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Mobilization. Section 18.1. Mobilizing the Armed Forces. FDR realizes (before U.S. entry) that we must strengthen the armed forces Selective Service Act (1940): required all males aged 21-36 to register for military service Increased Defense spending from $2 billion to $10 billion
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Mobilization Section 18.1
Mobilizing the Armed Forces • FDR realizes (before U.S. entry) that we must strengthen the armed forces • Selective Service Act (1940): required all males aged 21-36 to register for military service • Increased Defense spending from $2 billion to $10 billion • “Four Freedoms speech”: prepared Americans for the possibility of war and what we should be fighting for
Freedom of Speech Freedom to Worship
Freedom from want Freedom from fear
Who is the army? • GI: “Government Issue” – +16 million serve in military • 300,000 Mexican Americans • 25,000 Native Americans (“Code Talkers”) • 1 million African Americans – most had “supporting roles” • End of the war (1944) AA’s are placed in combat positions • Tuskegee Airmen – 1st African American flying unit
U.S. Economy • FDR had to coordinate the businesses to meet Allied demands • War Production Board (WPB): directed the conversion of peacetime industries to wartime industries • Office of War Mobilization: served as a “super agency”; coordinated all production of wartime resources
Examples • Ford made B-24 Liberator bombers (used assembly line to mass produce) • Henry Kaiser used mass production techniques in shipbuilding – cut time down from 200 days to 40 days – “Liberty Ships”
How do you motivate a business to change? • “Cost-Plus” system (military contract): Military paid development and production costs and added a percentage of costs as profit for the manufacturer • Pride and patriotism also motivated many businesses
Production • By the end of 1945: • 300,000 airplanes • 80,000 landing craft • 100,000 tanks and armored cars • 5,600 merchant ships • 6 million rifles, carbines and machine guns • 41 billion rounds of ammunition
Financing the War • U.S. gov’t. vowed to spend whatever was necessary • Federal spending increased from $8.9 billion/yr. (1939) to $95.2 billion/yr. (1945) • Overall, 1941-1945, gov’t. spent $321 billion – 10x as much as WWI
How do you pay for a costly war? • 41% of the war paid by higher taxes • Borrowed money from banks, private investors, and war bonds ($186 billion) • Deficit spending help pull U.S. out of depression • Also, boosted national debt from $43 billion to $259 billion
Daily Life on the Home Front • Nearly everyone had a relative/ friend in the war • Population grew by 7.5 million (nearly double the rate of the 1930’s) • Baby Boomers
Shortages & Controls • Shortages and rationing limited the goods that people could buy • Metal from zippers could make guns • Rubber from bike tires made army truck tires • Nylon stockings could make parachutes
Food Shortages • Food was needed for the military • Also, enemy occupied territories cut off shipping to the U.S. (ex. Sugar, fruit, coffee…) • Office of Price Controls (OPC): controlled inflation by limiting price and rents
Rationing • Rationing: a fair distribution of scarce items • OPA assigned point values to items such as sugar, coffee, meat, butter, canned fruit, and shoes • Issued ration books of coupons – once you used up the points, you couldn’t receive anymore
Pop Culture • What do you spend your money on since you can’t buy “scarce” items? • Books and magazines • Recordings of popular songs • Go to a baseball game • Go to the movies • 60% of the population (growth of movie stars)
Enlisting Public Support • FDR creates the Office of War Information to boost public morale • Created posters and ads that stirred patriotic feelings • Victory gardens: home vegetable garden planted to add to the home food supply – instead of buying farm produce that went to the military • Recycled scrap metal, paper, etc.