information that was deemed to harm the Allied war effort.[125]

The war would be covered by over 2,000 correspondents supplying their reports to newsreels, radios, magazines, newspapers and television which was an emerging technology. In the 1930s and 40s most Americans relied on print journalist to get their news.[126] The news was prohibited from covering the travels of the president, the location of the newly moved National Archives or any diplomatic or military missions.[125]

Local activism edit

One way to enlist everyone in the war effort was scrap collection (called "recycling" decades later). Many everyday commodities were vital to the war effort, and drives were organized to recycle such products as rubber, tin, waste kitchen fats (raw material for explosives), newspaper, lumber, steel, and many others. Popular phrases promoted by the government at the time were "Get into the scrap!" and "Get some cash for your trash" (a nominal sum was paid to the donor for many kinds of scrap items) and Thomas "Fats" Waller even wrote and recorded a song with the latter title. Such commodities as rubber and tin remained highly important as recycled materials until the end of the war, while others, such as steel, were critically needed at first. War propaganda played a prominent role in many of these drives. Nebraska had perhaps the most extensive and well-organized drives; it was mobilized by the Omaha World Herald newspaper.[127]

Sports edit

Auto racing edit

In July 1942, the Office of Defense Transportation ordered an indefinite ban on auto racing in an effort to conserve rubber and gasoline.[128][129]

Baseball edit

 
The 1942 "Green Light Letter" sent by President Roosevelt to Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis authorizing wartime baseball

Baseball was at a peak in its popularity as the national pastime at the outset of the war. In January 1942, however, Commissioner of Baseball and former federal judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis handwrote a letter to President Roosevelt asking whether the President felt "professional baseball should continue to operate" given that "these are not ordinary times." Roosevelt wrote back the following day in what became known as the "Green Light Letter" that it would be "thoroughly worthwhile" and "best for the country to keep baseball going." He reasoned that the public would be working longer and harder hours than ever before and therefore had a greater need for recreation than ever before.[130]

In 1943 and 1944, Commissioner Landis, with input from Joseph Bartlett Eastman of the Office of Defense Transportation, ordered that all spring training take place north of the Potomac River and east of the Mississippi River in order to cut down on travel.[131]: 134  Major League Baseball (MLB) teams regularly played exhibition games to raise money and morale for the war effort, often against military teams; Ford Frick testified in 1951 before the House Judiciary Committee that MLB teams played 61 games on military bases between 1942 and 1944. The league raised more than $2.1 million (equivalent to $34.9 million in 2022).[131]: 134 

Because many of the able-bodied young men of the United States enlisted or were drafted into service, many MLB roster spots went to players deemed physically unfit for service.[132] They ranged from players such as Tommy Holmes, who had a chronic sinus condition,[132]: 25  to Pete Gray, who had only one arm.[132]: 332  Older stars such as Jimmie Foxx, Lloyd Waner, Ben Chapman, Babe Herman and Hal Trosky also found new playing opportunities and came out of retirement.[133][134][135]

Basketball edit

After the United States entered the war, the country's two professional basketball leagues, the American Basketball League and National Basketball League, both shrunk to four teams. Much of the country's best basketball was played on military bases.[136]

Football edit

More than 1,000 players left or postponed their professional football careers due to the war.[137] Due to the depletion of rosters, the Pittsburgh Steelers merged with the Philadelphia Eagles in 1943 to become the Steagles and with the Chicago Cardinals in 1944 to become Card-Pitt. In 1943, the Cleveland Rams suspended operations altogether.[138] During this time, due to the lack of well-rounded athletes available, the National Football League also began allowing free substitutions, which revolutionized the game.[139]

Golf edit

The U.S. Open was not held between 1942 and 1945 because of the scarcity of the rubber essential to the manufacture of golf balls.[140] Many of the nation's golf courses were also converted to more practical use. For example, Augusta National Golf Club was used to raise cows for beef for Camp Gordon and Congressional Country Club was used as a special ops training ground while several others were converted to farmland.[141]

Attacks on U.S. soil edit

Although the Axis powers never launched a full-scale invasion of the United States, there were attacks and acts of sabotage on U.S. soil.

  • December 7, 1941 – Attack on Pearl Harbor, a surprise attack that killed almost 2,500 people in the then incorporated territory of Hawaii which caused the U.S. to enter the war the next day.
  • January–August 1942 – Second Happy Time, German U-boats engaged American ships off the U.S. East Coast.
  • February 23, 1942 – Bombardment of Ellwood, a Japanese submarine attack on California.
  • Attacks on California ships by Japanese submarines
  • March 4, 1942 – Operation K, a Japanese reconnaissance over Pearl Harbor following the attack on December 7, 1941.
  • June 3, 1942 – August 15, 1943 – Aleutian Islands Campaign, the battle for the then incorporated territory of Alaska.
  • June 21–22, 1942 – Bombardment of Fort Stevens, the second attack on a U.S. military base in the continental U.S. in World War II.
  • September 9, 1942, and September 29, 1942 – Lookout Air Raids, the only attack by enemy aircraft on the contiguous U.S. and the second enemy aircraft attack on the U.S. continent in World War II.
  • November 1944–April 1945 – Fu-Go balloon bombs, over 9,300 of them were launched by Japan across the Pacific Ocean towards the U.S. to start forest fires. On May 5, 1945, six U.S. civilians were killed in Oregon when they stumbled upon a bomb and it exploded, the only deaths to occur in the U.S. as a result of an enemy balloon attack during World War II.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Schneider, Carl G and Schneider, Dorothy; World War II; p. 57 ISBN 1438108907
  2. ^ Harold G. Vatter, The U.S. Economy in World War II (1988) pp. 27-31
  3. ^ David Kennedy, Freedom from Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929-1945 (2001) pp. 615-68
  4. ^ Franklin Roosevelt, Executive Order 9250 Establishing the Office of Economic Stabilization. http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=16171#axzz1qK2AszpJ 2012-03-20 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Carola Frydman and Raven Molloy, "Pay Cuts for the Boss: Executive Compensation in the 1940s," Journal of Economic History 72 (March 2012), 225–51.
  6. ^ Geoffrey Perrett, Days of sadness, months of triumph: the American people, 1939-1945: Volume 1 (1985) p. 300
  7. ^ Harvey C Mansfield, A short history of OPA (Historical reports on War Administration) (1951)
  8. ^ Paul A. C. Koistinen, Arsenal of World War II: The Political Economy of American Warfare, 1940-1945 (2004) pp. 498-517
  9. ^ Inflation existed because not all prices were controlled, and even when they were prices rose as "sales" disappeared, low-end items were less available, and quality deteriorated.
  10. ^ James J. Kimble, Mobilizing the Home Front: War Bonds And Domestic Propaganda (2006)
  11. ^ WPA workers were counted as unemployed. U.S. Bureau of the Census, Statistical Abstract: 1946 (1946) p. 173
  12. ^ Miller and Cornford
  13. ^ Lee Kennett (1985). For the duration... : the United States goes to war, Pearl Harbor-1942. New York: Scribner. pp. 130–32. ISBN 978-0-684-18239-1.
  14. ^ Goldin, Claudia D. (September 1991). "The Role of World War II in the Rise of Women's Employment" (PDF). JSTOR. 81 (4).
  15. ^ "Smithtown's History - Alice Throckmorton McLean - Article Archive (Chronological) - Smithtown Matters - Online Local News about Smithtown, Kings Park, St James, Nesconset, Commack, Hauppauge, Ft. Salonga". www.smithtownmatters.com. Retrieved 2021-04-22.
  16. ^ "Alice Throckmorton McLean | American social service organizer". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2021-04-22.
  17. ^ Bureau of the Census, Historical Statistics of the United States (1976) Chapter D, Labor, Series D 29-41
  18. ^ Susan Cahn, Coming On Strong. University of Illinois, 2015. Merrie A. Fidler, The Origins and History of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League. McFarland, 2006. Sue Macy, A Whole New Ball game. Henry Holt, 1993.
  19. ^ Walter W. Wilcox, Farmer in the Second World War (1947)
  20. ^ a b Holt, Marilyn (2022). "On the Farm Front with the Victory Farm Volunteers". Agricultural History. Duke University Press. 96 (1–2): 164–186. doi:10.1215/00021482-9619828. S2CID 249657291. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  21. ^ Kallen, Stuart A. (2000). The war at home. San Diego: Lucent Books. pp. 43–45. ISBN 978-1-56006-531-9.
  22. ^ Otey M. Scruggs, 'Texas and the Bracero Program, 1942-1947,' Pacific Historical Review (1963) 32#3 pp. 251-264 in JSTOR 2017-02-03 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ Erasmo Gamboa, Mexican Labor & World War II: Braceros in the Pacific Northwest, 1942-1947 (2000)
  24. ^ Duane Ernest Miller, 'Barbed-Wire Farm Laborers: Michigan'S Prisoners of War Experience during World War II,' Michigan History, Sept 1989, Vol. 73 Issue 5, pp. 12-17
  25. ^ Kallen, Stuart A. (2000). The war at home. San Diego: Lucent Books. ISBN 978-1560065319.
  26. ^ "World War II: Civic responsibility" (PDF). Smithsonian Institution. (PDF) from the original on 11 June 2014. Retrieved 1 April 2014.
  27. ^ Hinshaw (1943)
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References edit

  • Brinkley, David. Washington Goes to War Knopf, 1988; memoir
  • Campbell, D'Ann (1984), Women at War with America: Private Lives in a Patriotic Era Harvard University Press.
  • Cantril, Hadley and Mildred Strunk, eds.; Public Opinion, 1935-1946 (1951), a massive compilation of many public opinion polls from the USA
  • Ferguson, Robert G. 'One Thousand Planes a Day: Ford, Grumman, General Motors and the Arsenal of Democracy.' History and Technology 2005 21(2): 149-175. ISSN 0734-1512 Fulltext in Swetswise, Ingenta, and Ebsco
  • Flynn, George Q. The Draft, 1940-1973 (1993) (ISBN 0-7006-1105-3)
  • Gallup, George Horace, ed. The Gallup Poll; Public Opinion, 1935-1971 3 vol (1972) esp vol 1. summarizes results of each poll as reported to newspapers
  • Garfinkel, Herbert. When Negroes March: The March on Washington and the Organizational Politics for FEPC (1959).
  • Koistinen, Paul A. C. Arsenal of World War II: The Political Economy of American Warfare, 1940–1945 (2004)
  • Miller, Sally M., and Daniel A. Cornford eds. American Labor in the Era of World War II (1995), essays by historians, mostly on California
  • Lichtenstein, Nelson. Labor's War at Home: The CIO in World War II (2003)
  • Wynn, Neil A. The Afro-American and the Second World War (1977)
  • Vatter, Howard. The U.S. Economy in World War II Columbia University Press, 1985. General survey
  • Hinshaw, David. The Home Front (1943)
  • Hoehling, A. A. Home Front, the U.S.A. (1966)

Further reading edit

Surveys edit

  • Adams, Michael C.C. The Best War Ever: America and World War II (1993); contains detailed bibliography
  • Blum, John Morton. V Was for Victory: Politics and American Culture During World War II (1995); original edition (1976)
  • Casdorph, Paul D. Let the Good Times Roll: Life at Home in America During World War II (1989)
  • Jeffries, John W. Wartime America: The World War II Home Front (1996) online.
  • Kennedy, David M. Freedom from Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929-1945. (2001) excerpt and text search; a major scholarly survey of the era
  • Kennett, Lee. For the Duration: The United States Goes to War, Pearl Harbor—1942 (1985), covers the first six months.
  • Lingeman, Richard R. Don’t You Know There’s a War On? The American Home Front, 1941–1945 (1970), popular history
  • Perrett, Geoffrey. Days of Sadness, Years of Triumph: The American People, 1939–1945 (1973), popular history.
  • Polenberg, Richard. War and Society: The United States, 1941-1945 (1980)
  • Smith, Gaddis. American Diplomacy During the Second World War, 1941-1945 (1965) online
  • Sparrow, James T. Warfare state: World War II Americans and the age of big government (Oxford UP, 2011).
  • Tindall, George B. The emergence of the new South, 1913-1945 (1967) online free to borrow pp 687=732.
  • Titus, James, ed. The Home Front and War in the Twentieth Century: The American Experience in Comparative Perspective (1984) essays by scholars. online free
  • Winkler, Allan M. Home Front U.S.A.: America During World War II (3rd ed. 2012). short survey

Encyclopedias edit

  • Ciment, James D. and Thaddeus Russell, eds. The Home Front Encyclopedia: United States, Britain, and Canada in World Wars I and II (3 vol 2006)
  • Frank, Lisa Tendrich. An Encyclopedia of American Women at War: From the Home Front to the Battlefields (2013)
  • Resch, John Phillips, and D'Ann Campbell eds. Americans at War: Society, Culture, and the Homefront (vol 3 2004)
  • Shearer, Benjamin F. ed. Home Front Heroes: A Biographical Dictionary of Americans during Wartime (3 vol. 2006)
  • 10 Eventful Years: 1937-1946 4 vol. Encyclopædia Britannica, 1947. Highly detailed encyclopedia of events online free

Economy and labor edit

  • Aruga, Natsuki. " 'An' Finish School': Child Labor during World War II" Labor History 29 (1988): 498-530. DOI: 10.1080/00236568800890331.
  • Campbell, D'Ann. 'Sisterhood versus the Brotherhoods: Women in Unions' in Campbell, Women at War with America (1984) pp. 139–62
  • Dubofsky, Melvyn and Warren Van Time John L. Lewis (1986). Biography of the head of coal miners' union
  • Campbell, W. Glenn, ed. Economics of mobilization and war (1952) online
  • Evans Paul. 'The Effects of General Price Controls in the United States during World War II.' Journal of Political Economy 90 (1983): 944-66. a statistical study in JSTOR
  • Feagin, Joe R., and Kelly Riddell. 'The State, Capitalism and World War II: The U.S. Case.' Armed Forces and Society (1990) 17#1 pp. 53–79.
  • Flynn, George Q. The Mess in Washington: Manpower Mobilization in World War II (1979) * Fraser, Steve. Labor Will Rule: Sidney Hillman and the Rise of American Labor (1993). leader of CIO
  • Hall, Martha L. et al., "American Women's Wartime Dress: Sociocultural Ambiguity Regarding Women's Roles During World War II," Journal of American Culture 38 (Sept. 2015), 234–42.
  • Harrison, Mark. 'Resource Mobilization for World War II: The U.S.A., UK, U.S.S.R. and Germany, 1938-1945.' Economic History Review 41 (1988): 171-92. in JSTOR
  • Herman, Arthur. Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II (Random House, 2012) 413 pp.
  • Hyde, Charles K. Arsenal of Democracy: The American Automobile Industry in World War II (Wayne State University Press; 2013) 264 pages
  • Jacobs, Meg. '"How About Some Meat?": The Office of Price Administration, Consumption Politics, and State Building from the Bottom Up, 1941-1946,' Journal of American History 84#3 (1997), pp. 910–941 in JSTOR
  • Jensen, Richard J. "The causes and cures of unemployment in the Great Depression." Journal of Interdisciplinary History 19.4 (1989): 553-583. online
  • Kersten, Andrew E. Labor's home front: the American Federation of Labor during World War II (NYU Press, 2006).
  • Klein, Maury. A Call to Arms: Mobilizing America for World War II (2013).
  • Lichtenstein, Nelson. Labor's war at home: The CIO in World War II (Temple University Press, 2003).
  • Lipsitz, George. Rainbow at Midnight: Labor and Culture in the 1940s (1994) excerpt
  • Maines, Rachel. 'Wartime Allocation of Textiles and Apparel Resources: Emergency Policy in the Twentieth Century.' Public Historian (1985) 7#1 pp. 29–51.
  • Mills, Geoffrey, and Hugh Rockoff. "Compliance with Price Controls in the United States and the United Kingdom during World War II," Journal of Economic History 47#1 (1987): 197-213. in JSTOR
  • Myers, Margaret G. Financial History of the United States (1970). pp 343–64. online
  • Reagan, Patrick D. 'The Withholding Tax, Beardsley Ruml, and Modern American Public Policy.' Prologue 24 (1992): 19-31.
  • Rockoff, Hugh. "The Response of the Giant Corporations to Wage and Price Controls in World War II." Journal of Economic History (1981) 41#1 pp. 123–28. in JSTOR
  • Romer, Christina D. 'What Ended the Great Depression?' Journal of Economic History 52 (1992): 757-84. in JSTOR
  • Seidman , Joel. American Labor from Defense to Reconversion (1953)
  • Simmons, Dean. Swords into plowshares: Minnesota's POW camps during World War II. (2000). ISBN 978-0-9669001-0-1.
  • Sosna, Morton, and James C. Cobb, Remaking Dixie: The Impact of World War II on the American South (UP of Mississippi, 1997).
  • Tuttle, William M. Jr. 'The Birth of an Industry: The Synthetic Rubber 'Mess' in World War II.' Technology and Culture 22 (1981): 35-67. in JSTOR
  • Wilcox, Walter W. The Farmer in the Second World War. (1947) online
  • Wilson, Mark R. Destructive Creation: American Business and the Winning of World War II (2016) online review.

Draft edit

  • Bennett, Scott H., ed. Army GI, Pacifist CO: The World War II Letters of Frank and Albert Dietrich (New York: Fordham Univ. Press, 2005).
  • Blum, Albert A. Drafted Or Deferred: Practices Past and Present Ann Arbor: Bureau of Industrial Relations, Graduate School of Business Administration, University of Michigan, 1967.
  • Flynn George Q. 'American Medicine and Selective Service in World War II.' Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 42 (1987): 305-26.
  • Flynn George Q. The Draft, 1940-1973 (1993) excerpt and text search

Family, gender and minorities edit

  • Bailey, Beth, and David Farber; 'The "Double-V" Campaign in World War II Hawaii: African Americans, Racial Ideology, and Federal Power,' Journal of Social History Volume: 26. Issue: 4. 1993. pp. 817+.
  • Campbell, D'Ann. Women at War with America (1984) online
  • Daniel, Clete. Chicano Workers and the Politics of Fairness: The FEPC in the Southwest, 1941-1945 University of Texas Press, 1991
  • Collins, William J. 'Race, Roosevelt, and Wartime Production: Fair Employment in World War II Labor Markets,' American Economic Review 91:1 (March 2001), pp. 272–286. in JSTOR
  • Costello, John. Virtue Under Fire: How World War II Changed Our Social and Sexual Attitudes (1986), US and Britain
  • Escobedo, Elizabeth. From Coveralls to Zoot Suits: The Lives of Mexican American Women on the World War II Home Front (2013)
  • Finkle, Lee. 'The Conservative Aims of Militant Rhetoric: Black Protest during World War II,' Journal of American History (1973) 60#3 pp. 692–713 in JSTOR
  • Hall, Martha L. et al., "American Women's Wartime Dress: Sociocultural Ambiguity Regarding Women's Roles During World War II," Journal of American Culture 38 (Sept. 2015), 234–42.
  • Hartmann, Susan M. Home Front and Beyond: American Women in the 40s (1982)
  • Kryder, Daniel. Divided Arsenal: Race and the American State During World War II (2001)
  • Kuhn, Clifford M., "'It Was a Long Way from Perfect, but It Was Working': The Canning and Home Production Initiatives in Green County, Georgia, 1940–1942," Agricultural History (2012) 86#1 pp. 68–90. on Victory gardens
  • Lees, Lorraine M. 'National Security and Ethnicity: Contrasting Views during World War II.' Diplomatic History 11 (1987): 113-25.
  • Myrdal, Gunnar. An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy (1944), famous classic
  • Ossian, Lisa L. The Forgotten Generation: American Children and World War II (University of Missouri Press; 2011) 192 pages; children's experiences at school, at play, at work, and in the home.
  • Tuttle Jr. William M.; Daddy's Gone to War: The Second World War in the Lives of America's Children Oxford University Press, 1995; online review
  • Records of the Women's Bureau (1997), short essay on women at work
  • Ward, Barbara McLean, ed., Produce and Conserve, Share and Play Square: The Grocer and the Consumer on the Home-Front Battlefield during World War II, Portsmouth, NH: Strawbery Banke Museum
  • Pfau, Ann Elizabeth. Miss Yourlovin: GIs, Gender, and Domesticity during World War II (Columbia UP. 2008) online

Politics edit

  • Burns, James MacGregor. Roosevelt: Soldier of Freedom (1970), vol 2 covers the war years.
  • Goodwin, Doris Kearns. No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front in World War II (1995)
  • Graham, Otis L. and Meghan Robinson Wander, eds. Franklin D. Roosevelt: His Life and Times. (1985). encyclopedia
  • Hooks Gregory. The Military-Industrial Complex: World War II's Battle of the Potomac University of Illinois Press, 1991.
  • Jeffries John W. 'The "New" New Deal: FDR and American Liberalism, 1937-1945.' Political Science Quarterly (1990): 397-418. in JSTOR
  • Leff Mark H. 'The Politics of Sacrifice on the American Home Front in World War II,' Journal of American History 77 (1991): 1296-1318. in JSTOR
  • Patterson, James T. Mr. Republican: A Biography of Robert A. Taft (1972)
  • Steele Richard W. 'The Great Debate: Roosevelt, the Media, and the Coming of the War, 1940-1941.' Journal of American History 71 (1994): 69-92. in JSTOR
  • Young, Nancy Beck. Why We Fight: Congress and the Politics of World War II (University Press of Kansas; 2013) 366 pages; a comprehensive survey

Primary sources and teaching materials edit

  • Dorn, Charles, and Connie Chiang. "Lesson Plan – National Unity and National Discord: The Western Homefront during World War II," Journal of the West (Summer 2010) 49#3 pp. 41–60. It contains a detailed lesson plan for 11th grade, focused on the social history of the Homefront in the West (especially California).
  • Nicholas, H. G. Washington despatches, 1941-1945: weekly political reports from the British Embassy (1985) 718 pages; unusually rich secret reports from British diplomats (especially Isaiah Berlin) analyzing American government and politics
  • Piehler, G. Kurt, ed, The United States in World War II: A Documentary Reader (2012) excerpt and text search

Propaganda, advertising, media, public opinion edit

  • Blanchard, Margaret A. 'Freedom of the Press in World War II.' American Journalism. Volume 12, Issue 3, 1995. p. 342-358. Published online on 24 July 2013. DOI: 10.1080/08821127.1995.10731748.
  • Bredhoff, Stacey (1994), Powers of Persuasion: Poster Art from World War II, National Archives Trust Fund Board.
  • Albert Hadley Cantril; Mildred Strunk (1951). Public opinion: 1935-1946. Princeton University Press., summaries of thousands of polls in US, Canada, Europe
  • Fauser, Annegret. Sounds of War: Music in the United States During World War II (Oxford University Press; 2013) 366 pages; focuses on classical music in the 1940s, including work by both American composers and Europeans in exile.
  • Fox, Frank W (1975), Madison Avenue Goes to War: The Strange Military Career of American Advertising, 1941–45, Brigham Young University Press.
  • Fyne, Robert (1994), The Hollywood Propaganda of World War II, Scarecrow Press.
  • Gregory, G.H. (1993), Posters of World War II, Gramercy Books.
  • Gallup, George H. (1972), The Gallup Poll: Public Opinion 1935- 1971, Vol. 1, 1935–1948, summary of every poll
  • Holsinger, M. Paul, and Mary Anne Schofield; Visions of War: World War II in Popular Literature and Culture (1992)
  • Witkowski, Terrence H. 'World War II Poster Campaigns: Preaching Frugality to American Consumers' Journal of Advertising, Vol. 32, 2003

Social, state and local history edit

  • Brown DeSoto. Hawaii Goes to War. Life in Hawaii from Pearl Harbor to Peace. 1989.
  • Cavnes, Max Parvin (1961). The Hoosier community at war. Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780598056399., on Indiana
  • Chandonnet, Fern. Alaska at War, 1941-1945: The Forgotten War Remembered (2007)
  • Clive Alan. State of War: Michigan in World War II University of Michigan Press, 1979.
  • Daniel Pete. 'Going among Strangers: Southern Reactions to World War II.' Journal of American History 77 (1990): 886-911. in JSTOR
  • Davis, Anita Price. North Carolina and World War II: A Documentary Portrait (McFarland, 2014) ISBN 978-0-7864-7984-9. See also online review
  • Escobedo, Elizabeth. From Coveralls to Zoot Suits: The Lives of Mexican American Women on the World War II Home Front (2013)
  • Evans, Jon (2011). Weathering the Storm: Florida Politics during the Administration of Spessard L. Holland in World War II (PDF) (Doctor of Philosophy thesis). Florida State University.
  • Gleason Philip. 'Pluralism, Democracy, and Catholicism in the Era of World War II.' Review of Politics 49 (1987): 208-30. in JSTOR
  • Hartzel, Karl Drew. The Empire State At War (1949), on upstate New York
  • Hiltner, Aaron. Friendly Invasions: Civilians and Servicemen on the World War II American Home Front (2017).
  • Jaworski, Taylor. World War II and the Industrialization of the American South (Paper. No. w23477. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2017) online.
  • Johnson, Charles. 'V for Virginia: The Commonwealth Goes to War,' Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 100 (1992): 365–398 in JSTOR
  • Johnson Marilynn S. 'War as Watershed: The East Bay and World War II.' Pacific Historical Review 63 (1994): 315-41, on Northern California in JSTOR
  • Lange, Dorothea; Charles Wollenberg (1995). Photographing the second gold rush: Dorothea Lange and the East Bay at war, 1941-1945. Heyday Books. ISBN 978-0-930588-78-6. in Northern California
  • LaRossa, Ralph. Of War and Men: World War II in the Lives of Fathers and Their Families (2011)
  • Larson, Thomas A. Wyoming's war years, 1941-1945 (1993)
  • Lichtenstein Nelson. 'The Making of the Postwar Working Class: Cultural Pluralism and Social Structure in World War II.' Historian 51 (1988): 42-63.
  • Lee James Ward, Carolyn N. Barnes, and Kent A. Bowman, eds. 1941: Texas Goes to War University of North Texas Press, 1991.
  • Lotchin, Roger W. 'The Historians' War or The Home Front's War?: Some Thoughts for Western Historians,' Western Historical Quarterly (1995) 26#2 pp. 185–196 in JSTOR
  • Marcello, Ronald E. Small Town America in World War II: War Stories from Wrightsville, Pennsylvania (University of North Texas Press, 2014) 452 pp.
  • Miller Marc. The Irony of Victory. World War II and Lowell, Massachusetts (U of Illinois Press, 1988).
  • Nash Gerald D. The American West Transformed. The Impact of the Second World War (Indiana UP, 1985).
  • Newton, Wesley Phillips. Montgomery in the Good War: Portrait of a Southern City, 1939–1946 (U of Alabama Press, 2000), Montgomery, Alabama.
  • Pleasants, Julian M. Home Front: North Carolina During World War II (UP of Florida, 2017), 366 pp. online review
  • Scranton, Philip. ed. The Second Wave: Southern Industrialization from the 1940s to the 1970s (U of Georgia Press, 2001).
  • Smith C. Calvin. War and Wartime Changes: The Transformation of Arkansas, 1940–1945 (U of Arkansas Press, 1986).
  • O'Brien, Kenneth Paul and Lynn Hudson Parsons, eds. The Home-Front War: World War II and American Society essays by scholars
  • Spinney, Robert G. World War II in Nashville: Transformation of the Homefront (1998)
  • Verge, Arthur C. 'The Impact of the Second World War on Los Angeles,' Pacific Historical Review (1994) 63#3 pp. 289–314 in JSTOR
  • Watters, Mary. Illinois in the Second World War. 2 vol (1951)

External links edit

  • Regional Oral History Office / Rosie the Riveter / World War II American Homefront Project
  • American Anti-Axis Propaganda from World War II 2009-07-20 at the Wayback Machine
  • FDR Cartoon Archive 2009-01-21 at the Wayback Machine
  • National Museum of the Civil Air Patrol (online, World War II section)
  • Powers of Persuasion: Poster Art from World War II, National Archives
  • Northwestern U Library World War II Poster Collection
  • War Ration Book Records and Related Information
  • Library of Congress: 1000 Digitized Photos of World War II Occupations on the Homefront
  • curated by Michigan State University
  • Wartime Prosperity? A Reassessment of the U.S. Economy in the 1940s Robert Higgs, 1 March 1992
  • Dick Dorrance papers, which document the rise of FM broadcasting and the role that broadcasters and radio could play in the war effort, at the University of Maryland libraries

united, states, home, front, during, world, supported, effort, many, ways, including, wide, range, volunteer, efforts, submitting, government, managed, rationing, price, controls, there, general, feeling, agreement, that, sacrifices, were, national, good, duri. The United States home front during World War II supported the war effort in many ways including a wide range of volunteer efforts and submitting to government managed rationing and price controls There was a general feeling of agreement that the sacrifices were for the national good during the war United States Home Front1942 1945Service on the Home Front by Louis Hirshman and William Tasker LocationUnited StatesIncludingNew Deal EraSecond Great MigrationPresident s Franklin Delano Roosevelt Harry TrumanKey eventsAttack on Pearl HarborDouble V campaignRationingInternment policiesConscriptionG I BillChronology Great Depression Post war era The labor market changed radically Peacetime conflicts concerning race and labor took on a special dimension because of the pressure for national unity The Hollywood film industry was important for propaganda Every aspect of life from politics to personal savings changed when put on a wartime footing This was achieved by tens of millions of workers moving from low to high productivity jobs in industrial centers Millions of students retirees housewives and unemployed moved into the active labor force The hours they had to work increased dramatically as the time for leisure activities declined sharply Gasoline meat clothing and footwear were tightly rationed Most families were allocated 3 US gallons 11 L 2 5 imp gal of gasoline a week which sharply curtailed driving for any purpose Production of most durable goods like new housing vacuum cleaners and kitchen appliances was banned until the war ended 1 In industrial areas housing was in short supply as people doubled up and lived in cramped quarters Prices and wages were controlled Americans saved a high portion of their incomes which led to renewed growth after the war 2 3 Contents 1 Controls and taxes 2 Personal savings 3 Labor 3 1 Women 3 2 Farming 3 3 Children 3 4 Teenagers 3 5 Labor unions 4 The South in wartime 5 Civilian support for war effort 5 1 Draft 5 2 Religion 5 3 Pacifism 5 4 Suspected disloyalty 6 Population movements 6 1 Transportation 6 2 Racial tensions 7 Role of women 7 1 Employment 7 2 Nursing 7 3 Volunteer activities 7 4 Baby boom 7 5 Housewives 8 Racial politics of the war 8 1 Immigration policies during and after World War II 8 1 1 Repatriation of Americans abroad 8 2 Internment 8 3 FEPC 8 4 African Americans and the Double V campaign 8 5 Racism in propaganda 9 Wartime politics 9 1 Prewar background 9 2 Wartime events 9 3 Voting 10 Propaganda and culture 10 1 Posters 10 2 Bond drives 10 3 Hollywood 10 4 Censorship 11 Local activism 12 Sports 12 1 Auto racing 12 2 Baseball 12 3 Basketball 12 4 Football 12 5 Golf 13 Attacks on U S soil 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 Further reading 17 1 Surveys 17 1 1 Encyclopedias 17 2 Economy and labor 17 3 Draft 17 4 Family gender and minorities 17 5 Politics 17 5 1 Primary sources and teaching materials 17 6 Propaganda advertising media public opinion 17 7 Social state and local history 18 External linksControls and taxes editFederal tax policy was highly contentious during the war with President Franklin D Roosevelt opposing a conservative coalition in Congress However both sides agreed on the need for high taxes along with heavy borrowing to pay for the war top marginal tax rates ranged from 81 94 for the duration of the war and the income level subject to the highest rate was lowered from 5 000 000 to 200 000 Roosevelt tried unsuccessfully by executive order 9250 4 to impose a 100 surtax on after tax incomes over 25 000 equal to roughly 422 788 today However Roosevelt did manage to impose this cap on executive pay in corporations with government contracts 5 Congress also enlarged the tax base by lowering the minimum income to pay taxes and by reducing personal exemptions and deductions By 1944 nearly every employed person was paying federal income taxes compared to 10 in 1940 6 Many controls were put on the economy The most important was price controls imposed on most products and monitored by the Office of Price Administration Wages were also controlled 7 Corporations dealt with numerous agencies especially the War Production Board WPB and the War and Navy departments which had the purchasing power and priorities that largely reshaped and expanded industrial production 8 Main article Rationing in the United States World War II nbsp Sugar rationingIn 1942 a rationing system was begun to guarantee minimum amounts of necessities to everyone especially poor people and prevent inflation Tires were the first item to be rationed in January 1942 because supplies of natural rubber were interrupted Gasoline rationing proved an even better way to allocate scarce rubber In June 1942 the Combined Food Board was set up to coordinate the worldwide supply of food to the Allies with special attention to flows from the U S and Canada to Britain By 1943 government issued ration coupons were required to purchase coffee sugar meat cheese butter lard margarine canned foods dried fruits jam gasoline bicycles fuel oil clothing silk or nylon stockings shoes and many other items Some items like automobiles and home appliances were no longer made The rationing system did not apply to used goods like clothes or cars but they became more expensive since they were not subject to price controls To get a classification and a book of rationing stamps people had to appear before a local rationing board Each person in a household received a ration book including babies and children When purchasing gasoline a driver had to present a gas card along with a ration book and cash Ration stamps were valid only for a set period to forestall hoarding All forms of automobile racing were banned including the Indianapolis 500 which was canceled from 1942 to 1945 Sightseeing driving was banned Personal savings editPersonal income was at an all time high and more dollars were chasing fewer goods to purchase This was a recipe for economic disaster that was largely avoided because Americans persuaded daily by their government to do so were also saving money at an all time high rate mostly in War Bonds but also in private savings accounts and insurance policies Consumer saving was strongly encouraged through investment in war bonds that would mature after the war Most workers had an automatic payroll deduction children collected savings stamps until they had enough to buy a bond Bond rallies were held throughout the U S with celebrities usually Hollywood film stars to enhance the bond advertising effectiveness Several stars were responsible for personal appearance tours that netted multiple millions of dollars in bond pledges an astonishing amount in 1943 The public paid of the face value of a war bond and received the full face value back after a set number of years This shifted their consumption from the war to postwar and allowed over 40 of GDP to go to military spending with moderate inflation 9 Americans were challenged to put at least 10 of every paycheck into Bonds Compliance was very high with entire factories of workers earning a special Minuteman flag to fly over their plant if all workers belonged to the Ten Percent Club There were seven major War Loan drives all of which exceeded their goals 10 Labor editThe unemployment problems of the Great Depression largely ended with the mobilization for war Out of a labor force of 54 million unemployment fell by half from 7 7 million in spring 1940 when the first accurate statistics were compiled to 3 4 million by fall of 1941 and fell by half again to 1 5 million by fall of 1942 hitting an all time low of 700 000 in fall 1944 11 There was a growing labor shortage in war centers with sound trucks going street by street begging for people to apply for war jobs Greater wartime production created millions of new jobs while the draft reduced the number of young men available for civilian jobs So great was the demand for labor that millions of retired people housewives and students entered the labor force lured by patriotism and wages 12 The shortage of grocery clerks caused retailers to convert from service at the counter to self service With new shorter women clerks replacing taller men some stores lowered shelves to 5 feet 8 inches 1 73 m Before the war most groceries dry cleaners drugstores and department stores offered home delivery service The labor shortage and gasoline and tire rationing caused most retailers to stop delivery They found that requiring customers to buy their products in person increased sales 13 Women edit nbsp Rosie the Riveter working on an A 31 Vengeance dive bomber Tennessee 1943 Women also joined the workforce to replace men who had joined the forces though in fewer numbers citation needed From 1890 1990 the percentage of married women in the workforce rose from 5 to 60 Most of this change in workforce participation was during World War II 14 Roosevelt stated that the efforts of civilians at home to support the war through personal sacrifice was as critical to winning the war as the efforts of the soldiers themselves Rosie the Riveter became the symbol of women laboring in manufacturing Women worked in defense plants and volunteered for war related organizations Women even learned to fix cars and became conductorettes for the train The war effort brought about significant changes in the role of women in society as a whole When the male breadwinner returned wives could stop working Alice Throckmorton McLean founded the American Women s Voluntary Services AWVS in January 1940 23 months before the United States entered the war When Pearl Harbor was bombed the AWVS had more than 18 000 members who were ready to drive ambulances fight fires lead evacuations operate mobile kitchens deliver first aid and perform other emergency services 15 By war s end the AWVS counted 325 000 women at work and selling an estimated 1 billion in war bonds and stamps 16 At the end of the war most of the munitions making jobs ended Many factories were closed others retooled for civilian production In some jobs women were replaced by returning veterans who did not lose seniority because they were in service However the number of women at work in 1946 was 87 of the number in 1944 leaving 13 who lost or quit their jobs Many women working in machinery factories and more were taken out of the workforce Many of these former factory workers found other work at kitchens being teachers etc The table shows the development of the United States labor force by sex during the war years 17 Year Total labor force 1000 of which Male 1000 of which Female 1000 Female share of total 1940 56 100 41 940 14 160 25 21941 57 720 43 070 14 650 25 41942 60 330 44 200 16 120 26 71943 64 780 45 950 18 830 29 11944 66 320 46 930 19 390 29 21945 66 210 46 910 19 304 29 21946 60 520 43 690 16 840 27 8 nbsp A female welder helping construct theSS George Washington Carver at the Kaiser Shipyards in Richmond California April 1943 Women also took on new roles in sport and entertainment which opened to them as more and more men were drafted The All American Girls Professional Baseball League was the creation of Chicago Cubs owner Philip Wrigley who sought alternative ways to expand his baseball franchise as top male players left for military service In 1943 he created an eight team league in small industrial cities around the Great Lakes Night games offered affordable patriotic entertainment to working Americans who had flocked to wartime jobs in the Midwest hubs of Chicago and Detroit The league provided a novel entertainment of women playing baseball well while wearing short feminine uniform skirts Players as young as fifteen were recruited from white farm families and urban industrial teams Fans supported the League to the extent that it continued well past the conclusion of the war lasting through 1953 18 Farming edit nbsp Victory garden posterLabor shortages were felt in agriculture even though most farmers were given an exemption and few were drafted Large numbers volunteered or moved to cities for factory jobs At the same time many agricultural commodities were in greater demand by the military and for the civilian populations of Allies Production was encouraged and prices and markets were under tight federal control 19 Between December 1941 and December 1942 it was estimated 1 6 million men amp women left agricultural work for military service or to get higher paying jobs in war industries 20 Civilians were encouraged to create victory gardens farms that were often started in backyards and lots Children were encouraged to help with these farms too 21 The Bracero Program a bi national labor agreement between Mexico and the U S started in 1942 Some 290 000 braceros strong arms in Spanish were recruited and contracted to work in the agriculture fields Half went to Texas and 20 to the Pacific Northwest 22 23 Between 1942 and 1946 some 425 000 Italian and German prisoners of war were used as farm laborers loggers and cannery workers In Michigan for example the POWs accounted for more than one third of the state s agricultural production and food processing in 1944 24 Children edit To help with the need for a larger source of food the nation looked to school aged children to help on farms Schools often had a victory garden in vacant parking lots and on roofs Children would help on these farms to help with the war effort 25 The slogan Grow your own can your own also influenced children to help at home 26 Teenagers edit With the war s ever increasing need for able bodied men consuming America s labor force in the early 1940s industry turned to teen aged boys and girls to fill in as replacements 27 28 Consequently many states had to change their child labor laws to allow these teenagers to work The lures of patriotism adulthood and money led many youths to drop out of school and take a defense job Between 1940 and 1944 the number of teenage workers tripled from 870 000 in 1940 to 2 8 million in 1944 while the number of students in public high schools dropped from 6 6 million in 1940 to 5 6 million in 1944 about a million students and many teachers took jobs 29 Policymakers did not want high school students to drop out Government agencies parents school administrations and employers would cooperate in local Go to School Drives to encourage high school students to stay whether this be part or full time 30 nbsp Recruitment poster for the Victory Farm Volunteers 1943 The Victory Farm Volunteers under the US Crop Corps accepted teenagers from 14 18 to work in agricultural jobs However some states did lower their age limit with the youngest being 9 At the program s peak in 1944 there would be 903 794 volunteers which made it larger than the amount in the Women s Land Army foreign migrant workers and the amount of prisoners of war who were laborers These volunteers were mainly from the cities and urban areas Volunteers mostly worked for three months in the summer and for a fourth if high schools decided to push starting dates back To join a volunteer needed the consent of their parent s guardian s There were three types of work environments for the volunteers The most common 80 of volunteers involved them being transported to a worksite daily via buses or farming trucks and returned home at night Another program involved where volunteers lived with farming families and worked alongside them with about 1 in 5 doing this There was also camps set up which were not very common as only 4 of all VFV volunteers lived there between 1943 amp 1945 20 Labor unions edit nbsp Welder making boilers for a ship Combustion Engineering Co Chattanooga Tennessee June 1942 The war mobilization changed the relationship of the Congress of Industrial Organizations CIO with both employers and the national government 31 Both the CIO and the larger American Federation of Labor AFL grew rapidly in the war years 32 Nearly all the unions that belonged to the CIO were fully supportive of both the war effort and of the Roosevelt administration However the United Mine Workers who had taken an isolationist stand in the years leading up to the war and had opposed Roosevelt s reelection in 1940 left the CIO in 1942 The major unions supported a wartime no strike pledge that aimed to eliminate not only major strikes for new contracts but also the innumerable small strikes called by shop stewards and local union leadership to protest particular grievances In return for labor s no strike pledge the government offered arbitration to determine the wages and other terms of new contracts Those procedures produced modest wage increases during the first few years of the war but not enough to keep up with inflation particularly when combined with the slowness of the arbitration machinery 33 Even though the complaints from union members about the no strike pledge became louder and more bitter the CIO did not abandon it The Mine Workers by contrast who did not belong to either the AFL or the CIO for much of the war threatened numerous strikes including a successful twelve day strike in 1943 The strikes and threats made mine leader John L Lewis a much hated man and led to legislation hostile to unions 34 All the major unions grew stronger during the war The government put pressure on employers to recognize unions to avoid the sort of turbulent struggles over union recognition of the 1930s while unions were generally able to obtain maintenance of membership clauses a form of union security through arbitration and negotiation Employers gave workers new untaxed benefits such as vacation time pensions and health insurance which increased real incomes even when wage rates were frozen 35 The wage differential between higher skilled and less skilled workers narrowed and with the enormous increase in overtime for blue collar wage workers at time and a half pay incomes in working class households shot up while the salaried middle class lost ground nbsp Workers at Consolidated Aircraft Fort Worth Texas 1942 The experience of bargaining on a national basis while restraining local unions from striking also tended to accelerate the trend toward bureaucracy within the larger CIO unions Some such as the Steelworkers had always been centralized organizations in which authority for major decisions resided at the top The UAW by contrast had always been a more grassroots organization but it also started to try to rein in its maverick local leadership during these years 36 The CIO also had to confront deep racial divides in its membership particularly in the UAW plants in Detroit where white workers sometimes struck to protest the promotion of black workers to production jobs but also in shipyards in Alabama mass transit in Philadelphia and steel plants in Baltimore The CIO leadership particularly those in further left unions such as the Packinghouse Workers the UAW the NMU and the Transport Workers undertook serious efforts to suppress hate strikes to educate their membership and to support the Roosevelt Administration s tentative efforts to remedy racial discrimination in war industries through the Fair Employment Practices Commission Those unions contrasted their relatively bold attack on the problem with the AFL 37 The CIO unions were progressive in dealing with gender discrimination in the wartime industry which now employed many more women workers in nontraditional jobs Unions that had represented large numbers of women workers before the war such as the UE electrical workers and the Food and Tobacco Workers had fairly good records of fighting discrimination against women Most union leaders saw women as temporary wartime replacements for the men in the armed forces The wages of these women needed to be kept high so that the veterans would get high wages 38 The South in wartime editThe war marked a time of dramatic change in the poor heavily rural South as new industries and military bases were developed by the Federal government providing badly needed capital and infrastructure in many regions People from all parts of the US came to the South for military training and work in the region s many bases and new industries During and after the war millions of hard scrabble farmers both white and black left agriculture for urban jobs 39 40 41 The United States began mobilizing for war in a major way in the spring of 1940 The warm sunny weather of the South proved ideal for building 60 percent of the Army s new training camps and nearly half the new airfields In all 40 percent of spending on new military installations went to the South For example sleepy Starke Florida a town of 1 500 people in 1940 became the base of Camp Blanding By March 1941 20 000 men were constructing a permanent camp for 60 000 soldiers Money flowed freely for the war effort as over 4 billion went into military facilities in the South and another 5 billion into defense plants Major shipyards were built in Virginia Charleston and along the Gulf Coast Huge warplane plants were opened in Dallas Fort Worth and Georgia The most secret and expensive operation was at Oak Ridge Tennessee where unlimited amounts of locally generated electricity were used to prepare uranium for the atom bomb 42 The number of production workers doubled during the war Most training centers factories and shipyards were closed in 1945 and the families that left hardscrabble farms often remained to find jobs in the urban South The region had finally reached the take off stage into industrial and commercial growth although its income and wage levels lagged well behind the national average Nevertheless as George B Tindall notes the transformation was The demonstration of industrial potential new habits of mind and a recognition that industrialization demanded community services 43 44 Civilian support for war effort editSee also United States civil defense World War II and American propaganda during World War II nbsp A synagogue in New York City remained open 24 hours on D Day June 6 1944 for special services and prayer Early in the war it became apparent that German U boats were using the backlighting of coastal cities in the Eastern Seaboard and the South to destroy ships exiting harbors It became the first duty of civilians recruited for the local civilian defense to ensure that lights were either off or thick curtains drawn over all windows at night State Guards were reformed for internal security duties to replace the National Guardsmen who were federalized and sent overseas The Civil Air Patrol was established which enrolled civilian spotters in air reconnaissance search and rescue and transport Its Coast Guard counterpart the Coast Guard Auxiliary used civilian boats and crews in similar rescue roles Towers were built in coastal and border towns and spotters were trained to recognize enemy aircraft Blackouts were practiced in every city even those far from the coast All exterior lighting had to be extinguished and black out curtains placed over windows The main purpose was to remind people that there was a war on and to provide activities that would engage the civil spirit of millions of people not otherwise involved in the war effort In large part this effort was successful sometimes almost to a fault such as the Plains states where many dedicated aircraft spotters took up their posts night after night watching the skies in an area of the country that no enemy aircraft of that time could hope to reach 45 The United Service Organizations USO was founded in 1941 in response to a request from President Franklin D Roosevelt to provide morale and recreation services to uniformed military personnel The USO brought together six civilian agencies the Salvation Army YMCA Young Women s Christian Association National Catholic Community Service National Travelers Aid Association and the National Jewish Welfare Board 46 Women volunteered to work for the Red Cross the USO and other agencies Other women previously employed only in the home or in traditionally female work took jobs in factories that directly supported the war effort or filled jobs vacated by men who had entered military service Enrollment in high schools and colleges plunged as many high school and college students dropped out to take war jobs 47 48 49 Various items previously discarded were saved after use for what was called recycling years later Families were requested to save fat drippings from cooking for use in soap making Neighborhood scrap drives collected scrap copper and brass for use in artillery shells Milkweed was harvested by children ostensibly for lifejackets 50 Draft edit nbsp A female factory worker in 1942 Fort Worth Texas Women entered the workforce because men were drafted into the armed forces In 1940 Congress passed the first peace time draft legislation It was renewed by one vote in summer 1941 It involved questions as to who should control the draft the size of the army and the need for deferments The system worked through local draft boards comprising community leaders who were given quotas and then decided how to fill them There was very little draft resistance 51 The nation went from a surplus manpower pool with high unemployment and relief in 1940 to a severe manpower shortage by 1943 The industry realized that the Army urgently desired production of essential war materials and foodstuffs more than soldiers Large numbers of soldiers were not used until the invasion of Europe in summer 1944 In 1940 43 the Army often transferred soldiers to civilian status in the Enlisted Reserve Corps to increase production Those transferred would return to work in essential industry although they could be recalled to active duty if the Army needed them Others were discharged if their civilian work was deemed essential There were instances of mass releases of men to increase production in various industries Working men who had been classified 4F or otherwise ineligible for the draft took second jobs citation needed In the figure below an overview of the development of the United States labor force the armed forces and unemployment during the war years 52 Year Total labor force 1000 Armed forces 1000 Unemployed 1000 Unemployment rate 1939 55 588 370 9 480 17 21940 56 180 540 8 120 14 61941 57 530 1 620 5 560 9 91942 60 380 3 970 2 660 4 71943 64 560 9 020 1 070 1 91944 66 040 11 410 670 1 21945 65 290 11 430 1 040 1 91946 60 970 3 450 2 270 3 9One contentious issue involved the drafting of fathers which was avoided as much as possible The drafting of 18 year olds was desired by the military but vetoed by public opinion Racial minorities were drafted at the same rate as Whites and were paid the same The experience of World War I regarding men needed by industry was particularly unsatisfactory too many skilled mechanics and engineers became privates there is a possibly apocryphal story of a banker assigned as a baker due to a clerical error noted by historian Lee Kennett in his book G I Farmers demanded and were generally given occupational deferments many volunteered anyway but those who stayed at home lost postwar veteran s benefits Later in the war in light of the tremendous amount of manpower that would be necessary for the invasion of France in 1944 many earlier deferment categories became draft eligible Religion edit In the 1930s pacifism was a very strong force in most of the Protestant churches Only a minority of religious leaders typified by Reinhold Niebuhr paid serious attention to the threats to peace posed by Nazi Germany Fascist Italy or militaristic Japan After Pearl Harbor in December 1941 practically all the religious denominations gave some support to the war effort such as providing chaplains Typically church members sent their sons into the military without protest accepted shortages and rationing as a war necessity purchased war bonds working munitions industries and prayed intensely for safe return and for victory Church leaders however were much more cautious while holding fast to the ideals of peace justice and humanitarianism and sometimes criticizing military policies such as the bombing of enemy cities They sponsored 10 000 military chaplains and set up special ministries in and around military bases focused not only on soldiers but their young wives who often followed them The mainstream Protestant churches supported the Double V campaign of the black churches to achieve victory against the enemies abroad and victory against racism on the home front However there was little religious protest against the incarceration of Japanese on the West Coast or against segregation of Blacks in the services The intense moral outrage regarding the Holocaust largely appeared after the war ended especially after 1960 Many church leaders supported studies of postwar peace proposals typified by John Foster Dulles a leading Protestant layman and a leading adviser to top level Republicans The churches promoted strong support for European relief programs especially through the United Nations 53 54 Pacifism edit The major churches showed much less pacifism than in 1914 The pacifist churches such as the Quakers and Mennonites were small but maintained their opposition to military service though many young members such as Richard Nixon voluntarily joined the military Unlike in 1917 1918 the positions were generally respected by the government which set up non combat civilian roles for conscientious objectors The Church of God had a strong pacifist element reaching a high point in the late 1930s This small Fundamentalist Protestant denomination regarded World War II as a just war because America was attacked 55 Likewise the Quakers generally regarded World War II as a just war and about 90 served although there were some conscientious objectors 56 The Mennonites and Brethren continued their pacifism but the federal government was much less hostile than in the previous war These churches helped their young men to both become conscientious objectors and to provide valuable service to the nation Goshen College set up a training program for unpaid Civilian Public Service jobs Although young women pacifists were not eligible for the draft they volunteered for unpaid Civilian Public Service jobs to demonstrate their patriotism many worked in mental hospitals 57 The Jehovah s Witness denomination however refused to participate in any forms of service and thousands of its young men refused to register and went to prison 58 As part of the 1940 Selective Service and Training Act the Civilian Public Service would be formed for conscientious objectors to do work considered to be of national importance What type of work varied based on the location of the camps and what was needed 59 Overall about 43 000 conscientious objectors COs refused to take up arms About 6 000 COs went to prison especially the Jehovah s Witnesses About 12 000 served in Civilian Public Service CPS but never received any veterans benefits About 25 000 or more performed noncombatant jobs in the military and did receive postwar veterans benefits 60 61 A rare but notable example of pacifism from within the government came from Jeannette Rankin s opposition to the war Rankin voted against the war particularly because she saw women and peace to be inseparable 62 and even actively encouraged women to do more to prevent the war in America 63 Suspected disloyalty edit Further information Opposition to World War II Civilian support for the war was widespread with isolated cases of draft resistance The F B I was already tracking elements that were suspected of loyalty to Germany Japan or Italy and many were arrested in the weeks after the attack on Pearl Harbor 7 000 German and Italian aliens who were not U S citizens were moved back from the West Coast along with some 100 000 of Japanese descent Some enemy aliens were held without trial during the entire war The U S citizens accused of supporting Germany were given public trials and often were freed 64 65 66 Population movements editThere was large scale migration to industrial centers especially the West Coast Millions of wives followed their husbands to military camps for many families especially from farms the moves were permanent One 1944 survey of migrants in Portland Oregon and San Diego found that three quarters wanted to stay after the war 67 Many new military training bases were established or enlarged especially in the South Large numbers of African Americans left the cotton fields and headed for the cities Housing was increasingly difficult to find in industrial centers as there was no new non military construction Transportation edit nbsp Women cycling in Central Park in New York City September 1942 Many Americans during World War 2 would end up bicycling instead of driving During the war the Office of Defense Transportation ODT would be created to help regulate transportation During the war people would reduce travelling for personal reasons Those that drove cars would do less and carpool People would end up walking and bicycling more often while bus and rail usages would increase to levels that were never seen until that point 68 When the United States entered World War II it was a vastly motorized country as about 85 of all passenger travel came from private cars while all other forms of mass transit made up about 14 of passenger travel Commuting by car would be limited by the ODT through car tire and gasoline rationing banning pleasure driving regulating the movement of commercial vehicles establishing a national 35 miles per hour 56 km h speed limit along with public campaigns and carpooling programs What was defined as pleasure driving was ambiguous and the policy banning it was unpopular The newly established speed limit was enforced by state and local level officials Exemptions were made to the national speed limit for military and emergencies vehicles that were on duties that required speedier travel times 68 During the war taxis were also regulated by the ODT 69 Railroads previously saw a decline in travel during the 1920s and 30s with World War 2 reversing this decline as the amount of passenger travel dramatically increased This gain in railroad travel largely came from soldiers who were travelling During the war 43 million soldiers were transported at an average of 1 million per month 69 In 1941 prior to the United States entering the war 3 4 million passengers were transported both across the Atlantic Ocean and throughout the United States Many airlines ended up cancelling their regular flights and turned over the 200 out of 360 airlines to the military 69 which would be placed under the Air Transport Command 70 During the war casual air travel would practically disappear in the United States 71 Racial tensions edit The large scale movement of black Americans from the rural South to urban and defense centers in the North and the West and some in the South during the Second Great Migration led to local confrontations over jobs and housing shortages The cities were relatively peaceful much feared large scale race riots did not happen but there was nevertheless violence on both sides as in the 1943 race riot in Detroit and the anti Mexican Zoot Suit Riots in Los Angeles in 1943 72 The zoot suit was a highly conspicuous costume worn by Mexican American teenagers in Los Angeles As historian Roger Bruns notes the Zoot suit also represented a stark visual expression of culture for Mexican Americans about making a statement a mark of defiance against the place in society in which they found themselves They gained admiration from within their in group and disgust and ridicule from others especially the Anglos 73 Role of women editFurther information American women in World War II nbsp Riveting team working on the cockpit shell of a C 47 transport at the plant of North American Aviation Office of War Information photo by Alfred T Palmer 1942 nbsp Woman aircraft worker checking assemblies California 1942 nbsp Woman standing next to a wide range of tire sizes required by military aircraft Standlee 2010 argues that during the war the traditional gender division of labor changed somewhat as the home or domestic female sphere expanded to include the home front Meanwhile the public sphere the male domain was redefined as the international stage of military action 74 Employment edit Wartime mobilization drastically changed the sexual divisions of labor for women as young able bodied men were sent overseas and wartime manufacturing production increased Throughout the war according to Susan Hartmann 1982 an estimated 6 5 million women entered the labor force Women many of whom were married took a variety of paid jobs in a multitude of vocational jobs many of which were previously exclusive to men The greatest wartime gain in female employment was in the manufacturing industry where more than 2 5 million additional women represented an increase of 140 percent by 1944 75 This was catalyzed by the Rosie the Riveter phenomenon The composition of the marital status of women who went to work changed considerably throughout the war One in every ten married women entered the labor force during the war and they represented more than three million of the new female workers while 2 89 million were single and the rest widowed or divorced For the first time in the nation s history there were more married women than single women in the female labor force In 1944 thirty seven percent of all adult women were reported in the labor force but nearly fifty percent of all women were employed at some time during that year at the height of wartime production 75 In the same year the unemployment rate hit an all time historical low of 1 2 76 According to Hartmann 1982 the women who sought employment based on various surveys and public opinion reports at the time suggests that financial reasoning was the justification for entering the labor force however patriotic motives made up another large portion of women s desires to enter Women whose husbands were at war were more than twice as likely to seek jobs 75 Fundamentally women were thought to be taking work defined as men s work however the work women did was typically catered to specific skill sets management thought women could handle Management would also advertise women s work as an extension of domesticity 77 For example in a Sperry Corporation recruitment pamphlet the company stated Note the similarity between squeezing orange juice and the operation of a small drill press A Ford Motor Company at Willow Run bomber plant publication proclaimed The ladies have shown they can operate drill presses as well as egg beaters One manager was even stated saying Why should men who from childhood on never so much as sewed on buttons be expected to handle delicate instruments better than women who have plied embroidery needles knitting needles and darning needles all their lives 77 In these instances women were thought of and hired to do jobs management thought they could perform based on sex typing Following the war many women left their jobs voluntarily One Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant formally Twin Cities Ordnance Plant worker in New Brighton Minnesota confessed I will gladly get back into the apron I did not go into war work with the idea of working all my life It was just to help out during the war 78 Other women were laid off by employers to make way for returning veterans who did not lose their seniority due to the war There are a few examples of reluctance of women to take on wartime jobs For example due to labour shortages the American government had to actively promote the war to civilians and the War Manpower Commission used propaganda to sell the war to American women There was a change in attitudes regarding women in employment in wartime America and the government started to promote women in work as part of nature and those that resisted or were reluctant to find work were slackers 79 By the end of the war many men who entered into the service did not return This left women to take up the sole responsibility of the household and provide economically for the family Nursing edit Nursing became a highly prestigious occupation for young women A majority of female civilian nurses volunteered for the Army Nurse Corps or the Navy Nurse Corps These women automatically became officers 80 Teenaged girls enlisted in the Cadet Nurse Corps To cope with the growing shortage on the homefront thousands of retired nurses volunteered to help out in local hospitals 81 82 Volunteer activities edit nbsp What Can I Do The Citizen s Handbook for War U S Office of Civilian Defense 1942Women staffed millions of jobs in community service roles such as nursing the USO 46 and the Red Cross 83 Unorganized women were encouraged to collect and turn in materials that were needed by the war effort Women collected fats rendered during cooking children formed balls of aluminum foil they peeled from chewing gum wrappers and also created rubber band balls which they contributed to the war effort Hundreds of thousands of men joined civil defense units to prepare for disasters such as enemy bombing The Women Airforce Service Pilots WASP mobilized 1 000 civilian women to fly new warplanes from the factories to airfields located on the east coast of the U S This was historically significant because flying a warplane had always been a male role No American women flew warplanes in combat 84 Baby boom edit Marriage and motherhood came back as prosperity empowered couples who had postponed marriage The birth rate started shooting up in 1941 paused in 1944 45 as 12 million men were in uniform then continued to soar until reaching a peak in the late 1950s This was the Baby Boom In a New Deal like move the federal government set up the EMIC program that provided free prenatal and natal care for the wives of servicemen below the rank of sergeant Housing shortages especially in the munitions centers forced millions of couples to live with parents or in makeshift facilities Little housing had been built in the Depression years so the shortages grew steadily worse until about 1949 when a massive housing boom finally caught up with demand After 1944 much of the new housing was supported by the G I Bill Federal law made it difficult to divorce absent servicemen so the number of divorces peaked when they returned in 1946 In long range terms divorce rates changed little 45 Housewives edit nbsp A World War II American home front diorama depicting a woman and her daughter at the Audie Murphy American Cotton MuseumJuggling their roles as mothers due to the Baby Boom and the jobs they filled while the men were at war women strained to complete all tasks set before them The war caused cutbacks in automobile and bus service and migration from farms and towns to munitions centers Those housewives who worked found the dual role difficult to handle Stress came when sons husbands fathers brothers and fiances were drafted and sent to faraway training camps preparing for a war in which nobody knew how many would be killed Millions of wives tried to relocate near their husbands training camps 45 Racial politics of the war editImmigration policies during and after World War II edit During World War II the trend in immigration policies was both more and less restrictive The United States immigration policies focused more on national security and were driven by foreign policy imperatives 85 Legislation such as the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 was finally repealed This Act was the first law in the United States that excluded a specific group the Chinese from migrating to the United States 85 But during World War II with the Chinese as allies the United States passed the Magnuson Act also known as the Chinese Exclusion Repeal Act of 1943 There was also the Nationality Act of 1940 which clarified how to become and remain a citizen 85 Specifically it allowed immigrants who were not citizens like the Filipinos or those in the outside territories to gain citizenship by enlisting in the army In contrast the Japanese and Japanese Americans were subject to internment in the U S There was also legislation like the Smith Act also known as the Alien Registration Act of 1940 which required indicted communists anarchists and fascists Another program was the Bracero Program which allowed over two decades nearly 5 million Mexican workers to come and work in the United States 85 When World War II broke out in 1939 a common belief spread that Germany was planting spies and saboteurs in the US under the guise of immigrants American consuls under the encouragement of US Assistant Secretary of State Breckinridge Long who was the head of visa related affairs in the US State Department to screen visa applicants so much to the point that few could ever pass the endless criteria to prove they were not likely to become a public charge Long was described as being anti Semitic 86 and is credited with making it harder for Jewish refugees to come to the United States 87 88 After World War II there was also the Truman Directive of 1945 which did not allow more people to migrate but did use the immigration quotas to let in more displaced people after the war 89 There was also the War Brides Act of 1945 which allowed spouses of US soldiers to get an expedited path towards citizenship In contrast the 1952 Immigration and Nationality Act also known as the McCarran Walter Act turned away migrants based not on their country of origin but rather whether they are moral or diseased 90 Repatriation of Americans abroad edit When World War II began in Europe during 1939 the United States would attempt to repatriate approximately 100 000 Americans who were in Europe The Special Division was created within the US State Department to handle matters involving the war and giving assistance to Americans who were abroad and being repatriated with Breckinridge Long being given responsibility of the Special Division The US government would end up chartering 6 ships from United States Lines to repatriate Americans On November 4 1939 the Neutrality Act was signed into law which banned American ships from traveling to states engaged in armed conflict and by early November 75 000 Americans had been repatriated from Europe 91 Internment edit Main articles Internment of Japanese Americans Internment of Italian Americans and Internment of German Americans In 1942 the War Department demanded that all enemy nationals be removed from war zones on the West Coast The question became how to evacuate the estimated 120 000 people of Japanese ancestry living on the Pacific Coast of the continental United States Roosevelt looked at the secret evidence available to him 92 the Japanese in the Philippines had collaborated with the Japanese invasion troops most of the adult Japanese in California had been strong supporters of Japan in the war against China There was evidence of espionage compiled by code breakers that decrypted messages to Japan from agents in North America and Hawaii before and after the attack on Pearl Harbor These MAGIC cables were kept a secret from all but those with the highest clearance such as Roosevelt On February 19 1942 Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 which set up designated military areas from which any or all persons may be excluded The most controversial part of the order included American born children and youth who had dual U S and Japanese citizenship In February 1943 when activating the 442nd Regimental Combat Team a unit composed mostly of American born American citizens of Japanese descent living in Hawaii Roosevelt said No loyal citizen of the United States should be denied the democratic right to exercise the responsibilities of his citizenship regardless of his ancestry The principle on which this country was founded and by which it has always been governed is that Americanism is a matter of the mind and heart Americanism is not and never was a matter of race or ancestry In 1944 the U S Supreme Court upheld the legality of the executive order in the Korematsu v United States case The executive order remained in force until December when Roosevelt released the Japanese internees except for those who announced their intention to return to Japan Fascist Italy was an official enemy and citizens of Italy were also forced away from strategic coastal areas in California Altogether 58 000 Italians were forced to relocate They relocated on their own and were not put in camps Known spokesmen for Benito Mussolini were arrested and held in prison The restrictions were dropped in October 1942 and Italy became a co belligerent of the Allies in 1943 In the east however the large Italian populations of the northeast especially in munitions producing centers such as Bridgeport and New Haven faced no restrictions and contributed just as much to the war effort as other Americans FEPC edit The Fair Employment Practices Commission FEPC was a federal executive order requiring companies with government contracts not to discriminate based on race or religion It assisted African Americans in obtaining defense industry jobs during the second wave of the Great Migration of southern blacks to Northern and Western war production and urban centers Under pressure from A Philip Randolph s growing March on Washington Movement on June 25 1941 President Roosevelt created the Fair Employment Practices Committee FEPC by signing Executive Order 8802 It said there shall be no discrimination in the employment of workers in defense industries or government because of race creed color or national origin In 1943 Roosevelt greatly strengthened FEPC with a new executive order 9346 It required that all government contracts have a non discrimination clause 93 FEPC was the most significant breakthrough ever for Blacks and women on the job front During the war the federal government operated airfields shipyards supply centers ammunition plants and other facilities that employed millions FEPC rules applied and guaranteed equality of employment rights These facilities shut down when the war ended In the private sector the FEPC was generally successful in enforcing non discrimination in the North and West but did not attempt to challenge segregation in the South and in the border region its intervention led to hate strikes by angry white workers 94 African Americans and the Double V campaign edit Main article Double V campaign nbsp Participants in the Double V campaign 1942 From the collection of the National Archives and Records Administration The African American community in the United States resolved on a Double V campaign victory over fascism abroad and victory over discrimination at home During the second phase of the Great Migration five million African Americans relocated from rural and poor Southern farms to urban and munitions centers in Northern and Western states in search of racial economic social and political opportunities Racial tensions remained high in these cities particularly in overcrowding in housing as well as competition for jobs As a result cities such as Detroit New York and Los Angeles experienced race riots in 1943 leading to dozens of deaths 95 Black newspapers created the Double V campaign to build black morale and head off radical action 96 Most black women had been farm laborers or domestics before the war 97 Working with the federal Fair Employment Practices Committee the NAACP and CIO unions these Black women fought a Double V campaign fighting against the Axis abroad and restrictive hiring practices at home Their efforts redefined citizenship equating their patriotism with war work and seeking equal employment opportunities government entitlements and better working conditions as conditions appropriate for full citizens 98 In the South black women worked in segregated jobs in the West and most of the North they were integrated However wildcat strikes erupted in Detroit Baltimore and Evansville Indiana where white migrants from the South refused to work alongside black women 99 100 Racism in propaganda edit Pro American media during the war tended to portray the Axis powers in a negative light nbsp With the war in full swing patriotically themed comic books were an important source of propaganda Germans were portrayed as weak barbaric or stupid and were heavily associated with Nazism and Nazi imagery For example the comic book Captain America No 1 features the titular superhero punching Hitler Similar anti German sentiments existed in cartoons as well The Popeye cartoon Seein Red White N Blue aired on February 19 1943 ends with Uncle Sam punching a sickly looking Hitler In the Donald Duck cartoon Der Fuehrer s Face Donald Duck is portrayed as a Nazi living in Germany where the Nazi war effort is heavily satirized and caricatured 101 American media portrayed the Japanese negatively as well While attacks on Germans were generally focused on high level Nazi officials such as Hitler Himmler Goebbels and Goring the Japanese were targeted more broadly Portrayals of the Japanese ranged from showing them being vicious and feral as on the cover of Marvel Comics Mystery Comics no 32 to mocking their physical appearance and speech patterns In the Looney Tunes cartoon Tokio Jokio aired May 13 1943 the Japanese people are all shown to be dim witted obsessed with being polite cowardly and physically short with buckteeth big lips squinty eyes and glasses The entire cartoon is also narrated in broken English with the letter R often replacing L in pronunciation of words a common stereotype 102 Japanese slurs were commonly used such as Jap monkey face and slanty eyes 103 104 These stereotypes are also seen in Theodor Geisel s comics created during the Second World War 105 Wartime politics editMain article Presidency of Franklin D Roosevelt third and fourth terms Prewar background edit When World War 2 began the United States was initially neutral until the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor Polling done immediately after the war found over 90 opposed entering the war 106 However as time went on public opinion began to shift toward joining the war 107 The most notable non interventionist group was the America First Committee 106 which was formed in September 1940 Another smaller non interventionist group was Keep America Out of War Congress originally known as the Keep America Out of War Committee or KAOWC which was a socialist pacifist organization formed in March 1938 lasting until the Attack on Pearl Harbor 108 With regards for pro interventionist forces one organization was the Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies CDAAA which was formed in May 1940 106 After the attack on Pearl Harbor the United States joined the war and this practically ended any debate about entering the war 107 Roosevelt easily won the bitterly contested 1940 election but the Conservative coalition maintained a tight grip on Congress regarding taxes and domestic issues Wendell Willkie the defeated GOP candidate in 1940 became a roving ambassador for Roosevelt After Vice President Henry A Wallace became enmeshed in a series of squabbles with other high officials Roosevelt stripped him of his administrative responsibilities and dropped him from the 1944 ticket Roosevelt in cooperation with big city party leaders replaced Wallace with Missouri Senator Harry S Truman Truman was best known for investigating waste fraud and inefficiency in wartime programs 109 Wartime events edit Despite conspiracy theories saying FDR would cancel the 1942 elections they went ahead as they previously had prior to the war 110 Among the 80 million men and women eligible to vote only 28 million did so The election would not go well for FDR and his party as they lost 7 seats in the Senate and 47 in the House of Representatives with a Conservative coalition of Republicans and Southern Democrats taking control of both houses on domestic issues Reducing the draft age to 18 regulations amp restrictions from the war along with rationing and a drift away from the New Deal are credited with hurting the Democrats that year 109 In the 1944 presidential election Roosevelt would end up defeating Thomas Dewey who came from the conservative wing of the Republican Party in a close election Several Republicans would run for the presidential nomination which were Wendell Willkie New York Governor Thomas E Dewey and Ohio Governor John W Bricker Dewey would win the nomination selecting Bricker as his running mate Willkie would mobilize liberal Republicans while Dewey and Bricker attracted Republicans from the conservative bloc of the party Campaigning would carry out during the 1944 presidential election just like in previous ones 109 111 nbsp A soldier sealing his ballot October 1944Voting edit During World War II traditional means of voting were unavailable to soldiers drafted into the military along with women serving in auxiliary corps or volunteer organizations like the Red Cross so instead those working serving away from home had to cast absentee ballots if they chose to vote Many states during the war did not have absentee voting laws and those that did did not take into account the circumstance generated by the war To solve this issue with absentee voting US Congress would pass the 1942 and later 1944 Soldier Voting Acts 112 The Soldier Voting Act of 1942 would be enacted on September 16 1942 allowing for men and women serving the country to cast an absentee ballot if they still lived in the United States It would disregard any state voting registration requirement and prohibited the use of poll taxes for those covered by the act However turnout was low in the 1942 elections and of the 4 million men serving in the military along with tens of thousands of women 28 000 absentee ballots were cast making this a less than 1 turnout rate for those in the armed forces Also because of the timing of the act states did not have much time to prepare ballots The Soldier Voting Act of 1944 would pass in April 1944 As part of the act a federal ballot was created that allowed for states that did not have adequate voting mechanisms and the act encouraged states to amend absentee voting laws The 1944 elections did see a significant increase in the amount of absentee ballots cast by soldiers with an estimated 3 4 million absentee votes being cast or about 25 of those in the armed forces casting an absentee ballot 112 Propaganda and culture edit nbsp Rural school children in front of homefront posters in San Augustine County Texas 1943Main article American propaganda during World War IIPatriotism became the central theme of advertising throughout the war as large scale campaigns were launched to sell war bonds promote efficiency in factories reduce ugly rumors and maintain civilian morale The war consolidated the advertising industry s role in American society deflecting earlier criticism 113 The media cooperated with the federal government in presenting the official view of the war All movie scripts had to be pre approved 114 For example there were widespread rumors in the Army to the effect that people on the homefront were slacking off A Private SNAFU film cartoon released to soldiers only belied that rumor 115 Tin Pan Alley produced patriotic songs to rally the people 116 Posters edit nbsp Fool the Axis Use Prophylaxis poster 1942 Philadelphia nbsp Government poster showing a friendly Soviet soldier 1942Posters helped to mobilize the nation Inexpensive accessible and ever present the poster was an ideal agent for making war aims the personal mission of every citizen Government agencies businesses and private organizations issued an array of poster images linking the military front with the home front calling upon every American to boost production at work and home Some resorted to extreme racial and ethnic caricatures of the enemy sometimes as hopelessly bumbling cartoon characters sometimes as evil half human creatures 117 Bond drives edit A strong aspect of American culture then as now was a fascination with celebrities and the government used them in its eight war bond campaigns that called on people to save now and redeem the bonds after the war when houses cars and appliances would again be available 118 The War Bond drives helped finance the war Americans were challenged to put at least 10 of every paycheck into bonds 119 Compliance was high with entire workplaces earning a special Minuteman flag to fly over their plant if all workers belonged to the Ten Percent Club 120 Hollywood edit Hollywood studios also went all out for the war effort as studios encouraged their stars such as Clark Gable and James Stewart to enlist Hollywood had military units that made training films Ronald Reagan narrated many of them Nearly all of Hollywood made hundreds of war movies that in coordination with the Office of War Information OWI taught Americans what was happening and who the heroes and the villains were Ninety million people went to the movies every week 121 Some of the most highly regarded films during this period included Casablanca Mrs Miniver Going My Way and Yankee Doodle Dandy Even before active American involvement in the war the popular Three Stooges comic trio were lampooning the Nazi German leadership and Nazis in general with a number of short subject films starting with You Nazty Spy released in January 1940 the very first Hollywood film of any length to satirize Hitler and the Nazis 122 nearly two years before the United States was drawn into World War II Cartoons and short subjects were a major sign of the times as Warner Brothers Studios and Disney Studios gave unprecedented aid to the war effort by creating cartoons that were both patriotic and humorous and also contributed to remind movie goers of wartime activities such as rationing and scrap drives war bond purchases and the creation of victory gardens Warner shorts such as Daffy The Commando Draftee Daffy Herr Meets Hare and Russian Rhapsody are particularly remembered for their biting wit and unflinching mockery of the enemy particularly Adolf Hitler Hideki Tōjō and Hermann Goring Their cartoons of Private Snafu produced for the military as training films served to remind many military men of the importance of following proper procedure during wartime for their safety MGM also contributed to the war effort with slyly pro US short cartoon The Yankee Doodle Mouse with Lt Jerry Mouse as the hero and Tom Cat as the enemy To heighten the suspense Hollywood needed to feature attacks on American soil and obtained inspirations for dramatic stories from the Philippines Indeed the Philippines became a homefront that showed the American way of life threatened by the Japanese enemy Especially popular were the films Texas to Bataan 1942 Corregidor 1943 Bataan 1943 They Were Expendable 1945 and Back to Bataan 1945 123 The OWI had to approve every film before they could be exported To facilitate the process the OWI s Bureau of Motion Pictures BMP worked with producers directors and writers before the shooting started to make sure that the themes reflected patriotic values While Hollywood had been generally nonpolitical before the war the liberals who controlled OWI encouraged the expression of New Deal liberalism bearing in mind the huge domestic audience as well as an international audience that was equally large 124 Censorship edit Main article Office of Censorship Prior to entering the war the US government had already done two years of planning in terms of how to conduct censorship Censorship would officially begin one hour after the Attack on Pearl Harbor which took place on December 7 1941 censoring all cable radiotelephone and telegraphic messages between the rest of the United States and Hawaii Control of censorship was temporarily placed under FBI Director J Edgar Hoover from December 8 to the 19th when the Office of Censorship was created via a presidential executive order with Byron Price leading the office for the duration of the war Censorship was both practiced mandatorily and voluntarily depending on the circumstance International communication was subjected to mandatory censorship while the domestic press participated on a voluntary basis as the federal government decided mandatory censorship would not be needed as long as patriotic broadcasters and publishers withheld any information that was deemed to harm the Allied war effort 125 The war would be covered by over 2 000 correspondents supplying their reports to newsreels radios magazines newspapers and television which was an emerging technology In the 1930s and 40s most Americans relied on print journalist to get their news 126 The news was prohibited from covering the travels of the president the location of the newly moved National Archives or any diplomatic or military missions 125 Local activism editOne way to enlist everyone in the war effort was scrap collection called recycling decades later Many everyday commodities were vital to the war effort and drives were organized to recycle such products as rubber tin waste kitchen fats raw material for explosives newspaper lumber steel and many others Popular phrases promoted by the government at the time were Get into the scrap and Get some cash for your trash a nominal sum was paid to the donor for many kinds of scrap items and Thomas Fats Waller even wrote and recorded a song with the latter title Such commodities as rubber and tin remained highly important as recycled materials until the end of the war while others such as steel were critically needed at first War propaganda played a prominent role in many of these drives Nebraska had perhaps the most extensive and well organized drives it was mobilized by the Omaha World Herald newspaper 127 Sports editAuto racing edit In July 1942 the Office of Defense Transportation ordered an indefinite ban on auto racing in an effort to conserve rubber and gasoline 128 129 Baseball edit nbsp The 1942 Green Light Letter sent by President Roosevelt to Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis authorizing wartime baseballBaseball was at a peak in its popularity as the national pastime at the outset of the war In January 1942 however Commissioner of Baseball and former federal judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis handwrote a letter to President Roosevelt asking whether the President felt professional baseball should continue to operate given that these are not ordinary times Roosevelt wrote back the following day in what became known as the Green Light Letter that it would be thoroughly worthwhile and best for the country to keep baseball going He reasoned that the public would be working longer and harder hours than ever before and therefore had a greater need for recreation than ever before 130 In 1943 and 1944 Commissioner Landis with input from Joseph Bartlett Eastman of the Office of Defense Transportation ordered that all spring training take place north of the Potomac River and east of the Mississippi River in order to cut down on travel 131 134 Major League Baseball MLB teams regularly played exhibition games to raise money and morale for the war effort often against military teams Ford Frick testified in 1951 before the House Judiciary Committee that MLB teams played 61 games on military bases between 1942 and 1944 The league raised more than 2 1 million equivalent to 34 9 million in 2022 131 134 Because many of the able bodied young men of the United States enlisted or were drafted into service many MLB roster spots went to players deemed physically unfit for service 132 They ranged from players such as Tommy Holmes who had a chronic sinus condition 132 25 to Pete Gray who had only one arm 132 332 Older stars such as Jimmie Foxx Lloyd Waner Ben Chapman Babe Herman and Hal Trosky also found new playing opportunities and came out of retirement 133 134 135 Basketball edit After the United States entered the war the country s two professional basketball leagues the American Basketball League and National Basketball League both shrunk to four teams Much of the country s best basketball was played on military bases 136 Football edit More than 1 000 players left or postponed their professional football careers due to the war 137 Due to the depletion of rosters the Pittsburgh Steelers merged with the Philadelphia Eagles in 1943 to become the Steagles and with the Chicago Cardinals in 1944 to become Card Pitt In 1943 the Cleveland Rams suspended operations altogether 138 During this time due to the lack of well rounded athletes available the National Football League also began allowing free substitutions which revolutionized the game 139 Golf edit The U S Open was not held between 1942 and 1945 because of the scarcity of the rubber essential to the manufacture of golf balls 140 Many of the nation s golf courses were also converted to more practical use For example Augusta National Golf Club was used to raise cows for beef for Camp Gordon and Congressional Country Club was used as a special ops training ground while several others were converted to farmland 141 Attacks on U S soil editAlthough the Axis powers never launched a full scale invasion of the United States there were attacks and acts of sabotage on U S soil December 7 1941 Attack on Pearl Harbor a surprise attack that killed almost 2 500 people in the then incorporated territory of Hawaii which caused the U S to enter the war the next day January August 1942 Second Happy Time German U boats engaged American ships off the U S East Coast February 23 1942 Bombardment of Ellwood a Japanese submarine attack on California Attacks on California ships by Japanese submarines March 4 1942 Operation K a Japanese reconnaissance over Pearl Harbor following the attack on December 7 1941 June 3 1942 August 15 1943 Aleutian Islands Campaign the battle for the then incorporated territory of Alaska June 21 22 1942 Bombardment of Fort Stevens the second attack on a U S military base in the continental U S in World War II September 9 1942 and September 29 1942 Lookout Air Raids the only attack by enemy aircraft on the contiguous U S and the second enemy aircraft attack on the U S continent in World War II November 1944 April 1945 Fu Go balloon bombs over 9 300 of them were launched by Japan across the Pacific Ocean towards the U S to start forest fires On May 5 1945 six U S civilians were killed in Oregon when they stumbled upon a bomb and it exploded the only deaths to occur in the U S as a result of an enemy balloon attack during World War II See also editEthnic minorities in the U S Armed Forces during World War II American music during World War II G I Generation Home front during World War II for rest of world Japanese occupation of the Philippines Military history of the United States during World War II United States home front during World War I Woman s Land Army of America California during World War II History of Texas World War II US Government films Why We Fight Black Marketing Campus on the March Henry Browne Farmer Manpower Negro Colleges in War Time The Arm Behind the ArmyNotes edit Schneider Carl G and Schneider Dorothy World War II p 57 ISBN 1438108907 Harold G Vatter The U S Economy in World War II 1988 pp 27 31 David Kennedy Freedom from Fear The American People in Depression and War 1929 1945 2001 pp 615 68 Franklin Roosevelt Executive Order 9250 Establishing the Office of Economic Stabilization http www presidency ucsb edu ws index php pid 16171 axzz1qK2AszpJ Archived 2012 03 20 at the Wayback Machine Carola Frydman and Raven Molloy Pay Cuts for the Boss Executive Compensation in the 1940s Journal of Economic History 72 March 2012 225 51 Geoffrey Perrett Days of sadness months of triumph the American people 1939 1945 Volume 1 1985 p 300 Harvey C Mansfield A short history of OPA Historical reports on War Administration 1951 Paul A C Koistinen Arsenal of World War II The Political Economy of American Warfare 1940 1945 2004 pp 498 517 Inflation existed because not all prices were controlled and even when they were prices rose as sales disappeared low end items were less available and quality deteriorated James J Kimble Mobilizing the Home Front War Bonds And Domestic Propaganda 2006 WPA workers were counted as unemployed U S Bureau of the Census Statistical Abstract 1946 1946 p 173 Miller and Cornford Lee Kennett 1985 For the duration the United States goes to war Pearl Harbor 1942 New York Scribner pp 130 32 ISBN 978 0 684 18239 1 Goldin Claudia D September 1991 The Role of World War II in the Rise of Women s Employment PDF JSTOR 81 4 Smithtown s History Alice Throckmorton McLean Article Archive Chronological Smithtown Matters Online Local News about Smithtown Kings Park St James Nesconset Commack Hauppauge Ft Salonga www smithtownmatters com Retrieved 2021 04 22 Alice Throckmorton McLean American social service organizer Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2021 04 22 Bureau of the Census Historical Statistics of the United States 1976 Chapter D Labor Series D 29 41 Susan Cahn Coming On Strong University of Illinois 2015 Merrie A Fidler The Origins and History of the All American Girls Professional Baseball League McFarland 2006 Sue Macy A Whole New Ball game Henry Holt 1993 Walter W Wilcox Farmer in the Second World War 1947 a b Holt Marilyn 2022 On the Farm Front with the Victory Farm Volunteers Agricultural History Duke University Press 96 1 2 164 186 doi 10 1215 00021482 9619828 S2CID 249657291 Retrieved November 10 2022 Kallen Stuart A 2000 The war at home San Diego Lucent Books pp 43 45 ISBN 978 1 56006 531 9 Otey M Scruggs Texas and the Bracero Program 1942 1947 Pacific Historical Review 1963 32 3 pp 251 264 in JSTOR Archived 2017 02 03 at the Wayback Machine Erasmo Gamboa Mexican Labor amp World War II Braceros in the Pacific Northwest 1942 1947 2000 Duane Ernest Miller Barbed Wire Farm Laborers Michigan S Prisoners of War Experience during World War II Michigan History Sept 1989 Vol 73 Issue 5 pp 12 17 Kallen Stuart A 2000 The war at home San Diego Lucent Books ISBN 978 1560065319 World War II Civic responsibility PDF Smithsonian Institution Archived PDF from the original on 11 June 2014 Retrieved 1 April 2014 Hinshaw 1943 Natsuki Aruga An finish school Child labor during World War II Labor History 29 4 1988 498 530 online Bureau of the Census Historical Statistics of the United States 1976 table H 424 Jaworski Taylor February 24 2014 You re in the Army Now The Impact of World War II on Women s Education Work and Family The Journal of Economic History 74 1 169 195 doi 10 1017 S0022050714000060 Lichtenstein 2003 Philip Taft The A F of L from the Death of Gompers to the Merger 1959 pp 204 33 Paul A C Koistinen Arsenal of World War II The Political Economy of American Warfare 1940 1945 2004 p 410 Melvyn Dubofsky and Warren Van Tine John L Lewis A Biography 1977 pp 415 44 William H Holley et al The Labor Relations Process 2008 p 63 Martin Glaberman Wartime Strikes The Struggle Against the No Strike Pledge in the UAW During World War II 1980 Andrew Kersten Race Jobs and the War The FEPC in the Midwest 1941 46 2000 Campbell Women at War with America ch 5 Morton Sosna and James C Cobb Remaking Dixie The Impact of World War II on the American South UP of Mississippi 1997 Ralph C Hon The South in a War Economy Southern Economic Journal8 3 1942 pp 291 308 online Archived 2020 08 19 at the Wayback Machine For comprehensive coverage see Dwight C Hoover and B U Ratchford Economic Resources and Policies of the South 1951 Russell B Olwell At Work in the Atomic City A Labor and Social History of Oak Ridge Tennessee 2004 Dewey W Grantham The South in modern America 1994 pp 172 183 Tindall The Emergence of the New South pp 694 701 quoting p 701 a b c Campbell a b Meghan K Winchell Good Girls Good Food Good Fun The Story of USO Hostesses 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Good War Conscientious Objection and Gender on the American Home Front 1941 1947 1997 pp 98 111 M James Penton 1997 Apocalypse Delayed The Story of Jehovah s Witnesses U of Toronto Press p 142 Archived from the original on 2022 03 31 Retrieved 2019 02 05 Martin Kali October 16 2020 Alternative Service Conscientious Objectors and Civilian Public Service in World War II The National WWII Museum Archived from the original on October 10 2022 Retrieved October 10 2022 Scott H Bennett American Pacifism the Greatest Generation and World War II in G Kurt Piehler and Sidney Pash The United States and the Second World War New Perspectives on Diplomacy War and the Home Front 2010 pp 259 92 Online Archived 2020 01 13 at the Wayback Machine Mulford Q Sibley and Philip E Jacob Conscription of Conscience The American State and the Conscientious Objector 1940 1947 Cornell UP 1952 Wilson J H 1980 Peace is a woman s job Jeannette Rankin and the Origins of American Foreign Policy Montana The Magazine of 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Vote How the Soldier Voting Acts of 1942 and 1944 Disenfranchised America s Armed Forces New York University Journal of Legislation and Public Policy 19 2 via New York Law School Digital Commons Inger L Stole Advertising at War Business Consumers and Government in the 1940s by University of Illinois Press 2012 Fox Madison Avenue Goes to War The Strange Military Career of American Advertising 1941 45 1975 Private Snafu cartoon John Bush Jones 2006 The Songs That Fought the War Popular Music And The Home Front 1939 1945 University Press of New England ISBN 9781584654438 Archived from the original on 2016 05 21 Retrieved 2015 10 25 The National Archives Northwestern University and the University of Minnesota all have extensive collections of World War II posters accessible online James J Kimble 2006 Mobilizing the Home Front War Bonds and Domestic Propaganda Texas A amp M U P p 5 ISBN 9781585444854 Archived from the original on 2016 04 24 Retrieved 2015 10 25 Keen Johnson 1982 The Public 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Censorship in World War II University of the Pacific Retrieved April 1 2023 via Scholarly Commons University of the Pacific Buljung Brianna 2011 From the Foxhole American Newsmen and the Reporting of World War II International Social Science Review 86 1 2 44 64 JSTOR 41887473 Retrieved April 1 2023 via JSTOR James J Kimble The Militarization of the Prairie Great Plains Quarterly 2007 27 2 pp 83 99 RACING BAN POSTPONED Auto and Motor Cycle Contests to End After July 31 New York Times July 8 1942 Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 25 January 2022 Oreovicz John 22 May 2016 Oreovicz Hulman saves day at Indy ESPN com ESPN Retrieved 25 January 2022 Bazer Gerald Culbertson Steven Spring 2002 When FDR Said Play Ball Prologue National Archives and Records Administration 34 1 Retrieved 25 January 2022 a b Obermeyer Jeff 25 July 2013 Baseball and the Bottom Line in World War II Gunning for Profits on the Home Front McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 7043 3 Retrieved 25 January 2022 a b c Aaron Mark Z 2015 Who s on First Replacement Players in World War II SABR Inc ISBN 9781933599908 Retrieved 6 August 2019 Jeanes William August 26 1991 Baseball in World War II Sports Illustrated Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 27 January 2020 Finoli David 2016 The 50 Greatest Players in Pittsburgh Pirates History Rowman amp Littlefield p 98 ISBN 978 1 4422 5871 6 Johnson William H 20 February 2017 Hal Trosky A Baseball Biography McFarland p 115 ISBN 978 1 4766 6645 7 Retrieved 21 January 2022 Grasso John 15 November 2010 Historical Dictionary of Basketball Scarecrow Press p 13 ISBN 978 0 8108 7506 7 Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 22 January 2022 Dixon Schuyler October 4 2019 NFL reaches West Coast is fairly stable despite war in 40s ABC News Associated Press Retrieved 25 January 2022 Robinson Joshua 15 January 2009 Steelers Shared Resources With 2 Teams During World War II The New York Times Archived from the original on 25 January 2022 Retrieved 25 January 2022 Evolution of the NFL Player NFL Football Operations Archived from the original on 25 January 2022 Retrieved 25 January 2022 Zullo Allan Rodell Chris October 2003 Amazing But True Golf Facts Andrews McMeel Publishing p 239 ISBN 978 0 7407 3860 9 Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 25 January 2022 Coyne Tom 25 May 2021 A Course Called America Fifty States Five Thousand Fairways and the Search for the Great American Golf Course Simon and Schuster p 159 ISBN 978 1 9821 2805 0 Retrieved 25 January 2022 References editBrinkley David Washington Goes to War Knopf 1988 memoir Campbell D Ann 1984 Women at War with America Private Lives in a Patriotic Era Harvard University Press Cantril Hadley and Mildred Strunk eds Public Opinion 1935 1946 1951 a massive compilation of many public opinion polls from the USA Ferguson Robert G One Thousand Planes a Day Ford Grumman General Motors and the Arsenal of Democracy History and Technology 2005 21 2 149 175 ISSN 0734 1512 Fulltext in Swetswise Ingenta and Ebsco Flynn George Q The Draft 1940 1973 1993 ISBN 0 7006 1105 3 Gallup George Horace ed The Gallup Poll Public Opinion 1935 1971 3 vol 1972 esp vol 1 summarizes results of each poll as reported to newspapers Garfinkel Herbert When Negroes March The March on Washington and the Organizational Politics for FEPC 1959 Koistinen Paul A C Arsenal of World War II The Political Economy of American Warfare 1940 1945 2004 Miller Sally M and Daniel A Cornford eds American Labor in the Era of World War II 1995 essays by historians mostly on California Lichtenstein Nelson Labor s War at Home The CIO in World War II 2003 Wynn Neil A The Afro American and the Second World War 1977 Vatter Howard The U S Economy in World War II Columbia University Press 1985 General survey Hinshaw David The Home Front 1943 Hoehling A A Home Front the U S A 1966 Further reading editSurveys edit Adams Michael C C The Best War Ever America and World War II 1993 contains detailed bibliography Blum John Morton V Was for Victory Politics and American Culture During World War II 1995 original edition 1976 Casdorph Paul D Let the Good Times Roll Life at Home in America During World War II 1989 Jeffries John W Wartime America The World War II Home Front 1996 online Kennedy David M Freedom from Fear The American People in Depression and War 1929 1945 2001 excerpt and text search a major scholarly survey of the era Kennett Lee For the Duration The United States Goes to War Pearl Harbor 1942 1985 covers the first six months Lingeman Richard R Don t You Know There s a War On The American Home Front 1941 1945 1970 popular history Perrett Geoffrey Days of Sadness Years of Triumph The American People 1939 1945 1973 popular history Polenberg Richard War and Society The United States 1941 1945 1980 Smith Gaddis American Diplomacy During the Second World War 1941 1945 1965 online Sparrow James T Warfare state World War II Americans and the age of big government Oxford UP 2011 Tindall George B The emergence of the new South 1913 1945 1967 online free to borrow pp 687 732 Titus James ed The Home Front and War in the Twentieth Century The American Experience in Comparative Perspective 1984 essays by scholars online free Winkler Allan M Home Front U S A America During World War II 3rd ed 2012 short surveyEncyclopedias edit Ciment James D and Thaddeus Russell eds The Home Front Encyclopedia United States Britain and Canada in World Wars I and II 3 vol 2006 Frank Lisa Tendrich An Encyclopedia of American Women at War From the Home Front to the Battlefields 2013 Resch John Phillips and D Ann Campbell eds Americans at War Society Culture and the Homefront vol 3 2004 Shearer Benjamin F ed Home Front Heroes A Biographical Dictionary of Americans during Wartime 3 vol 2006 10 Eventful Years 1937 1946 4 vol Encyclopaedia Britannica 1947 Highly detailed encyclopedia of events online freeEconomy and labor edit Aruga Natsuki An Finish School Child Labor during World War II Labor History 29 1988 498 530 DOI 10 1080 00236568800890331 Campbell D Ann Sisterhood versus the Brotherhoods Women in Unions in Campbell Women at War with America 1984 pp 139 62 Dubofsky Melvyn and Warren Van Time John L Lewis 1986 Biography of the head of coal miners union Campbell W Glenn ed Economics of mobilization and war 1952 online Evans Paul The Effects of General Price Controls in the United States during World War II Journal of Political Economy 90 1983 944 66 a statistical study in JSTOR Feagin Joe R and Kelly Riddell The State Capitalism and World War II The U S Case Armed Forces and Society 1990 17 1 pp 53 79 Flynn George Q The Mess in Washington Manpower Mobilization in World War II 1979 Fraser Steve Labor Will Rule Sidney Hillman and the Rise of American Labor 1993 leader of CIO Hall Martha L et al American Women s Wartime Dress Sociocultural Ambiguity Regarding Women s Roles During World War II Journal of American Culture 38 Sept 2015 234 42 Harrison Mark Resource Mobilization for World War II The U S A UK U S S R and Germany 1938 1945 Economic History Review 41 1988 171 92 in JSTOR Herman Arthur Freedom s Forge How American Business Produced Victory in World War II Random House 2012 413 pp Hyde Charles K Arsenal of Democracy The American Automobile Industry in World War II Wayne State University Press 2013 264 pages Jacobs Meg How About Some Meat The Office of Price Administration Consumption Politics and State Building from the Bottom Up 1941 1946 Journal of American History 84 3 1997 pp 910 941 in JSTOR Jensen Richard J The causes and cures of unemployment in the Great Depression Journal of Interdisciplinary History 19 4 1989 553 583 online Kersten Andrew E Labor s home front the American Federation of Labor during World War II NYU Press 2006 Klein Maury A Call to Arms Mobilizing America for World War II 2013 Lichtenstein Nelson Labor s war at home The CIO in World War II Temple University Press 2003 Lipsitz George Rainbow at Midnight Labor and Culture in the 1940s 1994 excerpt Maines Rachel Wartime Allocation of Textiles and Apparel Resources Emergency Policy in the Twentieth Century Public Historian 1985 7 1 pp 29 51 Mills Geoffrey and Hugh Rockoff Compliance with Price Controls in the United States and the United Kingdom during World War II Journal of Economic History 47 1 1987 197 213 in JSTOR Myers Margaret G Financial History of the United States 1970 pp 343 64 online Reagan Patrick D The Withholding Tax Beardsley Ruml and Modern American Public Policy Prologue 24 1992 19 31 Rockoff Hugh The Response of the Giant Corporations to Wage and Price Controls in World War II Journal of Economic History 1981 41 1 pp 123 28 in JSTOR Romer Christina D What Ended the Great Depression Journal of Economic History 52 1992 757 84 in JSTOR Seidman Joel American Labor from Defense to Reconversion 1953 Simmons Dean Swords into plowshares Minnesota s POW camps during World War II 2000 ISBN 978 0 9669001 0 1 Sosna Morton and James C Cobb Remaking Dixie The Impact of World War II on the American South UP of Mississippi 1997 Tuttle William M Jr The Birth of an Industry The Synthetic Rubber Mess in World War II Technology and Culture 22 1981 35 67 in JSTOR Wilcox Walter W The Farmer in the Second World War 1947 online Wilson Mark R Destructive Creation American Business and the Winning of World War II 2016 online review Draft edit Bennett Scott H ed Army GI Pacifist CO The World War II Letters of Frank and Albert Dietrich New York Fordham Univ Press 2005 Blum Albert A Drafted Or Deferred Practices Past and Present Ann Arbor Bureau of Industrial Relations Graduate School of Business Administration University of Michigan 1967 Flynn George Q American Medicine and Selective Service in World War II Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 42 1987 305 26 Flynn George Q The Draft 1940 1973 1993 excerpt and text searchFamily gender and minorities edit Bailey Beth and David Farber The Double V Campaign in World War II Hawaii African Americans Racial Ideology and Federal Power Journal of Social History Volume 26 Issue 4 1993 pp 817 Campbell D Ann Women at War with America 1984 online Daniel Clete Chicano Workers and the Politics of Fairness The FEPC in the Southwest 1941 1945 University of Texas Press 1991 Collins William J Race Roosevelt and Wartime Production Fair Employment in World War II Labor Markets American Economic Review 91 1 March 2001 pp 272 286 in JSTOR Costello John Virtue Under Fire How World War II Changed Our Social and Sexual Attitudes 1986 US and Britain Escobedo Elizabeth From Coveralls to Zoot Suits The Lives of Mexican American Women on the World War II Home Front 2013 Finkle Lee The Conservative Aims of Militant Rhetoric Black Protest during World War II Journal of American History 1973 60 3 pp 692 713 in JSTOR Hall Martha L et al American Women s Wartime Dress Sociocultural Ambiguity Regarding Women s Roles During World War II Journal of American Culture 38 Sept 2015 234 42 Hartmann Susan M Home Front and Beyond American Women in the 40s 1982 Kryder Daniel Divided Arsenal Race and the American State During World War II 2001 Kuhn Clifford M It Was a Long Way from Perfect but It Was Working The Canning and Home Production Initiatives in Green County Georgia 1940 1942 Agricultural History 2012 86 1 pp 68 90 on Victory gardens Lees Lorraine M National Security and Ethnicity Contrasting Views during World War II Diplomatic History 11 1987 113 25 Myrdal Gunnar An American Dilemma The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy 1944 famous classic Ossian Lisa L The Forgotten Generation American Children and World War II University of Missouri Press 2011 192 pages children s experiences at school at play at work and in the home Tuttle Jr William M Daddy s Gone to War The Second World War in the Lives of America s Children Oxford University Press 1995 online review Records of the Women s Bureau 1997 short essay on women at work Ward Barbara McLean ed Produce and Conserve Share and Play Square The Grocer and the Consumer on the Home Front Battlefield during World War II Portsmouth NH Strawbery Banke Museum Pfau Ann Elizabeth Miss Yourlovin GIs Gender and Domesticity during World War II Columbia UP 2008 onlinePolitics edit Burns James MacGregor Roosevelt Soldier of Freedom 1970 vol 2 covers the war years Goodwin Doris Kearns No Ordinary Time Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt The Home Front in World War II 1995 Graham Otis L and Meghan Robinson Wander eds Franklin D Roosevelt His Life and Times 1985 encyclopedia Hooks Gregory The Military Industrial Complex World War II s Battle of the Potomac University of Illinois Press 1991 Jeffries John W The New New Deal FDR and American Liberalism 1937 1945 Political Science Quarterly 1990 397 418 in JSTOR Leff Mark H The Politics of Sacrifice on the American Home Front in World War II Journal of American History 77 1991 1296 1318 in JSTOR Patterson James T Mr Republican A Biography of Robert A Taft 1972 Steele Richard W The Great Debate Roosevelt the Media and the Coming of the War 1940 1941 Journal of American History 71 1994 69 92 in JSTOR Young Nancy Beck Why We Fight Congress and the Politics of World War II University Press of Kansas 2013 366 pages a comprehensive surveyPrimary sources and teaching materials edit Dorn Charles and Connie Chiang Lesson Plan National Unity and National Discord The Western Homefront during World War II Journal of the West Summer 2010 49 3 pp 41 60 It contains a detailed lesson plan for 11th grade focused on the social history of the Homefront in the West especially California Nicholas H G Washington despatches 1941 1945 weekly political reports from the British Embassy 1985 718 pages unusually rich secret reports from British diplomats especially Isaiah Berlin analyzing American government and politics Piehler G Kurt ed The United States in World War II A Documentary Reader 2012 excerpt and text searchPropaganda advertising media public opinion edit Blanchard Margaret A Freedom of the Press in World War II American Journalism Volume 12 Issue 3 1995 p 342 358 Published online on 24 July 2013 DOI 10 1080 08821127 1995 10731748 Bredhoff Stacey 1994 Powers of Persuasion Poster Art from World War II National Archives Trust Fund Board Albert Hadley Cantril Mildred Strunk 1951 Public opinion 1935 1946 Princeton University Press summaries of thousands of polls in US Canada Europe Fauser Annegret Sounds of War Music in the United States During World War II Oxford University Press 2013 366 pages focuses on classical music in the 1940s including work by both American composers and Europeans in exile Fox Frank W 1975 Madison Avenue Goes to War The Strange Military Career of American Advertising 1941 45 Brigham Young University Press Fyne Robert 1994 The Hollywood Propaganda of World War II Scarecrow Press Gregory G H 1993 Posters of World War II Gramercy Books Gallup George H 1972 The Gallup Poll Public Opinion 1935 1971 Vol 1 1935 1948 summary of every poll Holsinger M Paul and Mary Anne Schofield Visions of War World War II in Popular Literature and Culture 1992 Witkowski Terrence H World War II Poster Campaigns Preaching Frugality to American Consumers Journal of Advertising Vol 32 2003Social state and local history edit Brown DeSoto Hawaii Goes to War Life in Hawaii from Pearl Harbor to Peace 1989 Cavnes Max Parvin 1961 The Hoosier community at war Indiana University Press ISBN 9780598056399 on Indiana Chandonnet Fern Alaska at War 1941 1945 The Forgotten War Remembered 2007 Clive Alan State of War Michigan in World War II University of Michigan Press 1979 Daniel Pete Going among Strangers Southern Reactions to World War II Journal of American History 77 1990 886 911 in JSTOR Davis Anita Price North Carolina and World War II A Documentary Portrait McFarland 2014 ISBN 978 0 7864 7984 9 See also online review Escobedo Elizabeth From Coveralls to Zoot Suits The Lives of Mexican American Women on the World War II Home Front 2013 Evans Jon 2011 Weathering the Storm Florida Politics during the Administration of Spessard L Holland in World War II PDF Doctor of Philosophy thesis Florida State University Gleason Philip Pluralism Democracy and Catholicism in the Era of World War II Review of Politics 49 1987 208 30 in JSTOR Hartzel Karl Drew The Empire State At War 1949 on upstate New York Hiltner Aaron Friendly Invasions Civilians and Servicemen on the World War II American Home Front 2017 Jaworski Taylor World War II and the Industrialization of the American South Paper No w23477 National Bureau of Economic Research 2017 online Johnson Charles V for Virginia The Commonwealth Goes to War Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 100 1992 365 398 in JSTOR Johnson Marilynn S War as Watershed The East Bay and World War II Pacific Historical Review 63 1994 315 41 on Northern California in JSTOR Lange Dorothea Charles Wollenberg 1995 Photographing the second gold rush Dorothea Lange and the East Bay at war 1941 1945 Heyday Books ISBN 978 0 930588 78 6 in Northern California LaRossa Ralph Of War and Men World War II in the Lives of Fathers and Their Families 2011 Larson Thomas A Wyoming s war years 1941 1945 1993 Lichtenstein Nelson The Making of the Postwar Working Class Cultural Pluralism and Social Structure in World War II Historian 51 1988 42 63 Lee James Ward Carolyn N Barnes and Kent A Bowman eds 1941 Texas Goes to War University of North Texas Press 1991 Lotchin Roger W The Historians War or The Home Front s War Some Thoughts for Western Historians Western Historical Quarterly 1995 26 2 pp 185 196 in JSTOR Marcello Ronald E Small Town America in World War II War Stories from Wrightsville Pennsylvania University of North Texas Press 2014 452 pp Miller Marc The Irony of Victory World War II and Lowell Massachusetts U of Illinois Press 1988 Nash Gerald D The American West Transformed The Impact of the Second World War Indiana UP 1985 Newton Wesley Phillips Montgomery in the Good War Portrait of a Southern City 1939 1946 U of Alabama Press 2000 Montgomery Alabama Pleasants Julian M Home Front North Carolina During World War II UP of Florida 2017 366 pp online review Scranton Philip ed The Second Wave Southern Industrialization from the 1940s to the 1970s U of Georgia Press 2001 Smith C Calvin War and Wartime Changes The Transformation of Arkansas 1940 1945 U of Arkansas Press 1986 O Brien Kenneth Paul and Lynn Hudson Parsons eds The Home Front War World War II and American Society essays by scholars Spinney Robert G World War II in Nashville Transformation of the Homefront 1998 Verge Arthur C The Impact of the Second World War on Los Angeles Pacific Historical Review 1994 63 3 pp 289 314 in JSTOR Watters Mary Illinois in the Second World War 2 vol 1951 External links editRegional Oral History Office Rosie the Riveter World War II American Homefront Project American Anti Axis Propaganda from World War II Archived 2009 07 20 at the Wayback Machine FDR Cartoon Archive Archived 2009 01 21 at the Wayback Machine National Museum of the Civil Air Patrol online World War II section Powers of Persuasion Poster Art from World War II National Archives Northwestern U Library World War II Poster Collection War Ration Book Records and Related Information Library of Congress 1000 Digitized Photos of World War II Occupations on the Homefront A Visual History of Victory Gardens curated by Michigan State University Wartime Prosperity A Reassessment of the U S Economy in the 1940s Robert Higgs 1 March 1992 Dick Dorrance papers which document the rise of FM broadcasting and the role that broadcasters and radio could play in the war effort at the University of Maryland libraries Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States home front during World War II amp oldid 1200142625, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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