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Life on t he Home Front

Life on t he Home Front. Rachael Leonard Tiffany Young Kenneth Hondl. Women and Minorities Gain Ground. The war finally ended the great depression Mobilizing the economy created almost 19 million new jobs and nearly doubled the average families income

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Life on t he Home Front

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  1. Life on the Home Front Rachael Leonard Tiffany Young Kenneth Hondl

  2. Women and Minorities Gain Ground • The war finally ended the great depression • Mobilizing the economy created almost 19 million new jobs and nearly doubled the average families income • families had to move to where the defensive factories were located • Housing conditions were terrible • Workers worked 90 hours per week

  3. Under pressure to produce, employers began to recruit women and minorities • 2.5 million women worked in shipyards, aircraft factories, and other manufacturing plants • The success of women permanently changers American’s attitudes about women in the workplace • Although factories were hiring women they resisted hiring African Americans

  4. A Philip Randolph- the head of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters • Randolph informed Roosevelt that he was arranging African Americans to march on Washington to secure jobs • Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802 on June 25,1941which declared that there should be no discrimination in employment in defensive industries or government

  5. Bracero Program- a program of Mexican farm workers • Bracero- a spanish word meaning workers • The government arranged for the Mexican farm workers to help with the harvest

  6. A Nation on the Move • To get to the jobs, 15 million Americans moved during the war • The growth of southern California and the expansion of cities in the Deep South created a new industrial region- The Sunbelt • In 1942 Roosevelt created the National Housing Agency to coordinate (to bring into common action) all government housing

  7. In southern California, racial tensions mixed with juvenile delinquency • Racism against Mexican Americans and the fear of juvenile crime became linked because of the “zoot suit” • Zoot suits- consisted of baggy, pleated pants, an overstuffed knee length jacket with wide lapels and sometimes a wide-brimmed hat • Victory suits- a suit with no vests, no cuffs, a short jacket, and narrow lapels

  8. In June 1943, after hearing rumors that zoot-suiters had attacked several sailors, about 2,500 soldiers and sailors attacked Mexican American neighborhoods in Los Angles • After Pearl harbor many Americans turned their anger on Japanese American citizens • On February 19, 1942, Roosevelt signed an order allowing the War Department to declare any part of the United states a military zone and to remove people from that zone • He must of felt justified (to prove or show to be just) when 4 days later a Japanese submarine surfaced off the coast of California and shelled an oil refinery

  9. On December 8, 1941 Roosevelt proclaimed that unnaturalized people14 or older of German and Italian decent were designated as alien enimies • They were subject to government regulations such as travel restrictions, being forced to carry an identification card, and the seizure or personal property

  10. Daily Life in Wartime • The president worried about inflation, to stabilize wages and prices he created the Office of Economic Stabilization (OES) which regulated wages and the price of farm products • He also created the Office of Price Administration (OPA) which regulated all other prices

  11. The War Labor Board (WLB) worked to prevent strikes, by the end of the war they had helped settle more than 17,000 disputes • Rationing- limiting the purchase of many products to make sure enough were available for the war effort • A person from each household picked up a book of rationing coupons every month • The coupons consisted of red points, blue points, and miscellaneous coupons

  12. Red points controlled meats, fats, and oils • Blue points controlled processed foods • Miscellaneous coupons controlled items such as coffee, shoes, and sugar • Victory Gardens- gardens planted to produce more food for the effort • Certain raw materials were so vital to the war effort that the government organized scrap drives • To earn more ration coupons you could exchange bacon grease and meat drippings, this helped with the scrap drives

  13. The federal government spent more than $300 billion during WW2 • To raise money the government raised taxes, congress refused to raise taxes as high as Roosevelt wanted • As a result taxes collected only covered 45% of the wars cost • The government issued war bonds to make up the difference, individuals bought nearly $50 billion worth of war bonds, institutions bought the rest more than $100 billion worth

  14. Hollywood Goes to War • In 1942 Roosevelt created the Office of War Information (OWI) • The OWI’s mission was to improve the publics understanding of the war • Created guidelines for various forms of media • The Donald Duck cartoon Der Fuehrer’s Face was one of the media that followed these guidelines • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5LYD0Fzf1LU

  15. Question 1 • Workers worked an average of how many hours per week? • 90 hours

  16. Question 2 • Executive Order 8802 declared what? • There should be no discrimination in employment in defensive industries and government

  17. Question 3 • The ____________ was designed to coordinate all government housing. • National Housing Agency

  18. Question 4 • On December 8, 1941, Roosevelt proclaimed that unnaturalized people 14 or older of ______ and _______ decent were designated enemy aliens • German, Italian

  19. Question 5 • ______ ________ controlled processed foods • Blue points

  20. Question 6 • Certain raw materials were so vital to the war effort that the government organized ______ ______ • Scrap drives

  21. Question 7 • To earn more ration coupons you could exchange _______ ______ and ______ _________. • Bacon grease/ meat drippings

  22. Question 8 • ______ _________ controlled meats, fats, and oils. • Red points

  23. Question 9 • Mobilizing the economy created almost ___________ new jobs. • 19 million

  24. Question 10 • 2.5 million ________ worked in shipyards, aircraft factories, and other manufacturing plants. • women

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