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14.3 Life on the Home Front

14.3 Life on the Home Front. I. Women & Minorities Gain Ground. Women worked in defense plants 1. Rosie the Riveter. I. Women & Minorities Gain Ground…. Factories resisted hiring African Americans 1. A. Philip Randolph organized a march on Washington for jobs

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14.3 Life on the Home Front

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  1. 14.3 Life on the Home Front

  2. I. Women & Minorities Gain Ground • Women worked in defense plants 1. Rosie the Riveter

  3. I. Women & Minorities Gain Ground… • Factories resisted hiring African Americans 1. A. Philip Randolph organized a march on Washington for jobs 2. FDR issued Executive Order 8802, which ended discrimination in defense industries & the govt. Executive Order 8802 declared “there should be no discrimination in the employment of workers in defense industries or government because of race, creed, color, or national origin.”

  4. I. Women & Minorities Gain Ground… C. Through the Bracero Program, the govt. hired Mexicans to work on the farms in the Southwest Bracero is a Spanish word meaning “worker.” More than 200,000 Mexicans came to the U.S to work on farms during WWII. The program continued until 1964.

  5. II. A Nation on the Move • People migrated to find war jobs 1. Greatest short-term migration in U.S. history 2. A new industrial region in the SW formed and was called the Sunbelt More than 20% .1%-4.9% Population Decrease

  6. II. A Nation on the Move… • Rapid growth of communities with defense plants became known as boomtowns 1. Housing was scarce & services were overburdened “Sidewalks are crowded. Gutters are stacked with litter that drifts back and forth in the brisk spring wind…. Cues (lines) wait outside of movies and lunchrooms. The trailer army has filled all the open lots with its regular ranks. In cluttered backyards people camp out in tents and chicken houses and shelter tacked together out of packing cases.” - John Dos Passos, State of the Nation, 1944

  7. II. A Nation on the Move… 2. Led to racial violence Detroit, 1943: Rioting resulted in 34 dead, 700 injured, & $2 million worth of property destroyed

  8. II. A Nation on the Move… • In CA, racial tensions became entangled with juvenile delinquency 1. Mexican-American teens wore zoot suits 2. In order to save fabric for the war, most men wore “victory suits” 3. Rioting, known as the Zoot Suit Riots, began when soldiers & sailors attacked Mexican American neighborhoods A zoot suit was a long jacket with heavily padded shoulders & pleated trousers tapered at the cuffs.

  9. III. Daily Life in Wartime • To stabilize wages & prices, FDR created the Office of Price Administration 1. Kept inflation under control 2. Began a system of rationing to make sure products were available for military use *Red stamps = meat, cheese, dairy products, etc. *Blue stamps = vegetables, canned fruits, etc.

  10. RATIONING Rationing helped to reduce the demand for items such as gasoline. To learn how to use rationing stamps, these school children set up a booth with charts & products to figure out how to buy needed goods during the war.

  11. III. Daily Life in Wartime… B. Volunteers planted victory gardens & organized scrap drives "Well, it was just very difficult to transport fruit and vegetables and everything. Most of it that was raised in California, or wherever they were raised, was going to the troops. So we had to raise our own and bring it into the local grocery store. And, so, another part of the government effort was – they called them Victory Gardens. In the cities, and even in the country, they wanted everybody to have their own garden, to raise their own produce and maybe have enough that somebody that didn't have access to a garden had produce and things, because it wasn't available in the stores... "It was a great morale thing. And for young people like me, it was, you know, I could do my part. I was a part of the effort."

  12. Scrap Drives Everyday commodities were vital to the war effort, and drives were organized to recycle such things as rubber, tin, waste kitchen fats paper, lumber, and steel.

  13. III. Daily Life in Wartime… C. To pay for the war, the govt. raised taxes and sold war bonds For the first time, the government started collecting taxes through monthly payroll deductions.

  14. The public school children of the South-Central District of Chicago purchased $263,148. 83 in war bonds and stamps...a huge check representing enough money for 125 jeeps, two pursuit planes and a motorcycle.

  15. III. Daily Life in Wartime… Paper Advertisement • To keep Americans informed, the govt. created the Office of War Information 1. Encouraged the media & entertainment industry to promote the war Air Raid Warden

  16. III. Daily Life in Wartime…

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