1 / 33

The Home Front Mobilizing the Home Front

The Home Front Mobilizing the Home Front. A. Building National Morale. America was shocked by Pearl Harbor; celebrities boosted support for the war at home, abroad

tanaya
Download Presentation

The Home Front Mobilizing the Home Front

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Home FrontMobilizing the Home Front

  2. A.Building National Morale • America was shocked by Pearl Harbor; celebrities boosted support for the war at home, abroad • Most opposition to war ended after PH; FDR rallied all behind the Four Freedoms: 1. Freedom of speech and expression 2. Freedom of worship3. Freedom from want 4. Freedom from fear

  3. A.Building National Morale 1.Calling All Volunteers • The Office of Civilian Defense (OCD) was founded to raise and maintain civilian morale • Volunteers planted “victory gardens” (40%), served as air raid wardens, etc. • Volunteers recycled much of the steel and 50% of the paper and tin used to fight the war • “Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without”

  4. A.Building National Morale 2.The Media Goes to War • The govt. founded the Office of War Information to coordinate war news and keep the public informed • Hollywood rushed war films into production; cast American cinema heroes and stereotyped Germans, Italians and Japanese • Comics, patriotic songs and magazine ads promoted the OCD, American involvement

  5. B.Staging a Production Miracle • 1941: Only 15% of industrial production was for the military • FDR created the War Production Board (WPB) to increase war materials

  6. B.Staging a Production Miracle • WPB ordered industry to convert to making things for the war (shirts, toys and cars to uniforms, bombs, tanks and planes) • WPB paid industries well for opening new factories, lifted antitrust laws in war industry • War production doubled; warships taking 105 days to build at the beginning of the war were finished in just 14 days by war’s end

  7. C.Directing a Wartime Economy • Gross National Product (GNP): The total value of goods and services produced annually • GNP rose from $91 billion (1939) to $212 billion (1945) • Crop prices doubled, 17 million jobs were created and standard of living rose over 15%

  8. C.Directing a Wartime Economy 1.Controlling Wages and Prices • National War Labor Board (NWLB) monitored inflation and adjusted wages accordingly, but inflation continued • 1942: The NWLB froze hourly wages and the Office of Price Administration (OPA) set price ceilings to protects consumers

  9. C.Directing a Wartime Economy 2.Reducing Demand Through Rationing • OPA kept prices down through rationing • Consumers were issued ration coupons for milk, meat, gas, etc. based on family needs • Rationing was controversial; Americans were earning more but were restricted in purchasing

  10. C.Directing a Wartime Economy 3.Paying For A Costly War • The govt. spent $321 billion on WWII (10 times WWI, 2 times the past 150 years) • The govt. paid 40% of the cost with taxes, borrowed the rest • The Revenue Act of 1942 increased corporate taxes, expanded income tax to most people

  11. C.Directing aWartime Economy 3.Paying For A Costly War • The govt. sold war bonds, promising to repay the amount plus interest to finance the war • War bonds controlled inflation by reducing the money Americans could spend elsewhere • Americans saved $129 billion on war bonds for post-war purchases

  12. D.Upholding a No-Strike Pledge • Unions promised not to strike during the war, but were not legally bound (3 million struck, 1943) • NWLB enforced labor standards for unions • Steel, railroads and especially coal struck during the war but the majority of labor unions kept their promise

  13. E.Recruiting New Workers • Workers were needed to replace GIs and fill new war factories • Depression unemployed was wiped out by wartime labor demands • 1940-45: 6 million women joined the workforce (27%-37%)

  14. E.RecruitingNew Workers • “Rosie the Riveter” changed the American workforce, but women in war industries were paid 60% less than men and had little job security • 4 million women lost their jobs or left them after the war; this, the war and other factors strained society and American families

  15. The Home FrontThe War and Social Change

  16. A.Americans on the Move • 1941-45: 20% of Americans moved between; 700,000 African Americans moved from the South to find better work, escape segregation • Migration: The movement of people from one country or region to another • People joined the military, moved for wartime jobs; largest short-term migration in U.S. history

  17. A.Americans on the Move • Americans moved from: Rural to Urban, East to West and North to South • CA, WA, OR, TX, MD, FL and VA saw large increases in population • Farm workers decreased 17%, production increased 25% • Better fertilizer and machinery on large, consolidated farms marked a change in agriculture

  18. B.Boom Towns Emerge • Small towns and industrial centers Like Mobile, AL became overcrowded by migrants • Housing was often scarce, schools and hospitals were dirty and overcrowded • 9 million migrant workers and families were housed by the National Housing Agency, in barracks, trailers or tents • e.g., Pascagoula, MS quadrupled in size; serious social and ecological stresses ensued

  19. C.Social Stresses Multiply • LA, San Diego and Detroit were scenes of sever social stresses • Local residents resented, often hated newcomers, especially African Americans

  20. C.Social Stresses Multiply 1.Racial Tensions Explode • 500,000 migrants call Detroit home by 1943; African Americans wedged into small section • A fight between black teens and a sailor broke out; sailors from a nearby base joined in • Rumors spread quickly and black crowds rioted, attacked groups of whites

  21. C.Social Stresses Multiply 1.Racial Tensions Explode • The next day (Bloody Monday) large white mobs prowled the streets, beating and killing blacks • 6,000 soldiers called in to restore peace; $2 million in damage, 25 blacks and 9 whites killed • Summer, ‘43: Riots in Harlem and on 9 army training camps across the country marked a tense summer

  22. C.Social StressesMultiply 2.The Zoot Suit Riots • Chicanos (Americans of Mexican descent) moved from agricultural work in Southern CA to industrial and manufacturing jobs; faced great discrimination • Agricultural opportunities brought many illegal aliens from Mexico; tensions increased

  23. C.Social Stresses Multiply 2.The Zoot Suit Riots • Zoot-suiters were underemployed teens (often Hispanic), seeking independence and an escape from slum life • Summer, ‘43: Sailors and LA zoot-suiters clashed; sailors roamed streets, beating indiscriminately but zoot-suiters were often blamed

  24. D.WartimeFamily Stresses • Single parent home became more common, parents working overtime or in the military • “Latch-key kids” and “eight-hour orphans” common in boom towns; teens looked after siblings • Teen working tripled to 2.9 million; juvenile delinquency increased, curfews were often enforced

  25. E.The New Deal Comes to an End • 12/43: FDR declared the war effort took priority over the New Deal • Social Security, the TVA and unemployment benefits, however, became permanent programs • Programs that might interfere with the war effort were stopped or scaled back (e.g., REA) • The CCC, WPA and NYA were phased out with the return of jobs

  26. E.The New Deal Comes to an End • Wartime economic growth convinced many that govt. spending could bring prosperity • The govt. would soon resort to deficit spending to fight economic downturns • War brought both economic growth and social stresses (overcrowding, juvenile delinquency) • Minorities struggled with discrimination, but small gains cracked the door for the civil rights movement

  27. The Home FrontThe War and Civil Rights

  28. A.Civil Rights Movement Grows • African Americans fought in both World Wars, but faced job discrimination at home • Many compared American racism to German Nazism; was segregation no longer justified? • African Americans became more vocal for equality (“Double-V” victory at home and abroad)

  29. B.A March on Washington • Legal and de facto segregation kept races separate • A. Philip Randolph was a “father of the (modern) civil rights movement;” helped unionize blacks • 1941: Randolph formed the March on Washington Movement (MOWM) to end military discrimination • NAACP sought equality legally, politically; Randolph wanted direct action and excluded whites

  30. B.A March on Washington 1.Roosevelt and Randolph Compromise • FDR did not want a march; Randolph wanted fair defense contracting, no segregation in the govt. and armed forces • 6/25/41: Executive Order 8802 ended discrimination in defense contracting • FDR did not want the military desegregated; the march was called off

  31. B.A March on Washington 2.Other Victories • 1942: Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) boycotted, sat-in to end segregation in Northern cities • NAACP grew to 450,000; fought and won many legal battles for equality

  32. D.Internment of Japanese Americans • WWII brought about few restrictions of civil liberties (unlike WWI), but Japanese Americans were targets for discrimination • 2/19/42: Issei (foreign born Japanese Americans) and Nisei (native born Japanese Americans) on the West Coast were interned in camps when FDR signed E.O. 9066 • Japanese Americans were forced sell belongings, homes, farms, etc.

  33. D.Internment of Japanese Americans • Internment camps were barren and dirty; often ranging from blistering heat to freezing cold • The Supreme Courts later upheld the relocation and Japanese curfews in Korematsu v. U.S. (1943) and Hirabayashi v. U.S., (1944) • WWII saw great gains and setbacks in a number of areas in civil rights

More Related