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United States in World War I

The United States declared war on the German Empire on April 6, 1917, nearly three years after World War I started. A ceasefire and armistice were declared on November 11, 1918. Before entering the war, the U.S. had remained neutral, though it had been an important supplier to the United Kingdom, France, and the other powers of the Allies of World War I.

United States in World War I
1917–1918
Two American soldiers run towards a bunker.
LocationUnited States
President(s)Woodrow Wilson
Key eventsSelective Service Act of 1917
Food and Fuel Control Act
Conscription
Chronology

The U.S. made its major contributions in terms of supplies, raw material, and money, starting in 1917. American soldiers under General of the Armies John Pershing, Commander-in-Chief of the American Expeditionary Force (AEF), arrived at the rate of 10,000 soldiers a day on the Western Front in the summer of 1918. During the war, the U.S. mobilized over 4.7 million military personnel and suffered the loss of over 116,000 soldiers.[1] The war saw a dramatic expansion of the United States government in an attempt to harness the war effort and a significant increase in the size of the U.S. Armed Forces.

After a relatively slow start in mobilizing the economy and labor force, by spring 1918, the nation was poised to play a role in the conflict. Under the leadership of President Woodrow Wilson, the war represented the climax of the Progressive Era as it sought to bring reform and democracy to the world. There was substantial public opposition to U.S. entry into the war.

Beginning edit

The American entry into World War I came on April 6, 1917, after a year long effort by President Woodrow Wilson to get the United States into the war.[citation needed] Apart from an Anglophile element urging early support for the British, American public opinion sentiment for neutrality was particularly strong among Irish Americans, German Americans and Scandinavian Americans,[2] as well as among church leaders and among women in general. On the other hand, even before World War I had broken out, American opinion had been more negative toward the German Empire than towards any other country in Europe.[3] Over time, especially after reports of atrocities in Belgium in 1914 and following the sinking of the passenger liner RMS Lusitania in 1915, the American people increasingly came to see the German Empire as the aggressor.

 
1917 political cartoon about the Zimmermann Telegram published in the Dallas Morning News

As U.S. president, it was Wilson who made the key policy decisions over foreign affairs: while the country was at peace, the domestic economy ran on a laissez-faire basis, with American banks making huge loans to Britain and France — funds that were in large part used to buy munitions, raw materials, and food from across the Atlantic. Until 1917, Wilson made minimal preparations for a land war and kept the United States Army on a small peacetime footing, despite increasing demands for enhanced preparedness. He did, however, expand the United States Navy.

In 1917, with the Russian Revolution and widespread disillusionment over the war, and with Britain and France low on credit, the German Empire appeared to have the upper hand in Europe,[4] while the Ottoman Empire clung to its possessions in the Middle East. In the same year, the German Empire decided to resume unrestricted submarine warfare against any vessel approaching British waters; this attempt to starve Britain into surrender was balanced against the knowledge that it would almost certainly bring the United States into the war. The German Empire also made a secret offer to help Mexico regain territories lost in the Mexican–American War in an encoded telegram known as the Zimmermann Telegram, which was intercepted by British Intelligence. Publication of that communique outraged Americans just as German U-boats started sinking American merchant ships in the North Atlantic. Wilson then asked Congress for "a war to end all wars" that would "make the world safe for democracy", and Congress voted to declare war on the German Empire on April 6, 1917.[5] On December 7, 1917, the U.S. declared war on Austria-Hungary.[6][7] U.S. troops began arriving on the Western Front in large numbers in 1918.[citation needed]

Neutrality edit

 
A 1915 political cartoon about the United States neutrality

After the war began in 1914, the United States proclaimed a policy of neutrality despite President Woodrow Wilson's antipathies against the German Empire.

When the German U-boat U-20 sank the British liner Lusitania on 7 May 1915 with 128 U.S. citizens aboard, Wilson demanded an end to German attacks on passenger ships, and warned that the US would not tolerate unrestricted submarine warfare in violation of "American rights" and of "international and obligations."[8] Wilson's Secretary of State, William Jennings Bryan, resigned, believing that the President's protests against the German use of U-boat attacks conflicted with America's official commitment to neutrality. On the other hand, Wilson came under pressure from war hawks led by former president Theodore Roosevelt, who denounced German acts as "piracy",[9] and from British delegations under Cecil Spring Rice and Sir Edward Grey.

U.S. Public opinion reacted with outrage to the suspected German sabotage of Black Tom in Jersey City, New Jersey on 30 July 1916, and to the Kingsland explosion on 11 January 1917 in present-day Lyndhurst, New Jersey.[10]

Crucially, by the spring of 1917, President Wilson's official commitment to neutrality had finally unraveled. Wilson realized he needed to enter the war in order to shape the peace and implement his vision for a League of Nations at the Paris Peace Conference.[11][page needed]

Public opinion edit

 
Anti-German sentiment spiked after the sinking of the Lusitania. This recruiting poster depicts a drowning mother and child.

American public opinion was divided, with most Americans until early 1917 largely of the opinion that the United States should stay out of the war. Opinion changed gradually, partly in response to German actions in Belgium and the Lusitania, partly as German Americans lost influence, and partly in response to Wilson's position that America had to play a role to make the world safe for democracy.[12]

In the general public, there was little if any support for entering the war on the side of the German Empire. The great majority of German Americans, as well as Scandinavian Americans, wanted the United States to remain neutral; however, at the outbreak of war, thousands of U.S. citizens had tried to enlist in the German army.[13][14] The Irish Catholic community, based in the large cities and often in control of the Democratic Party apparatus, was strongly hostile to helping Britain in any way, especially after the Easter uprising of 1916 in Ireland.[15] Most of the Protestant church leaders in the United States, regardless of their theology, favored pacifistic solutions whereby the United States would broker a peace.[16] Most of the leaders of the women's movement, typified by Jane Addams, likewise sought pacifistic solutions.[17] The most prominent opponent of war was industrialist Henry Ford, who personally financed and led a peace ship to Europe to try to negotiate among the belligerents; no negotiations resulted.[18]

Britain had significant support among intellectuals and families with close ties to Britain.[19] The most prominent leader was Samuel Insull of Chicago, a leading industrialist who had emigrated from England. Insull funded many propaganda efforts, and financed young Americans who wished to fight by joining the Canadian military.[20][21]

Preparedness movement edit

By 1915 Americans were paying much more attention to the war. The sinking of the Lusitania aroused furious denunciations of German brutality.[22] In Eastern cities a new "Preparedness" movement emerged. It argued that the United States needed to build up immediately strong naval and land forces for defensive purposes; an unspoken assumption was that America would fight sooner or later. The driving forces behind Preparedness were all Republicans, notably General Leonard Wood, ex-president Theodore Roosevelt, and former secretaries of war Elihu Root and Henry Stimson; they enlisted many of the nation's most prominent bankers, industrialists, lawyers and scions of prominent families. Indeed, there emerged an "Atlanticist" foreign policy establishment, a group of influential Americans drawn primarily from upper-class lawyers, bankers, academics, and politicians of the Northeast, committed to a strand of Anglophile internationalism.[23]

 
The Landship Recruit in Union Square in New York City

The Preparedness movement had what political scientists call a "realism" philosophy of world affairs—they believed that economic strength and military muscle were more decisive than idealistic crusades focused on causes like democracy and national self-determination. Emphasizing over and over the weak state of national defenses, they showed that the United States' 100,000-man Army, even augmented by the 112,000-strong National Guard, was outnumbered 20 to one by the German army; similarly in 1915, the armed forces of Great Britain and the British Empire, France, Russia, the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Ottoman Empire, Italy, Bulgaria, Romania, Serbia, Belgium, Japan and Greece were all larger and more experienced than the United States military.[24]

They called for UMT or "universal military service" under which the 600,000 men who turned 18 every year would be required to spend six months in military training, and then be assigned to reserve units. The small regular army would primarily be a training agency. Public opinion, however, was not willing to go that far.[25]

Both the regular army and the Preparedness leaders had a low opinion of the National Guard, which they saw as politicized, provincial, poorly armed, ill trained, too inclined to idealistic crusading (as against Spain in 1898), and too lacking in understanding of world affairs. The National Guard on the other hand was securely rooted in state and local politics, with representation from a very broad cross section of the U.S. political economy. The Guard was one of the nation's few institutions that (in some northern states) accepted black men on an equal footing with white men.

Democrats respond edit

The Democratic party saw the Preparedness movement as a threat. Roosevelt, Root and Wood were prospective Republican presidential candidates. More subtly, the Democrats were rooted in localism that appreciated the National Guard, and the voters were hostile to the rich and powerful in the first place. Working with the Democrats who controlled Congress, Wilson was able to sidetrack the Preparedness forces. Army and Navy leaders were forced to testify before Congress to the effect that the nation's military was in excellent shape.

In reality, neither the U.S. Army nor U.S. Navy was in shape for war in terms of manpower, size, military hardware or experience. The Navy had fine ships but Wilson had been using them to threaten Mexico, and the fleet's readiness had suffered. The crews of the Texas and the New York, the two newest and largest battleships, had never fired a gun, and the morale of the sailors was low. The Army and Navy air forces were tiny in size. Despite the flood of new weapons systems unveiled in the war in Europe, the Army was paying scant attention. For example, it was making no studies of trench warfare, poison gas or tanks, and was unfamiliar with the rapid evolution of aerial warfare. The Democrats in Congress tried to cut the military budget in 1915. The Preparedness movement effectively exploited the surge of outrage over the Lusitania in May 1915, forcing the Democrats to promise some improvements to the military and naval forces. Wilson, less fearful of the Navy, embraced a long-term building program designed to make the fleet the equal of the British Royal Navy by the mid-1920s, although this would not come to pass until World War II.[26] "Realism" was at work here; the admirals were Mahanians and they therefore wanted a surface fleet of heavy battleships second to none—that is, equal to the Royal Navy. The facts of submarine warfare (which necessitated destroyers, not battleships) and the possibilities of imminent war with the German Empire (or with Britain, for that matter), were simply ignored.

Wilson's decision touched off a firestorm.[27] Secretary of War Lindley Garrison adopted many of the proposals of the Preparedness leaders, especially their emphasis on a large federal reserves and abandonment of the National Guard. Garrison's proposals not only outraged the provincial politicians of both parties, they also offended a strongly held belief shared by the liberal wing of the Progressive movement, that was, that warfare always had a hidden economic motivation. Specifically, they warned the chief warmongers were New York bankers (such as J. P. Morgan) with millions at risk, profiteering munition makers (such as Bethlehem Steel, which made armor, and DuPont, which made powder) and unspecified industrialists searching for global markets to control. Antiwar critics blasted them. These selfish special interests were too powerful, especially, Senator La Follette noted, in the conservative wing of the Republican Party. The only road to peace was disarmament in the eyes of many.

National debate edit

 
Poster for a March 1916 charity bazaar in Madison Square Garden raising funds for widows and orphans of the Central Powers. This poster was drawn by a German American artist (Winold Reiss), and aimed to evoke the sympathies of German Americans, Hungarian Americans and Austrian Americans.

Garrison's plan unleashed the fiercest battle in peacetime history over the relationship of military planning to national goals. In peacetime, War Department arsenals and Navy yards manufactured nearly all munitions that lacked civilian uses, including warships, artillery, naval guns, and shells. Items available on the civilian market, such as food, horses, saddles, wagons, and uniforms were always purchased from civilian contractors.

Peace leaders like Jane Addams of Hull House and David Starr Jordan of Stanford University redoubled their efforts, and now turned their voices against the President because he was "sowing the seeds of militarism, raising up a military and naval caste." Many ministers, professors, farm spokesmen and labor union leaders joined in, with powerful support from a band of four dozen southern Democrats in Congress who took control of the House Military Affairs Committee. Wilson, in deep trouble, took his cause to the people in a major speaking tour in early 1916, a warm-up for his reelection campaign that fall.

Wilson seemed to have won over the middle classes, but had little impact on the largely ethnic working classes and the deeply isolationist farmers. Congress still refused to budge, so Wilson replaced Garrison as Secretary of War with Newton Baker, the Democratic mayor of Cleveland and an outspoken opponent of preparedness.[28] The upshot was a compromise passed in May 1916, as the war raged on and Berlin was debating whether America was so weak it could be ignored. The Army was to double in size to 11,300 officers and 208,000 men, with no reserves, and a National Guard that would be enlarged in five years to 440,000 men. Summer camps on the Plattsburg model were authorized for new officers, and the government was given $20 million to build a nitrate plant of its own. Preparedness supporters were downcast, the antiwar people were jubilant. The United States would now be too weak to go to war. Colonel Robert L. Bullard privately complained that "Both sides [Britain and the German Empire] treat us with scorn and contempt; our fool, smug conceit of superiority has been exploded in our faces and deservedly.".[29] The House gutted the naval plans as well, defeating a "big navy" plan by 189 to 183, and canceling the battleships. The battle of Jutland (May 31/June 1, 1916) saw the main German High Seas Fleet engage in a monumental yet inconclusive clash with the far stronger Grand Fleet of the Royal Navy. Arguing this battle proved the validity of Mahanian doctrine, the navalists took control in the Senate, broke the House coalition, and authorized a rapid three-year buildup of all classes of warships.[citation needed] A new weapons system, naval aviation, received $3.5 million, and the government was authorized to build its own armor-plate factory. The very weakness of American military power encouraged the German Empire to start its unrestricted submarine attacks in 1917. It knew this meant war with America, but it could discount the immediate risk because the U.S. Army was negligible and the new warships would not be at sea until 1919 by which time the war would be over, Berlin thought, with the German Empire victorious. The notion that armaments led to war was turned on its head: refusal to arm in 1916 led to war in 1917.

War declared edit

 
New York Times April 3, 1917

In January 1917, the German Empire resumed unrestricted submarine warfare in hopes of forcing Britain to begin peace talks. The German Foreign minister, Arthur Zimmermann invited revolution-torn Mexico to join the war as the German Empire's ally against the United States if the United States declared war on the German Empire in the Zimmermann Telegram. In return, the Germans would send Mexico money and help it recover the territories of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona that Mexico lost during the Mexican–American War 70 years earlier.[30] British intelligence intercepted the telegram and passed the information on to Washington. Wilson released the Zimmerman note to the public and Americans saw it as a casus belli—a justification for war.

 
President Wilson before Congress, announcing the break in official relations with the German Empire on February 3, 1917.

At first, Wilson tried to maintain neutrality while fighting off the submarines by arming American merchant ships with guns powerful enough to sink German submarines on the surface (but useless when the U-boats were under water). After submarines sank seven U.S. merchant ships, Wilson finally went to Congress calling for a declaration of war on the German Empire, which Congress voted on April 6, 1917.[31]

As a result of the Russian February Revolution in 1917, the Tsar abdicated and was replaced by a Russian Provisional Government. This helped overcome Wilson's reluctance to having the U.S. fight alongside a country ruled by an absolutist monarch. Pleased by the Provisional Government's pro-war stance, the U.S. accorded the new government diplomatic recognition on March 9, 1917.[32]

Furthermore, as the war raged on Wilson started to increasingly see belligerency in the war as a ticket to the international conferences that would undoubtedly follow the war's end. This was part of his wider mission to make the United States a more instrumental player on the global stage (which he would later expand upon in his Fourteen points).[33]

Congress declared war on the Austro-Hungarian Empire on December 7, 1917,[34] but never made declarations of war against the other Central Powers, Bulgaria, the Ottoman Empire or the various small co-belligerents allied with the Central Powers.[35] Thus, the United States remained uninvolved in the military campaigns in central and eastern Europe, the Middle East, the Caucasus, North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, Asia and the Pacific.

Home front edit

The home front required a systematic mobilization of the entire population and the entire economy to produce the soldiers, food supplies, munitions, and money needed to win the war. It took a year to reach a satisfactory state. Although the war had already raged for two years, Washington had avoided planning, or even recognition of the problems that the British and other Allies had to solve on their home fronts. As a result, the level of confusion was high at first. Finally efficiency was achieved in 1918.[36]

 
World War I propaganda poster for enlistment in the U.S. Army.

The war came in the midst of the Progressive Era, when efficiency and expertise were highly valued. Therefore, the federal government set up a multitude of temporary agencies with 50,000 to 1,000,000 new employees to bring together the expertise necessary to redirect the economy into the production of munitions and food necessary for the war, as well as for propaganda purposes.[37]

Food edit

The most admired agency for efficiency was the United States Food Administration under Herbert Hoover. It launched a massive campaign to teach Americans to economize on their food budgets and grow victory gardens in their backyards for family consumption. It managed the nation's food distribution and prices and built Hoover's reputation as an independent force of presidential quality.[38]

Finance edit

 
Liberty bond poster

In 1917 the government was unprepared for the enormous economic and financial strains of the war. Washington hurriedly took direct control of the economy. The total cost of the war came to $33 billion, which was 42 times as large as all Treasury receipts in 1916. A constitutional amendment legitimized income tax in 1913; its original very low levels were dramatically increased, especially at the demand of the Southern progressive elements. North Carolina Congressman Claude Kitchin, chairman of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee argued that since Eastern businessman had been leaders in calling for war, they should pay for it.[39] In an era when most workers earned under $1000 a year, the basic exemption was $2,000 for a family. Above that level taxes began at the 2 percent rate in 1917, jumping to 12 percent in 1918. On top of that there were surcharges of one percent for incomes above $5,000 to 65 percent for incomes above $1,000,000. As a result, the richest 22 percent of American taxpayers paid 96 percent of individual income taxes. Businesses faced a series of new taxes, especially on "excess profits" ranging from 20 percent to 80 percent on profits above pre-war levels. There were also excise taxes that everyone paid who purchased an automobile, jewelry, camera, or a motorboat.[40][41] The greatest source of revenue came from war bonds, which were effectively merchandised to the masses through an elaborate innovative campaign to reach average Americans. Movie stars and other celebrities, supported by millions of posters, and an army of Four-Minute Men speakers explained the importance of buying bonds. In the third Liberty Loan campaign of 1918, more than half of all families subscribed. In total, $21 billion in bonds were sold with interest from 3.5 to 4.7 percent. The new Federal Reserve system encouraged banks to loan families money to buy bonds. All the bonds were redeemed, with interest, after the war. Before the United States entered the war, New York banks had loaned heavily to the British. After the U.S. entered in April 1917, the Treasury made $10 billion in long-term loans to Britain, France and the other allies, with the expectation the loans would be repaid after the war. Indeed, the United States insisted on repayment, which by the 1950s eventually was achieved by every country except Russia.[42][43]

Labor edit

The American Federation of Labor (AFL) and affiliated trade unions were strong supporters of the war effort.[44] Fear of disruptions to war production by labor radicals provided the AFL political leverage to gain recognition and mediation of labor disputes, often in favor of improvements for workers. They resisted strikes in favor of arbitration and wartime policy, and wages soared as near-full employment was reached at the height of the war. The AFL unions strongly encouraged young men to enlist in the military, and fiercely opposed efforts to reduce recruiting and slow war production by pacifists, the anti-war Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) and radical socialists. To keep factories running smoothly, Wilson established the National War Labor Board in 1918, which forced management to negotiate with existing unions.[45] Wilson also appointed AFL president Samuel Gompers to the powerful Council of National Defense, where he set up the War Committee on Labor.

After initially resisting taking a stance, the IWW became actively anti-war, engaging in strikes and speeches and suffering both legal and illegal suppression by federal and local governments as well as pro-war vigilantes. The IWW was branded as anarchic, socialist, unpatriotic, alien and funded by German gold, and violent attacks on members and offices would continue into the 1920s.[46]

Women's roles edit

 
The Secretary of the Navy with female munition workers from New York

World War I saw women taking traditionally men's jobs in large numbers for the first time in American history. Many women worked on the assembly lines of factories, assembling munitions. Some department stores employed African American women as elevator operators and cafeteria waitresses for the first time.[47]

Most women remained housewives. The Food Administration helped housewives prepare more nutritious meals with less waste and with optimum use of the foods available. Most important, the morale of the women remained high, as millions of middle-class women joined the Red Cross as volunteers to help soldiers and their families.[48][49] With rare exceptions, women did not try to block the draft.[50]

The Department of Labor created a Women in Industry group, headed by prominent labor researcher and social scientist Mary van Kleeck.[51] This group helped develop standards for women who were working in industries connected to the war alongside the War Labor Policies Board, of which van Kleeck was also a member. After the war, the Women in Industry Service group developed into the U.S. Women's Bureau, headed by Mary Anderson.[52][51]

Propaganda edit

Crucial to U.S. participation was the extensive domestic propaganda campaign. On April 13, 1917, President Wilson issued Executive Order 2594 establishing the Committee on Public Information (CPI), the first state bureau in the United States dedicated solely to propaganda. George Creel, an energetic journalist and political campaign organizer, was appointed by President Wilson to lead the CPI. Creel sought out any information that would discredit his opponents. With boundless energy, Creel developed an intricate and unprecedented propaganda system that influenced every aspect of American life.[53] Through photographs, movies, rallies, press reports, and public meetings, the CPI saturated the public with propaganda, fostering American patriotism and stoking anti-German sentiment among the younger generation. This effectively suppressed the voices of neutrality supporters. The CPI also controlled the dissemination of war information on the American home front. The committee's New Division influenced news coverage by releasing thousands of press releases. The News Division also promoted a system of voluntary censorship by newspapers and magazines while policing seditious and anti-American content.[54] The Espionage Act of 1917 and the Sedition Act of 1918 effectively outlawed any criticism of the government or the war effort.[55] Violating these laws carried a penalty of up to 20 years in prison. While technically applicable to everyone, both laws were disproportionately enforced against immigrants and African Americans who often used their second class citizenship to protest their involvement in the war.[56] The propaganda campaign involved tens of thousands of government-selected community leaders delivering carefully scripted pro-war speeches at numerous public gatherings.[57][incomplete short citation][58]

In addition to government agencies, officially sanctioned private vigilante groups like the American Protective League closely monitored — and sometimes harassed — people who opposed American entry into the war or displayed too much German heritage.[59]

 
"Weapons for Liberty – U.S.A. Bonds" calls on Boy Scouts to serve just like soldiers do; poster by J. C. Leyendecker, 1918

Propaganda took various forms, including newsreels, billboards, magazine and newspaper articles, and large-print posters designed by well-known illustrators of the day, including Louis D. Fancher and Henry Reuterdahl. After the armistice was signed in 1918, the CPI was disbanded, having pioneered some of the tactics still employed by propagandists today.[60]

Children edit

The nation placed a great importance on the role of children, teaching them patriotism and national service and asking them to encourage war support and educate the public about the importance of the war. The Boy Scouts of America helped distribute war pamphlets, helped sell war bonds, and helped to drive nationalism and support for the war.[61]

 
FWD 'Model B', 3-ton, 4x4 truck

Motor vehicles edit

Before the American entry into the war, many American-made heavy four-wheel drive trucks, notably made by Four Wheel Drive (FWD) Auto Company, and Jeffery / Nash Quads, were already serving in foreign militaries, bought by Great Britain, France and Russia. When the war started, motor vehicles had begun to replace horses and pulled wagons, but on the European muddy roads and battlefields, two-wheel drive trucks got stuck all the time, and the leading allied countries could not produce 4WD trucks in the numbers they needed.[62] The U.S. Army wanted to replace four-mule teams used for hauling standard 112 U.S. ton (3000 lb / 1.36 metric ton) loads with trucks, and requested proposals from companies in late 1912.[63] This led the Thomas B. Jeffery Company to develop a competent four-wheel drive, 112 short ton capacity truck by July 1913: the "Quad".

 
U.S. Marines riding in a Jeffery Quad, Fort Santo Domingo, c. 1916

The Jeffery Quad truck, and from the company's take-over by Nash Motors after 1916, the Nash Quad, greatly assisted the World War I efforts of several Allied nations, particularly the French.[64] The U.S. first adopted Quads in the USMC's occupations of Haiti, and the Dominican Republic, from 1915 through 1917,[65] as well as in the 1916 Pancho Villa Expedition against Mexico. Once the U.S. entered World War I, general John Pershing used Nash Quads heavily in the European campaigns. They became the workhorse of the Allied Expeditionary Force there — both as regular transport trucks, and in the form of the Jeffery armored car.[66][67] Some 11,500 Jeffery / Nash Quads were built between 1913 and 1919.[68]

 
Luella Bates driving a Model B, FWD truck – promotional photo.

The success of the Four Wheel Drive cars in early military tests had prompted the U.S. company to switch from cars to truck manufacturing. For World War I, the U.S. Army ordered an amount of 15,000 FWD Model B, three-ton (6000 lb / 2700 kg) capacity trucks, as the "Truck, 3 ton, Model 1917", with over 14,000 actually delivered. Additional orders came from the United Kingdom and Russia.[69] Once the FWD and Jeffery / Nash four-wheel drive trucks were required in large numbers in World War I, both models were built under license by several additional companies to meet demand. The FWD Model B was produced under license by four additional manufacturers.[70]

The Quad and the FWD trucks were the world's first four-wheel drive vehicles to be made in five-figure numbers, and they incorporated many hallmark technological innovations, that also enabled the decisive U.S. and Allied usage of 4x4 and 6x6 trucks subsequently in World War II. The Quad's production continued for 15 years with a total of 41,674 units made.[71]

Socially, it was the FWD company that employed Luella Bates, believed to be the first female truck driver, chosen to work as test and demonstration driver for FWD, from 1918 to 1922.[55] [72] During World War I, she was a test driver traveling throughout the state of Wisconsin in an FWD Model B truck. After the war, when the majority of the women working at Four Wheel Drive were let go, she remained as a demonstrator and driver.[55]

American military edit

As late as 1917, the United States maintained only a small army, one which was in fact smaller than those of thirteen of the states already active in the war. After the passage of the Selective Service Act in 1917, it drafted 4 million men into military service.[73] The Commission on Training Camp Activities sought to improve the morals and morale of the troops.[74]

By the summer of 1918, about 2 million U.S. soldiers had arrived in France, about half of whom eventually saw front-line service; by the Armistice of November 11 approximately 10,000 U.S. soldiers were arriving in France daily.[75] In 1917, Congress gave U.S. citizenship to Puerto Ricans when they were drafted to participate in World War I, as part of the Jones Act. In the end, the German Empire miscalculated the United States' influence on the outcome of the conflict, believing it would be many more months before U.S. troops would arrive and overestimating the effectiveness of U-boats in slowing the American buildup.[76][incomplete short citation] Beginning with the Battle of Saint-Mihiel, the first major battle involving the American Expeditionary Forces, the leaders of the United States war efforts were General of the Armies John J. Pershing, Navy Admiral William Sims, and Chief of Air Service Mason Patrick.

 
American soldiers on the Piave front hurling hand grenades into the Austrian trenches

The United States Navy sent a battleship group to Scapa Flow to join with the British Grand Fleet, destroyers to Queenstown, Ireland and submarines to help guard convoys. Several regiments of Marines were also dispatched to France. The British and French wanted U.S. units to be used to reinforce their troops already on the battle lines and not to waste scarce shipping on bringing over supplies. The U.S. rejected the first proposition and accepted the second. General John J. Pershing, American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) commander, refused to break up U.S. units to serve as mere reinforcements for British Empire and French units. As an exception, he did allow the African-American combat regiments that made up the 93rd Combat Division to fight in French divisions. This allowed him to fulfill his pledge to provide the French military with troops while getting rid of the black combat regiments who had become indignant at the fact that they couldn't fight on the front lines.[77] The Harlem Hellfighters fought as part of the French 16th Division, earning a unit Croix de Guerre for their actions at Château-Thierry, Belleau Wood, and Séchault.[78]

African Americans in the military edit

 
African American workers lining up before their work shift, Bassens Docks, Bordeaux, April 1918.

World War I was the first international conflict in which African Americans played a notable role. Around 400,000 black men were enlisted in the military from 1917 to 1918 with half of these men being sent to Europe.[79] However, with the exception of the 42,000 men in the 92nd and 93rd Combat Divisions, the majority of African Americans weren't permitted to serve in active combat roles as white officers believed that black men lacked the 'mental stamina and moral sturdiness' that a front line soldier required.[80] Those enlisted in the army and sent to Europe most commonly served in labour battalions under the banner of Services of Supply (SOS). The African Americans placed in these units often spent their days doing tough labour like unloading supplies from ships or transporting goods from ports to warehouses near the front lines. These battalions were also tasked with building warehouses, roads, railroads and other vital infrastructure near major ports like Brest, Bordeaux, Marseilles, and St. Nazaire.

The men who served in these units were faced with some of the worst living conditions of all US soldiers thanks to the racial segregation enforced by white officers. In the first couple of months after their arrival in Europe, many black soldiers reported that they had to: sleep in tents on the dirt floors of barracks, eat outside (rather than in canteens), go to the bathroom in makeshift outhouses, and wash themselves in makeshift bathrooms.[80] Conditions did not improve much as the war went on. Moreover, African American recruits faced various forms of abuse from their white counterparts. There were several cases of African American soldiers being verbally abused by white soldiers working or living in their proximity. In some cases physical abuse also occurred. Ely Green, a man who worked in a labour battalion in St Nazaire, reported various events wherein African American men were assaulted and even murdered for breaching the stark lines of segregation that were enforced by the US military.[80] Some have come to see the work camps that black soldiers were subjected to as a means for the export of Jim Crow as the people within them essentially became a servant class for the white military officers.

Despite the rough conditions, major figures in the African American community actually endorsed enlistment in the military. W.E.B Du Bois for example urged his fellow African Americans to "join shoulder to shoulder with our fellow citizens and the allied nations that are fighting for democracy".[77] This was done because African Americans saw the war effort as an opportunity to prove their patriotism and loyalty to the United States. Many hoped that by involving themselves in the war they would win expanded rights on the home front; this did not end up occurring as can be seen in the Race Riots that followed the war in the Red Summer (1919). What the war did do, however, was sharpen the politics of African American soldiers; they returned home referring to themselves as the 'New Negro'. These men had experienced what life could be like without the restrictions of second-class citizenship thanks to the fact French citizens had treated them kindly when they wandered outside of the segregated military camps. They thus returned home to America with a new fighting spirit that made them more determined to win expanded rights.[79] This came with significant push back, however, as many white Americans pushed to return to 'normalcy' and saw African American soldiers as a symbol of wartime change. In turn then we start to see events like the lynching of Sergeant Caldwell.

Women in the military edit

American women never served in combat roles (as did some Russians), but many were eager to serve as nurses and support personnel in uniform.[81] During the course of the war, 21,498 U.S. Army nurses (American military nurses were all women then) served in military hospitals in the United States and overseas. Many of these women were positioned near to battlefields, and they tended to over a million soldiers who had been wounded or were unwell.[82] 272 U.S. Army nurses died of disease (mainly tuberculosis, influenza, and pneumonia).[83] Eighteen African-American Army nurses, including Aileen Cole Stewart, served stateside caring for German prisoners of war (POWs) and African-American soldiers. They were assigned to Camp Grant, IL, and Camp Sherman, OH, and lived in segregated quarters.[84][85][86]

 
Hello Girls receive decorations

Hello Girls was the colloquial name for American female switchboard operators in World War I, formally known as the Signal Corps Female Telephone Operators Unit. During World War I, these switchboard operators were sworn into the Army Signal Corps.[87] This corps was formed in 1917 from a call by General John J. Pershing to improve the worsening state of communications on the Western front. Applicants for the Signal Corps Female Telephone Operators Unit had to be bilingual in English and French to ensure that orders would be heard by anyone. Over 7,000 women applied, but only 450 women were accepted. Many of these women were former switchboard operators or employees at telecommunications companies.[87] Despite the fact that they wore Army Uniforms and were subject to Army Regulations (and Chief Operator Grace Banker received the Distinguished Service Medal),[88] they were not given honorable discharges but were considered "civilians" employed by the military, because Army Regulations specified the male gender. Not until 1978, the 60th anniversary of the end of World War I, did Congress approve veteran status and honorable discharges for the remaining women who had served in the Signal Corps Female Telephone Operators Unit.[89]

The first American women enlisted into the regular armed forces were 13,000 women admitted into active duty in the U.S. Navy during the war. They served stateside in jobs and received the same benefits and responsibilities as men, including identical pay (US$28.75 per month), and were treated as veterans after the war.

The U.S. Marine Corps enlisted 305 female Marine Reservists (F) to "free men to fight" by filling positions such as clerks and telephone operators on the home front.

During World War I, Myrtle Hazard enlisted in the Coast Guard, served as a telegraph operator, and was discharged as an Electrician 1st Class. She was the only woman to serve in the Coast Guard during the war and she is the namesake of USCGC Myrtle Hazard. Wartime newspapers erroneously reported that twin sisters Genevieve and Lucille Baker were the first women to serve in the Coast Guard. While they tried to enlist, they were not accepted.[90]

These women were demobilized when hostilities ceased, and aside from the Nurse Corps the uniformed military became once again exclusively male. In 1942, women were brought into the military again, largely following the British model.[91][92]

Impact of US forces on the war edit

 
Men of US 64th Regiment, 7th Infantry Division, celebrate the news of the Armistice, 11 November 1918

On the battlefields of France in spring 1918, the war-weary Allied armies enthusiastically greeted the fresh American troops. They arrived at the rate of 10,000 a day,[75] at a time when the Germans were unable to replace their losses. The Americans won a victory at Cantigny, then again in defensive stands at Chateau-Thierry and Belleau Wood. The Americans helped the British Empire, French and Portuguese forces defeat and turn back the powerful final German offensive (Spring Offensive of March to July, 1918), and most importantly, the Americans played a role in the Allied final offensive (Hundred Days Offensive of August to November). However, many American commanders used the same flawed tactics which the British, French, Germans and others had abandoned early in the war, and so many American offensives were not particularly effective. Pershing continued to commit troops to these full-frontal attacks, resulting in high casualties without noticeable military success against experienced veteran German and Austrian-Hungarian units. Nevertheless, the infusion of new and fresh U.S. troops greatly strengthened the Allies' strategic position and boosted morale. The Allies achieved victory over the German Empire on November 11, 1918 after German morale had collapsed both at home and on the battlefield.[93][94]

After the war edit

The government promptly ended wartime contracts, ended the draft, and started to bring home its troops from Europe as fast as transport became available.[95] However, there was no GI Bill or financial or educational benefits for veterans, and the lack became a major political issue, especially for the large veterans' groups such as the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the new American Legion.[96] The readjustment period was marked by soaring unemployment, massive strikes, and race riots in 1919. The public demanded a return to "normalcy", and repudiated Wilson with the election of conservative Republican Warren G. Harding.[97]

See also edit

References edit

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Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Bailey, Thomas. A Diplomatic History of the American people (1947) pp 610–680 online
  • Bassett, John Spencer. Our War with Germany: A History (1919) online edition
  • Breen, William J. Uncle Sam at Home: Civilian Mobilization, Wartime Federalism, and the Council of National Defense, 1917-1919 (1984)
  • Byerly, Carol R. (2010). "The U.S. Military and the Influenza Pandemic of 1918–1919". Public Health Reports. 125 (Suppl 3). United States National Library of Medicine: 82–91. doi:10.1177/00333549101250S311. ISSN 1468-2877. PMC 2862337. PMID 20568570.
  • Capozzola, Christopher. Uncle Sam Wants You: World War I and the Making of the Modern American Citizen (2008)
  • Chambers, John W., II. To Raise an Army: The Draft Comes to Modern America (1987) online
  • Clements, Kendrick A. The Presidency of Woodrow Wilson (1992)
  • Coffman, Edward M. The War to End All Wars: The American Military Experience in World War I (1998), a standard military history. online free to borrow
  • Committee on Public Information. How the war came to America (1917) online 840pp detailing every sector of society
  • Cooper, John Milton. Woodrow Wilson: A Biography (2009)
  • Cooper, John Milton. "The World War and American Memory." Diplomatic History (2014) 38#4 pp: 727-736.
  • Doenecke, Justus D. Nothing Less than War: A New History of America's Entry into World War I (University Press of Kentucky, 2011)
  • DuBois, W.E. Burghardt, "An Essay Toward a History of the Black Man in the Great War," The Crisis, vol. 18, no. 2 (June 1919), pp. 63–87.
  • Epstein, Katherine C. “The Conundrum of American Power in the Age of World War I,” Modern American History (2019): 1-21.
  • Hannigan, Robert E. The Great War and American Foreign Policy, 1914–24 (U of Pennsylvania Press, 2017)
  • Kang, Sung Won, and Hugh Rockoff. "Capitalizing patriotism: the Liberty loans of World War I." Financial History Review 22.1 (2015): 45+ online
  • Kennedy, David M. Over Here: The First World War and American Society (2004), comprehensive coverage online
  • Malin, James C. The United States After the World War (1930)
  • Marrin, Albert. The Yanks Are Coming: The United States in the First World War (1986) online
  • May, Ernest R. The World War and American Isolation, 1914-1917 (1959) , highly influential study
  • Nash, George H. The Life of Herbert Hoover: Master of Emergencies, 1917-1918 (1996) excerpt and text search
  • Paxson, Frederic L. Pre-war years, 1913-1917 (1936) wide-ranging scholarly survey
  • Paxson, Frederic L. American at War 1917-1918 (1939) online wide-ranging scholarly survey
  • Paxson, Frederic L. Post-War Years: Normalcy 1918-1923 (1948) online
  • Paxson, Frederic L. ed. War cyclopedia: a handbook for ready reference on the great war (1918) online
  • Resch, John P., ed. Americans at War: Society, culture, and the home front: volume 3: 1901-1945 (2005)
  • Schaffer, Ronald. America in the Great War: The Rise of the War-Welfare State (1991)
  • Trask, David F. The United States in the Supreme War Council: American War Aims and Inter-Allied Strategy, 1917–1918 (1961)
  • Trask, David F. The AEF and Coalition Warmaking, 1917–1918 (1993)online free
  • Trask, David F ed. World War I at home; readings on American life, 1914-1920 (1969) primary sources online
  • Tucker, Spencer C., and Priscilla Mary Roberts, eds. The Encyclopedia of World War I: A Political, Social, and Military History (5 vol. 2005). worldwide coverage
  • Van Ells, Mark D. America and World War I: A Traveler's Guide (2014) excerpt
  • Vaughn, Stephen. Holding Fast the Inner Lines: Democracy, Nationalism, and the Committee on Public Information (U of North Carolina Press, 1980) online
  • Venzon, Anne ed. The United States in the First World War: An Encyclopedia (1995)
  • Walworth, Arthur (1958). Woodrow Wilson, Volume I, Volume II. Longmans, Green.; 904pp; full scale scholarly biography; winner of Pulitzer Prize; online free; 2nd ed. 1965
  • Wevera, Peter C Wevera; van Bergenc, Leo (June 27, 2014). "Death from 1918 pandemic influenza during the First World War: a perspective from personal and anecdotal evidence". Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses. 8 (5): 538–46. doi:10.1111/irv.12267. PMC 4181817. PMID 24975798.
  • Woodward, David R. The American Army and the First World War (2014). 484 pp. online review
  • Woodward, David R. Trial by Friendship: Anglo-American Relations, 1917-1918 (1993) online
  • Young, Ernest William. The Wilson Administration and the Great War (1922) online edition
  • Zieger, Robert H. America's Great War: World War I and the American Experience (2000)

Historiography and memory edit

  • Berg, Manfred, and Axel Jansen. "Americans in World War I–World War I in America." Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 17.4 (2018): 599-607. excerpt
  • Capozzola, Chris, et al. "Interchange: World War I." Journal of American History 102.2 (2015): 463-499. https://doi.org/10.1093/jahist/jav474
  • Cooper, John Milton Jr. “The World War and American Memory,” Diplomatic History 38:4 (2014): 727–36.
  • Jones, Heather. “As the Centenary Approaches: The Regeneration of First World War Historiography” Historical Journal 56:3 (2013): 857–78, global perspective
  • Keene, Jennifer, “The United States” in John Horne, ed., A Companion to World War I (Wiley-Blackwell, 2012), 508–23.
  • Keene, Jennifer D. "Remembering the 'Forgotten War': American Historiography on World War I." Historian 78#3 (2016): 439-468.
  • Rubin, Richard. The Last of the Doughboys: The Forgotten Generation and their Forgotten World War (2013)
  • Snell, Mark A., ed. Unknown Soldiers: The American Expeditionary Forces in Memory and Remembrance (Kent State UP, 2008).
  • Trout, Steven. On the Battlefield of Memory: The First World War and American Remembrance, 1919–1941 (University of Alabama Press, 2010)
  • Woodward. David. America and World War I: A Selected Annotated Bibliography of English Language Sources (2nd ed 2007) excerpt
  • Zeiler, Thomas W., Ekbladh, David K., and Montoya, Benjamin C., eds. Beyond 1917: The United States and the Global Legacies of the Great War (Oxford University Press, 2017)

External links edit

  • First-hand accounts of World War I veterans, The Library of Congress Veterans History Project.

united, states, world, united, states, declared, german, empire, april, 1917, nearly, three, years, after, world, started, ceasefire, armistice, were, declared, november, 1918, before, entering, remained, neutral, though, been, important, supplier, united, kin. The United States declared war on the German Empire on April 6 1917 nearly three years after World War I started A ceasefire and armistice were declared on November 11 1918 Before entering the war the U S had remained neutral though it had been an important supplier to the United Kingdom France and the other powers of the Allies of World War I United States in World War I1917 1918Two American soldiers run towards a bunker LocationUnited StatesPresident s Woodrow WilsonKey eventsSelective Service Act of 1917Food and Fuel Control ActConscriptionChronology Progressive Era Roaring Twenties The U S made its major contributions in terms of supplies raw material and money starting in 1917 American soldiers under General of the Armies John Pershing Commander in Chief of the American Expeditionary Force AEF arrived at the rate of 10 000 soldiers a day on the Western Front in the summer of 1918 During the war the U S mobilized over 4 7 million military personnel and suffered the loss of over 116 000 soldiers 1 The war saw a dramatic expansion of the United States government in an attempt to harness the war effort and a significant increase in the size of the U S Armed Forces After a relatively slow start in mobilizing the economy and labor force by spring 1918 the nation was poised to play a role in the conflict Under the leadership of President Woodrow Wilson the war represented the climax of the Progressive Era as it sought to bring reform and democracy to the world There was substantial public opposition to U S entry into the war Contents 1 Beginning 2 Neutrality 3 Public opinion 4 Preparedness movement 4 1 Democrats respond 4 2 National debate 5 War declared 6 Home front 6 1 Food 6 2 Finance 6 3 Labor 6 3 1 Women s roles 6 4 Propaganda 6 5 Children 7 Motor vehicles 8 American military 8 1 African Americans in the military 8 2 Women in the military 8 3 Impact of US forces on the war 9 After the war 10 See also 11 References 12 Sources 13 Further reading 13 1 Historiography and memory 14 External linksBeginning editMain article American entry into World War I The American entry into World War I came on April 6 1917 after a year long effort by President Woodrow Wilson to get the United States into the war citation needed Apart from an Anglophile element urging early support for the British American public opinion sentiment for neutrality was particularly strong among Irish Americans German Americans and Scandinavian Americans 2 as well as among church leaders and among women in general On the other hand even before World War I had broken out American opinion had been more negative toward the German Empire than towards any other country in Europe 3 Over time especially after reports of atrocities in Belgium in 1914 and following the sinking of the passenger liner RMS Lusitania in 1915 the American people increasingly came to see the German Empire as the aggressor nbsp 1917 political cartoon about the Zimmermann Telegram published in the Dallas Morning News As U S president it was Wilson who made the key policy decisions over foreign affairs while the country was at peace the domestic economy ran on a laissez faire basis with American banks making huge loans to Britain and France funds that were in large part used to buy munitions raw materials and food from across the Atlantic Until 1917 Wilson made minimal preparations for a land war and kept the United States Army on a small peacetime footing despite increasing demands for enhanced preparedness He did however expand the United States Navy In 1917 with the Russian Revolution and widespread disillusionment over the war and with Britain and France low on credit the German Empire appeared to have the upper hand in Europe 4 while the Ottoman Empire clung to its possessions in the Middle East In the same year the German Empire decided to resume unrestricted submarine warfare against any vessel approaching British waters this attempt to starve Britain into surrender was balanced against the knowledge that it would almost certainly bring the United States into the war The German Empire also made a secret offer to help Mexico regain territories lost in the Mexican American War in an encoded telegram known as the Zimmermann Telegram which was intercepted by British Intelligence Publication of that communique outraged Americans just as German U boats started sinking American merchant ships in the North Atlantic Wilson then asked Congress for a war to end all wars that would make the world safe for democracy and Congress voted to declare war on the German Empire on April 6 1917 5 On December 7 1917 the U S declared war on Austria Hungary 6 7 U S troops began arriving on the Western Front in large numbers in 1918 citation needed Neutrality edit nbsp A 1915 political cartoon about the United States neutrality After the war began in 1914 the United States proclaimed a policy of neutrality despite President Woodrow Wilson s antipathies against the German Empire When the German U boat U 20 sank the British liner Lusitania on 7 May 1915 with 128 U S citizens aboard Wilson demanded an end to German attacks on passenger ships and warned that the US would not tolerate unrestricted submarine warfare in violation of American rights and of international and obligations 8 Wilson s Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan resigned believing that the President s protests against the German use of U boat attacks conflicted with America s official commitment to neutrality On the other hand Wilson came under pressure from war hawks led by former president Theodore Roosevelt who denounced German acts as piracy 9 and from British delegations under Cecil Spring Rice and Sir Edward Grey U S Public opinion reacted with outrage to the suspected German sabotage of Black Tom in Jersey City New Jersey on 30 July 1916 and to the Kingsland explosion on 11 January 1917 in present day Lyndhurst New Jersey 10 Crucially by the spring of 1917 President Wilson s official commitment to neutrality had finally unraveled Wilson realized he needed to enter the war in order to shape the peace and implement his vision for a League of Nations at the Paris Peace Conference 11 page needed Public opinion editSee also Opposition to World War I nbsp Anti German sentiment spiked after the sinking of the Lusitania This recruiting poster depicts a drowning mother and child American public opinion was divided with most Americans until early 1917 largely of the opinion that the United States should stay out of the war Opinion changed gradually partly in response to German actions in Belgium and the Lusitania partly as German Americans lost influence and partly in response to Wilson s position that America had to play a role to make the world safe for democracy 12 In the general public there was little if any support for entering the war on the side of the German Empire The great majority of German Americans as well as Scandinavian Americans wanted the United States to remain neutral however at the outbreak of war thousands of U S citizens had tried to enlist in the German army 13 14 The Irish Catholic community based in the large cities and often in control of the Democratic Party apparatus was strongly hostile to helping Britain in any way especially after the Easter uprising of 1916 in Ireland 15 Most of the Protestant church leaders in the United States regardless of their theology favored pacifistic solutions whereby the United States would broker a peace 16 Most of the leaders of the women s movement typified by Jane Addams likewise sought pacifistic solutions 17 The most prominent opponent of war was industrialist Henry Ford who personally financed and led a peace ship to Europe to try to negotiate among the belligerents no negotiations resulted 18 Britain had significant support among intellectuals and families with close ties to Britain 19 The most prominent leader was Samuel Insull of Chicago a leading industrialist who had emigrated from England Insull funded many propaganda efforts and financed young Americans who wished to fight by joining the Canadian military 20 21 Preparedness movement editMain article Preparedness Movement By 1915 Americans were paying much more attention to the war The sinking of the Lusitania aroused furious denunciations of German brutality 22 In Eastern cities a new Preparedness movement emerged It argued that the United States needed to build up immediately strong naval and land forces for defensive purposes an unspoken assumption was that America would fight sooner or later The driving forces behind Preparedness were all Republicans notably General Leonard Wood ex president Theodore Roosevelt and former secretaries of war Elihu Root and Henry Stimson they enlisted many of the nation s most prominent bankers industrialists lawyers and scions of prominent families Indeed there emerged an Atlanticist foreign policy establishment a group of influential Americans drawn primarily from upper class lawyers bankers academics and politicians of the Northeast committed to a strand of Anglophile internationalism 23 nbsp The Landship Recruit in Union Square in New York City The Preparedness movement had what political scientists call a realism philosophy of world affairs they believed that economic strength and military muscle were more decisive than idealistic crusades focused on causes like democracy and national self determination Emphasizing over and over the weak state of national defenses they showed that the United States 100 000 man Army even augmented by the 112 000 strong National Guard was outnumbered 20 to one by the German army similarly in 1915 the armed forces of Great Britain and the British Empire France Russia the Austro Hungarian Empire Ottoman Empire Italy Bulgaria Romania Serbia Belgium Japan and Greece were all larger and more experienced than the United States military 24 They called for UMT or universal military service under which the 600 000 men who turned 18 every year would be required to spend six months in military training and then be assigned to reserve units The small regular army would primarily be a training agency Public opinion however was not willing to go that far 25 Both the regular army and the Preparedness leaders had a low opinion of the National Guard which they saw as politicized provincial poorly armed ill trained too inclined to idealistic crusading as against Spain in 1898 and too lacking in understanding of world affairs The National Guard on the other hand was securely rooted in state and local politics with representation from a very broad cross section of the U S political economy The Guard was one of the nation s few institutions that in some northern states accepted black men on an equal footing with white men Democrats respond edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message The Democratic party saw the Preparedness movement as a threat Roosevelt Root and Wood were prospective Republican presidential candidates More subtly the Democrats were rooted in localism that appreciated the National Guard and the voters were hostile to the rich and powerful in the first place Working with the Democrats who controlled Congress Wilson was able to sidetrack the Preparedness forces Army and Navy leaders were forced to testify before Congress to the effect that the nation s military was in excellent shape In reality neither the U S Army nor U S Navy was in shape for war in terms of manpower size military hardware or experience The Navy had fine ships but Wilson had been using them to threaten Mexico and the fleet s readiness had suffered The crews of the Texas and the New York the two newest and largest battleships had never fired a gun and the morale of the sailors was low The Army and Navy air forces were tiny in size Despite the flood of new weapons systems unveiled in the war in Europe the Army was paying scant attention For example it was making no studies of trench warfare poison gas or tanks and was unfamiliar with the rapid evolution of aerial warfare The Democrats in Congress tried to cut the military budget in 1915 The Preparedness movement effectively exploited the surge of outrage over the Lusitania in May 1915 forcing the Democrats to promise some improvements to the military and naval forces Wilson less fearful of the Navy embraced a long term building program designed to make the fleet the equal of the British Royal Navy by the mid 1920s although this would not come to pass until World War II 26 Realism was at work here the admirals were Mahanians and they therefore wanted a surface fleet of heavy battleships second to none that is equal to the Royal Navy The facts of submarine warfare which necessitated destroyers not battleships and the possibilities of imminent war with the German Empire or with Britain for that matter were simply ignored Wilson s decision touched off a firestorm 27 Secretary of War Lindley Garrison adopted many of the proposals of the Preparedness leaders especially their emphasis on a large federal reserves and abandonment of the National Guard Garrison s proposals not only outraged the provincial politicians of both parties they also offended a strongly held belief shared by the liberal wing of the Progressive movement that was that warfare always had a hidden economic motivation Specifically they warned the chief warmongers were New York bankers such as J P Morgan with millions at risk profiteering munition makers such as Bethlehem Steel which made armor and DuPont which made powder and unspecified industrialists searching for global markets to control Antiwar critics blasted them These selfish special interests were too powerful especially Senator La Follette noted in the conservative wing of the Republican Party The only road to peace was disarmament in the eyes of many National debate edit nbsp Poster for a March 1916 charity bazaar in Madison Square Garden raising funds for widows and orphans of the Central Powers This poster was drawn by a German American artist Winold Reiss and aimed to evoke the sympathies of German Americans Hungarian Americans and Austrian Americans Garrison s plan unleashed the fiercest battle in peacetime history over the relationship of military planning to national goals In peacetime War Department arsenals and Navy yards manufactured nearly all munitions that lacked civilian uses including warships artillery naval guns and shells Items available on the civilian market such as food horses saddles wagons and uniforms were always purchased from civilian contractors Peace leaders like Jane Addams of Hull House and David Starr Jordan of Stanford University redoubled their efforts and now turned their voices against the President because he was sowing the seeds of militarism raising up a military and naval caste Many ministers professors farm spokesmen and labor union leaders joined in with powerful support from a band of four dozen southern Democrats in Congress who took control of the House Military Affairs Committee Wilson in deep trouble took his cause to the people in a major speaking tour in early 1916 a warm up for his reelection campaign that fall Wilson seemed to have won over the middle classes but had little impact on the largely ethnic working classes and the deeply isolationist farmers Congress still refused to budge so Wilson replaced Garrison as Secretary of War with Newton Baker the Democratic mayor of Cleveland and an outspoken opponent of preparedness 28 The upshot was a compromise passed in May 1916 as the war raged on and Berlin was debating whether America was so weak it could be ignored The Army was to double in size to 11 300 officers and 208 000 men with no reserves and a National Guard that would be enlarged in five years to 440 000 men Summer camps on the Plattsburg model were authorized for new officers and the government was given 20 million to build a nitrate plant of its own Preparedness supporters were downcast the antiwar people were jubilant The United States would now be too weak to go to war Colonel Robert L Bullard privately complained that Both sides Britain and the German Empire treat us with scorn and contempt our fool smug conceit of superiority has been exploded in our faces and deservedly 29 The House gutted the naval plans as well defeating a big navy plan by 189 to 183 and canceling the battleships The battle of Jutland May 31 June 1 1916 saw the main German High Seas Fleet engage in a monumental yet inconclusive clash with the far stronger Grand Fleet of the Royal Navy Arguing this battle proved the validity of Mahanian doctrine the navalists took control in the Senate broke the House coalition and authorized a rapid three year buildup of all classes of warships citation needed A new weapons system naval aviation received 3 5 million and the government was authorized to build its own armor plate factory The very weakness of American military power encouraged the German Empire to start its unrestricted submarine attacks in 1917 It knew this meant war with America but it could discount the immediate risk because the U S Army was negligible and the new warships would not be at sea until 1919 by which time the war would be over Berlin thought with the German Empire victorious The notion that armaments led to war was turned on its head refusal to arm in 1916 led to war in 1917 War declared editMain article United States declaration of war on Germany 1917 nbsp New York Times April 3 1917 In January 1917 the German Empire resumed unrestricted submarine warfare in hopes of forcing Britain to begin peace talks The German Foreign minister Arthur Zimmermann invited revolution torn Mexico to join the war as the German Empire s ally against the United States if the United States declared war on the German Empire in the Zimmermann Telegram In return the Germans would send Mexico money and help it recover the territories of Texas New Mexico and Arizona that Mexico lost during the Mexican American War 70 years earlier 30 British intelligence intercepted the telegram and passed the information on to Washington Wilson released the Zimmerman note to the public and Americans saw it as a casus belli a justification for war nbsp President Wilson before Congress announcing the break in official relations with the German Empire on February 3 1917 At first Wilson tried to maintain neutrality while fighting off the submarines by arming American merchant ships with guns powerful enough to sink German submarines on the surface but useless when the U boats were under water After submarines sank seven U S merchant ships Wilson finally went to Congress calling for a declaration of war on the German Empire which Congress voted on April 6 1917 31 As a result of the Russian February Revolution in 1917 the Tsar abdicated and was replaced by a Russian Provisional Government This helped overcome Wilson s reluctance to having the U S fight alongside a country ruled by an absolutist monarch Pleased by the Provisional Government s pro war stance the U S accorded the new government diplomatic recognition on March 9 1917 32 Furthermore as the war raged on Wilson started to increasingly see belligerency in the war as a ticket to the international conferences that would undoubtedly follow the war s end This was part of his wider mission to make the United States a more instrumental player on the global stage which he would later expand upon in his Fourteen points 33 Congress declared war on the Austro Hungarian Empire on December 7 1917 34 but never made declarations of war against the other Central Powers Bulgaria the Ottoman Empire or the various small co belligerents allied with the Central Powers 35 Thus the United States remained uninvolved in the military campaigns in central and eastern Europe the Middle East the Caucasus North Africa Sub Saharan Africa Asia and the Pacific Home front editMain article United States home front during World War I The home front required a systematic mobilization of the entire population and the entire economy to produce the soldiers food supplies munitions and money needed to win the war It took a year to reach a satisfactory state Although the war had already raged for two years Washington had avoided planning or even recognition of the problems that the British and other Allies had to solve on their home fronts As a result the level of confusion was high at first Finally efficiency was achieved in 1918 36 nbsp World War I propaganda poster for enlistment in the U S Army The war came in the midst of the Progressive Era when efficiency and expertise were highly valued Therefore the federal government set up a multitude of temporary agencies with 50 000 to 1 000 000 new employees to bring together the expertise necessary to redirect the economy into the production of munitions and food necessary for the war as well as for propaganda purposes 37 Food edit The most admired agency for efficiency was the United States Food Administration under Herbert Hoover It launched a massive campaign to teach Americans to economize on their food budgets and grow victory gardens in their backyards for family consumption It managed the nation s food distribution and prices and built Hoover s reputation as an independent force of presidential quality 38 Finance edit nbsp Liberty bond poster In 1917 the government was unprepared for the enormous economic and financial strains of the war Washington hurriedly took direct control of the economy The total cost of the war came to 33 billion which was 42 times as large as all Treasury receipts in 1916 A constitutional amendment legitimized income tax in 1913 its original very low levels were dramatically increased especially at the demand of the Southern progressive elements North Carolina Congressman Claude Kitchin chairman of the tax writing Ways and Means Committee argued that since Eastern businessman had been leaders in calling for war they should pay for it 39 In an era when most workers earned under 1000 a year the basic exemption was 2 000 for a family Above that level taxes began at the 2 percent rate in 1917 jumping to 12 percent in 1918 On top of that there were surcharges of one percent for incomes above 5 000 to 65 percent for incomes above 1 000 000 As a result the richest 22 percent of American taxpayers paid 96 percent of individual income taxes Businesses faced a series of new taxes especially on excess profits ranging from 20 percent to 80 percent on profits above pre war levels There were also excise taxes that everyone paid who purchased an automobile jewelry camera or a motorboat 40 41 The greatest source of revenue came from war bonds which were effectively merchandised to the masses through an elaborate innovative campaign to reach average Americans Movie stars and other celebrities supported by millions of posters and an army of Four Minute Men speakers explained the importance of buying bonds In the third Liberty Loan campaign of 1918 more than half of all families subscribed In total 21 billion in bonds were sold with interest from 3 5 to 4 7 percent The new Federal Reserve system encouraged banks to loan families money to buy bonds All the bonds were redeemed with interest after the war Before the United States entered the war New York banks had loaned heavily to the British After the U S entered in April 1917 the Treasury made 10 billion in long term loans to Britain France and the other allies with the expectation the loans would be repaid after the war Indeed the United States insisted on repayment which by the 1950s eventually was achieved by every country except Russia 42 43 Labor edit The American Federation of Labor AFL and affiliated trade unions were strong supporters of the war effort 44 Fear of disruptions to war production by labor radicals provided the AFL political leverage to gain recognition and mediation of labor disputes often in favor of improvements for workers They resisted strikes in favor of arbitration and wartime policy and wages soared as near full employment was reached at the height of the war The AFL unions strongly encouraged young men to enlist in the military and fiercely opposed efforts to reduce recruiting and slow war production by pacifists the anti war Industrial Workers of the World IWW and radical socialists To keep factories running smoothly Wilson established the National War Labor Board in 1918 which forced management to negotiate with existing unions 45 Wilson also appointed AFL president Samuel Gompers to the powerful Council of National Defense where he set up the War Committee on Labor After initially resisting taking a stance the IWW became actively anti war engaging in strikes and speeches and suffering both legal and illegal suppression by federal and local governments as well as pro war vigilantes The IWW was branded as anarchic socialist unpatriotic alien and funded by German gold and violent attacks on members and offices would continue into the 1920s 46 Women s roles edit nbsp The Secretary of the Navy with female munition workers from New York World War I saw women taking traditionally men s jobs in large numbers for the first time in American history Many women worked on the assembly lines of factories assembling munitions Some department stores employed African American women as elevator operators and cafeteria waitresses for the first time 47 Most women remained housewives The Food Administration helped housewives prepare more nutritious meals with less waste and with optimum use of the foods available Most important the morale of the women remained high as millions of middle class women joined the Red Cross as volunteers to help soldiers and their families 48 49 With rare exceptions women did not try to block the draft 50 The Department of Labor created a Women in Industry group headed by prominent labor researcher and social scientist Mary van Kleeck 51 This group helped develop standards for women who were working in industries connected to the war alongside the War Labor Policies Board of which van Kleeck was also a member After the war the Women in Industry Service group developed into the U S Women s Bureau headed by Mary Anderson 52 51 Propaganda edit Crucial to U S participation was the extensive domestic propaganda campaign On April 13 1917 President Wilson issued Executive Order 2594 establishing the Committee on Public Information CPI the first state bureau in the United States dedicated solely to propaganda George Creel an energetic journalist and political campaign organizer was appointed by President Wilson to lead the CPI Creel sought out any information that would discredit his opponents With boundless energy Creel developed an intricate and unprecedented propaganda system that influenced every aspect of American life 53 Through photographs movies rallies press reports and public meetings the CPI saturated the public with propaganda fostering American patriotism and stoking anti German sentiment among the younger generation This effectively suppressed the voices of neutrality supporters The CPI also controlled the dissemination of war information on the American home front The committee s New Division influenced news coverage by releasing thousands of press releases The News Division also promoted a system of voluntary censorship by newspapers and magazines while policing seditious and anti American content 54 The Espionage Act of 1917 and the Sedition Act of 1918 effectively outlawed any criticism of the government or the war effort 55 Violating these laws carried a penalty of up to 20 years in prison While technically applicable to everyone both laws were disproportionately enforced against immigrants and African Americans who often used their second class citizenship to protest their involvement in the war 56 The propaganda campaign involved tens of thousands of government selected community leaders delivering carefully scripted pro war speeches at numerous public gatherings 57 incomplete short citation 58 In addition to government agencies officially sanctioned private vigilante groups like the American Protective League closely monitored and sometimes harassed people who opposed American entry into the war or displayed too much German heritage 59 nbsp Weapons for Liberty U S A Bonds calls on Boy Scouts to serve just like soldiers do poster by J C Leyendecker 1918 Propaganda took various forms including newsreels billboards magazine and newspaper articles and large print posters designed by well known illustrators of the day including Louis D Fancher and Henry Reuterdahl After the armistice was signed in 1918 the CPI was disbanded having pioneered some of the tactics still employed by propagandists today 60 Children edit Main article Effect of World War I on children in the United States The nation placed a great importance on the role of children teaching them patriotism and national service and asking them to encourage war support and educate the public about the importance of the war The Boy Scouts of America helped distribute war pamphlets helped sell war bonds and helped to drive nationalism and support for the war 61 nbsp FWD Model B 3 ton 4x4 truckMotor vehicles editBefore the American entry into the war many American made heavy four wheel drive trucks notably made by Four Wheel Drive FWD Auto Company and Jeffery Nash Quads were already serving in foreign militaries bought by Great Britain France and Russia When the war started motor vehicles had begun to replace horses and pulled wagons but on the European muddy roads and battlefields two wheel drive trucks got stuck all the time and the leading allied countries could not produce 4WD trucks in the numbers they needed 62 The U S Army wanted to replace four mule teams used for hauling standard 11 2 U S ton 3000 lb 1 36 metric ton loads with trucks and requested proposals from companies in late 1912 63 This led the Thomas B Jeffery Company to develop a competent four wheel drive 11 2 short ton capacity truck by July 1913 the Quad nbsp U S Marines riding in a Jeffery Quad Fort Santo Domingo c 1916 The Jeffery Quad truck and from the company s take over by Nash Motors after 1916 the Nash Quad greatly assisted the World War I efforts of several Allied nations particularly the French 64 The U S first adopted Quads in the USMC s occupations of Haiti and the Dominican Republic from 1915 through 1917 65 as well as in the 1916 Pancho Villa Expedition against Mexico Once the U S entered World War I general John Pershing used Nash Quads heavily in the European campaigns They became the workhorse of the Allied Expeditionary Force there both as regular transport trucks and in the form of the Jeffery armored car 66 67 Some 11 500 Jeffery Nash Quads were built between 1913 and 1919 68 nbsp Luella Bates driving a Model B FWD truck promotional photo The success of the Four Wheel Drive cars in early military tests had prompted the U S company to switch from cars to truck manufacturing For World War I the U S Army ordered an amount of 15 000 FWD Model B three ton 6000 lb 2700 kg capacity trucks as the Truck 3 ton Model 1917 with over 14 000 actually delivered Additional orders came from the United Kingdom and Russia 69 Once the FWD and Jeffery Nash four wheel drive trucks were required in large numbers in World War I both models were built under license by several additional companies to meet demand The FWD Model B was produced under license by four additional manufacturers 70 The Quad and the FWD trucks were the world s first four wheel drive vehicles to be made in five figure numbers and they incorporated many hallmark technological innovations that also enabled the decisive U S and Allied usage of 4x4 and 6x6 trucks subsequently in World War II The Quad s production continued for 15 years with a total of 41 674 units made 71 Socially it was the FWD company that employed Luella Bates believed to be the first female truck driver chosen to work as test and demonstration driver for FWD from 1918 to 1922 55 72 During World War I she was a test driver traveling throughout the state of Wisconsin in an FWD Model B truck After the war when the majority of the women working at Four Wheel Drive were let go she remained as a demonstrator and driver 55 American military editMain article American Expeditionary Forces As late as 1917 the United States maintained only a small army one which was in fact smaller than those of thirteen of the states already active in the war After the passage of the Selective Service Act in 1917 it drafted 4 million men into military service 73 The Commission on Training Camp Activities sought to improve the morals and morale of the troops 74 By the summer of 1918 about 2 million U S soldiers had arrived in France about half of whom eventually saw front line service by the Armistice of November 11 approximately 10 000 U S soldiers were arriving in France daily 75 In 1917 Congress gave U S citizenship to Puerto Ricans when they were drafted to participate in World War I as part of the Jones Act In the end the German Empire miscalculated the United States influence on the outcome of the conflict believing it would be many more months before U S troops would arrive and overestimating the effectiveness of U boats in slowing the American buildup 76 incomplete short citation Beginning with the Battle of Saint Mihiel the first major battle involving the American Expeditionary Forces the leaders of the United States war efforts were General of the Armies John J Pershing Navy Admiral William Sims and Chief of Air Service Mason Patrick nbsp American soldiers on the Piave front hurling hand grenades into the Austrian trenches The United States Navy sent a battleship group to Scapa Flow to join with the British Grand Fleet destroyers to Queenstown Ireland and submarines to help guard convoys Several regiments of Marines were also dispatched to France The British and French wanted U S units to be used to reinforce their troops already on the battle lines and not to waste scarce shipping on bringing over supplies The U S rejected the first proposition and accepted the second General John J Pershing American Expeditionary Forces AEF commander refused to break up U S units to serve as mere reinforcements for British Empire and French units As an exception he did allow the African American combat regiments that made up the 93rd Combat Division to fight in French divisions This allowed him to fulfill his pledge to provide the French military with troops while getting rid of the black combat regiments who had become indignant at the fact that they couldn t fight on the front lines 77 The Harlem Hellfighters fought as part of the French 16th Division earning a unit Croix de Guerre for their actions at Chateau Thierry Belleau Wood and Sechault 78 African Americans in the military edit nbsp African American workers lining up before their work shift Bassens Docks Bordeaux April 1918 World War I was the first international conflict in which African Americans played a notable role Around 400 000 black men were enlisted in the military from 1917 to 1918 with half of these men being sent to Europe 79 However with the exception of the 42 000 men in the 92nd and 93rd Combat Divisions the majority of African Americans weren t permitted to serve in active combat roles as white officers believed that black men lacked the mental stamina and moral sturdiness that a front line soldier required 80 Those enlisted in the army and sent to Europe most commonly served in labour battalions under the banner of Services of Supply SOS The African Americans placed in these units often spent their days doing tough labour like unloading supplies from ships or transporting goods from ports to warehouses near the front lines These battalions were also tasked with building warehouses roads railroads and other vital infrastructure near major ports like Brest Bordeaux Marseilles and St Nazaire The men who served in these units were faced with some of the worst living conditions of all US soldiers thanks to the racial segregation enforced by white officers In the first couple of months after their arrival in Europe many black soldiers reported that they had to sleep in tents on the dirt floors of barracks eat outside rather than in canteens go to the bathroom in makeshift outhouses and wash themselves in makeshift bathrooms 80 Conditions did not improve much as the war went on Moreover African American recruits faced various forms of abuse from their white counterparts There were several cases of African American soldiers being verbally abused by white soldiers working or living in their proximity In some cases physical abuse also occurred Ely Green a man who worked in a labour battalion in St Nazaire reported various events wherein African American men were assaulted and even murdered for breaching the stark lines of segregation that were enforced by the US military 80 Some have come to see the work camps that black soldiers were subjected to as a means for the export of Jim Crow as the people within them essentially became a servant class for the white military officers Despite the rough conditions major figures in the African American community actually endorsed enlistment in the military W E B Du Bois for example urged his fellow African Americans to join shoulder to shoulder with our fellow citizens and the allied nations that are fighting for democracy 77 This was done because African Americans saw the war effort as an opportunity to prove their patriotism and loyalty to the United States Many hoped that by involving themselves in the war they would win expanded rights on the home front this did not end up occurring as can be seen in the Race Riots that followed the war in the Red Summer 1919 What the war did do however was sharpen the politics of African American soldiers they returned home referring to themselves as the New Negro These men had experienced what life could be like without the restrictions of second class citizenship thanks to the fact French citizens had treated them kindly when they wandered outside of the segregated military camps They thus returned home to America with a new fighting spirit that made them more determined to win expanded rights 79 This came with significant push back however as many white Americans pushed to return to normalcy and saw African American soldiers as a symbol of wartime change In turn then we start to see events like the lynching of Sergeant Caldwell Women in the military edit American women never served in combat roles as did some Russians but many were eager to serve as nurses and support personnel in uniform 81 During the course of the war 21 498 U S Army nurses American military nurses were all women then served in military hospitals in the United States and overseas Many of these women were positioned near to battlefields and they tended to over a million soldiers who had been wounded or were unwell 82 272 U S Army nurses died of disease mainly tuberculosis influenza and pneumonia 83 Eighteen African American Army nurses including Aileen Cole Stewart served stateside caring for German prisoners of war POWs and African American soldiers They were assigned to Camp Grant IL and Camp Sherman OH and lived in segregated quarters 84 85 86 nbsp Hello Girls receive decorations Hello Girls was the colloquial name for American female switchboard operators in World War I formally known as the Signal Corps Female Telephone Operators Unit During World War I these switchboard operators were sworn into the Army Signal Corps 87 This corps was formed in 1917 from a call by General John J Pershing to improve the worsening state of communications on the Western front Applicants for the Signal Corps Female Telephone Operators Unit had to be bilingual in English and French to ensure that orders would be heard by anyone Over 7 000 women applied but only 450 women were accepted Many of these women were former switchboard operators or employees at telecommunications companies 87 Despite the fact that they wore Army Uniforms and were subject to Army Regulations and Chief Operator Grace Banker received the Distinguished Service Medal 88 they were not given honorable discharges but were considered civilians employed by the military because Army Regulations specified the male gender Not until 1978 the 60th anniversary of the end of World War I did Congress approve veteran status and honorable discharges for the remaining women who had served in the Signal Corps Female Telephone Operators Unit 89 The first American women enlisted into the regular armed forces were 13 000 women admitted into active duty in the U S Navy during the war They served stateside in jobs and received the same benefits and responsibilities as men including identical pay US 28 75 per month and were treated as veterans after the war The U S Marine Corps enlisted 305 female Marine Reservists F to free men to fight by filling positions such as clerks and telephone operators on the home front During World War I Myrtle Hazard enlisted in the Coast Guard served as a telegraph operator and was discharged as an Electrician 1st Class She was the only woman to serve in the Coast Guard during the war and she is the namesake of USCGC Myrtle Hazard Wartime newspapers erroneously reported that twin sisters Genevieve and Lucille Baker were the first women to serve in the Coast Guard While they tried to enlist they were not accepted 90 These women were demobilized when hostilities ceased and aside from the Nurse Corps the uniformed military became once again exclusively male In 1942 women were brought into the military again largely following the British model 91 92 Impact of US forces on the war edit nbsp Men of US 64th Regiment 7th Infantry Division celebrate the news of the Armistice 11 November 1918 On the battlefields of France in spring 1918 the war weary Allied armies enthusiastically greeted the fresh American troops They arrived at the rate of 10 000 a day 75 at a time when the Germans were unable to replace their losses The Americans won a victory at Cantigny then again in defensive stands at Chateau Thierry and Belleau Wood The Americans helped the British Empire French and Portuguese forces defeat and turn back the powerful final German offensive Spring Offensive of March to July 1918 and most importantly the Americans played a role in the Allied final offensive Hundred Days Offensive of August to November However many American commanders used the same flawed tactics which the British French Germans and others had abandoned early in the war and so many American offensives were not particularly effective Pershing continued to commit troops to these full frontal attacks resulting in high casualties without noticeable military success against experienced veteran German and Austrian Hungarian units Nevertheless the infusion of new and fresh U S troops greatly strengthened the Allies strategic position and boosted morale The Allies achieved victory over the German Empire on November 11 1918 after German morale had collapsed both at home and on the battlefield 93 94 After the war editThe government promptly ended wartime contracts ended the draft and started to bring home its troops from Europe as fast as transport became available 95 However there was no GI Bill or financial or educational benefits for veterans and the lack became a major political issue especially for the large veterans groups such as the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the new American Legion 96 The readjustment period was marked by soaring unemployment massive strikes and race riots in 1919 The public demanded a return to normalcy and repudiated Wilson with the election of conservative Republican Warren G Harding 97 See also editUnited States campaigns in World War I History of the United States 1865 1918 German prisoners of war in the United States General Pershing WWI casualty list Spanish flu pandemicReferences edit DeBruyne Nese F 2017 American War and Military Operations Casualties Lists and Statistics PDF Report Congressional Research Service Jeanette Keith 2004 Rich Man s War Poor Man s Fight Race Class and Power in the Rural South during the First World War U of North Carolina Press pp 1 5 ISBN 978 0 8078 7589 6 Barnes Harry Elmer The Genesis of the World War 1925 pp 590 591 World War One BBC History Archived from the original on 2020 11 06 Retrieved 2019 12 25 Link Arthur S 1972 Woodrow Wilson and the Progressive Era 1910 1917 New York Harper amp Row pp 252 282 H J Res 169 Declaration of War with Austria Hungary WWI Archived 2021 11 25 at the Wayback Machine United States Senate Jennifer K Elsea Matthew C Weed April 18 2014 Declarations of War and Authorizations for the Use of Military Force Historical Background and Legal Implications PDF p 9 Archived PDF from the original on August 10 2006 Retrieved July 21 2014 Wilson s First Lusitania Note to Germany World War I Document Archive wwi lib byu edu Archived from the original on 2017 04 22 Retrieved 2020 03 06 H W Brands T R The Last Romantic 1997 p 756 Jules Witcover Black Tom Imperial Germany s Secret War in America 1989 Also in January 1917 the Zimmerman Telegram through which the German government sought to enlist Mexico as an ally and instigate a Mexican invasion of the U S was leaked further inflaming anti German sentiment Karp 1979 Ernest R May The World War and American Isolation 1914 1917 1959 Hew Strachan The First World War 2003 TV Series The First World War Part 7 Blockade Archived 2017 02 10 at the Wayback Machine 2003 William M Leary Jr Woodrow Wilson Irish Americans and the Election of 1916 Journal of American History Vol 54 No 1 Jun 1967 pp 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during World War I Family Tree Magazine Archived from the original on December 20 2019 Retrieved April 23 2019 Army Nurses of World War One Service Beyond Expectations Army Heritage Center Foundation www armyheritage org Archived from the original on 2019 06 24 Retrieved 2020 03 06 Women s History Chronology United States Coast Guard Archived from the original on 2013 10 01 Retrieved 2011 03 11 Highlights in the History of Military Women Archived from the original on 2013 04 03 Retrieved 2011 03 11 Women in the military international CBC News 30 May 2006 Archived from the original on March 28 2013 a b Malmstrom Airforce Base Archived 2011 07 22 at the Wayback Machine Sterling Christopher H 2008 Military Communications From Ancient Times to the 21st Century ABC CLIO p 55 ISBN 978 1 85109 732 6 Hello Girls U S Army Signal Museum Archived from the original on 2012 03 24 Retrieved 2010 01 23 The Long Blue Line The Baker Twins Re searching the first female Coasties or were they United States Coast Guard Retrieved 2023 07 30 Susan H Godson Serving Proudly A History of Women in the U S Navy 2002 Jeanne Holm Women in the Military An Unfinished Revolution 1993 pp 3 21 Ferguson Niall 1998 The Pity of War Penguin Edward M Coffman The War to End All Wars The American Military Experience in World War I 1998 Dixon Wecter When Johnny Comes Marching Home 1970 David Ortiz Beyond the Bonus March and GI Bill how veteran politics shaped the New Deal era 2013 p xiii Burl Noggle Into the Twenties The United States From Armistice to Normalcy 1974 Sources editKarp Walter 1979 The Politics of War 1st ed ISBN 0 06 012265 X OCLC 4593327Further reading editFurther information Presidency of Woodrow Wilson Further reading Bailey Thomas A Diplomatic History of the American people 1947 pp 610 680 online Bassett John Spencer Our War with Germany A History 1919 online edition Breen William J Uncle Sam at Home Civilian Mobilization Wartime Federalism and the Council of National Defense 1917 1919 1984 Byerly Carol R 2010 The U S Military and the Influenza Pandemic of 1918 1919 Public Health Reports 125 Suppl 3 United States National Library of Medicine 82 91 doi 10 1177 00333549101250S311 ISSN 1468 2877 PMC 2862337 PMID 20568570 Capozzola Christopher Uncle Sam Wants You World War I and the Making of the Modern American Citizen 2008 Chambers John W II To Raise an Army The Draft Comes to Modern America 1987 online Clements Kendrick A The Presidency of Woodrow Wilson 1992 Coffman Edward M The War to End All Wars The American Military Experience in World War I 1998 a standard military history online free to borrow Committee on Public Information How the war came to America 1917 online 840pp detailing every sector of society Cooper John Milton Woodrow Wilson A Biography 2009 Cooper John Milton The World War and American Memory Diplomatic History 2014 38 4 pp 727 736 Doenecke Justus D Nothing Less than War A New History of America s Entry into World War I University Press of Kentucky 2011 DuBois W E Burghardt An Essay Toward a History of the Black Man in the Great War The Crisis vol 18 no 2 June 1919 pp 63 87 Epstein Katherine C The Conundrum of American Power in the Age of World War I Modern American History 2019 1 21 Hannigan Robert E The Great War and American Foreign Policy 1914 24 U of Pennsylvania Press 2017 Kang Sung Won and Hugh Rockoff Capitalizing patriotism the Liberty loans of World War I Financial History Review 22 1 2015 45 online Kennedy David M Over Here The First World War and American Society 2004 comprehensive coverage online Malin James C The United States After the World War 1930 Marrin Albert The Yanks Are Coming The United States in the First World War 1986 online May Ernest R The World War and American Isolation 1914 1917 1959 online at ACLS e books highly influential study Nash George H The Life of Herbert Hoover Master of Emergencies 1917 1918 1996 excerpt and text search Paxson Frederic L Pre war years 1913 1917 1936 wide ranging scholarly survey Paxson Frederic L American at War 1917 1918 1939 online wide ranging scholarly survey Paxson Frederic L Post War Years Normalcy 1918 1923 1948 online Paxson Frederic L ed War cyclopedia a handbook for ready reference on the great war 1918 online Resch John P ed Americans at War Society culture and the home front volume 3 1901 1945 2005 Schaffer Ronald America in the Great War The Rise of the War Welfare State 1991 Trask David F The United States in the Supreme War Council American War Aims and Inter Allied Strategy 1917 1918 1961 Trask David F The AEF and Coalition Warmaking 1917 1918 1993 online free Trask David F ed World War I at home readings on American life 1914 1920 1969 primary sources online Tucker Spencer C and Priscilla Mary Roberts eds The Encyclopedia of World War I A Political Social and Military History 5 vol 2005 worldwide coverage Van Ells Mark D America and World War I A Traveler s Guide 2014 excerpt Vaughn Stephen Holding Fast the Inner Lines Democracy Nationalism and the Committee on Public Information U of North Carolina Press 1980 online Venzon Anne ed The United States in the First World War An Encyclopedia 1995 Walworth Arthur 1958 Woodrow Wilson Volume I Volume II Longmans Green 904pp full scale scholarly biography winner of Pulitzer Prize online free 2nd ed 1965 Wevera Peter C Wevera van Bergenc Leo June 27 2014 Death from 1918 pandemic influenza during the First World War a perspective from personal and anecdotal evidence Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses 8 5 538 46 doi 10 1111 irv 12267 PMC 4181817 PMID 24975798 Woodward David R The American Army and the First World War 2014 484 pp online review Woodward David R Trial by Friendship Anglo American Relations 1917 1918 1993 online Young Ernest William The Wilson Administration and the Great War 1922 online edition Zieger Robert H America s Great War World War I and the American Experience 2000 Historiography and memory edit Berg Manfred and Axel Jansen Americans in World War I World War I in America Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 17 4 2018 599 607 excerpt Capozzola Chris et al Interchange World War I Journal of American History 102 2 2015 463 499 https doi org 10 1093 jahist jav474 Cooper John Milton Jr The World War and American Memory Diplomatic History 38 4 2014 727 36 Jones Heather As the Centenary Approaches The Regeneration of First World War Historiography Historical Journal 56 3 2013 857 78 global perspective Keene Jennifer The United States in John Horne ed A Companion to World War I Wiley Blackwell 2012 508 23 Keene Jennifer D Remembering the Forgotten War American Historiography on World War I Historian 78 3 2016 439 468 Rubin Richard The Last of the Doughboys The Forgotten Generation and their Forgotten World War 2013 Snell Mark A ed Unknown Soldiers The American Expeditionary Forces in Memory and Remembrance Kent State UP 2008 Trout Steven On the Battlefield of Memory The First World War and American Remembrance 1919 1941 University of Alabama Press 2010 Woodward David America and World War I A Selected Annotated Bibliography of English Language Sources 2nd ed 2007 excerpt Zeiler Thomas W Ekbladh David K and Montoya Benjamin C eds Beyond 1917 The United States and the Global Legacies of the Great War Oxford University Press 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to United States in World War I First hand accounts of World War I veterans The Library of Congress Veterans History Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States in World War I amp oldid 1218365725, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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