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WWII Americans at War. Chapter 18 1941 - 1945. How do you gear up for a war?. Boosted defense spending from $2 billion to 10 billion. Encouraged enlistment. Selective Training and Service Act All males 21 – 36. The GI War. “Government Issue”
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WWIIAmericans at War Chapter 18 1941 - 1945
How do you gear up for a war? • Boosted defense spending from $2 billion to 10 billion. • Encouraged enlistment. • Selective Training and Service Act • All males 21 – 36.
The GI War • “Government Issue” • Applied to all soldiers, sailors and aviators.
Diversity in the Armed Forces • 300,000 Mexican Americans • Million African Americans • 25, 000 Native Americans. • 350,000 Women
NativeAmericans in the Military • The US needed a code to communicate that the Japanese couldn’t break. • US intelligence bet the Japanese never bothered to learn about Native American languages. • Wind Talkers / Code Talkers • Mostly Navajo
African Americans in the Military • At first officials limited African Americans to supporting roles • Cooks, drivers, garbage pick up • After 1942 – gave opportunities to fight. • Separate units • Tuskegee Airmen
Women in the military • Personnel shortage allowed women into all positions EXCEPT combat. • Clerks, typists, air traffic control, mechanics, photographers, drivers. • Towed practice targets for anti-aircraft gunners.
Preparing an Economy for War • With Japan controlling the Pacific the US was cut off from VITAL raw materials • Rubber • Oil • Tin
Preparing an Economy for War • Thanks to the New Deal – the government had tremendous power over the economy. • WPB War Production Board – • Convert peacetime industries to produce war materials. • Cars to building bomber planes
Preparing an Economy for War • By 1944 American production levels doubled those of all the Axis powers together. • 1945 • 300,000 planes • 80,000 landing craft • 100,000 armored cars and tanks • 6 million rifles • 41 BILLION rounds of ammunition!
Wartime Work Force • War production ended any lasting Depression unemployment. • Wages rose by 50% between 1940 – 1945. • Mostly women workers • “There’s a war on, you know!” • Rosie the Riveter
Financing the War • 1939 – US govt. spending was 8.9 billion. • 1945 – US govt. spending was $95.2 billion!!!!
How did we pay for the war? • 41% paid for by higher taxes • Urged people and businesses to buy war bonds. • Loans of your money to government. • Pay back date with interest for the loan.
How did we pay for the war? • Went further into debt! • 1940 – deficit spending made the US debt $43 billion. • 1945 - $259 billion in debt!
Daily Life on the Home Front • Practically every family had someone in the war. • 30-million people moved. • Soldiers moved • Families of soldiers moved • People moved to take jobs • BUT the population grew by 7.5 million 1940 – 1945. • Double the rate of the 1930s.
Shortages and Controls • Workers were making $$$$ • But there was really nothing to spend it on.
Shortages • Zippers • Typewriters • Rubber • Nylon stockings • Anything that had metal, rubber or nylon was needed for the war.
Food Shortages too • Between troop needs and enemy stopping supply lines. • Sugar • Tropical fruits • Coffee • Chocolate
OPA: Office of Price Administration • When demand is greater than supply prices go • UP! • INFLATION! • Had to limit prices.
OPA decided the prices for • Sugar • Coffee • Meat • Butter • Canned food • Shoes • Gas
Ration Books • Coupons with certain values allotted goods for the month. • Based on family size • Did consider distance and needs of farmers
Popular Culture • Looking for ways to spend money • Movies • Radio • Books and magazines • Ballgames with female players
Enlisting Public Support • Office of War Information • Writers and artists created posters and ads that stirred Americans’ patriotic feelings.
What civilians were encouraged to do: • Older men: join the Civilian Defense effort • Kids: Scrap metal drives • Women: • Grow Victory Gardens • Knit scarves and socks for the war • Roll bandages for the Red Cross
Motto • “Play YOUR Part” • “Conserve and Collect” • “Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without”
Nebraska Note: The North Platte Canteen • December 25, 1941 – April 1, 1946 • Served 6-million servicemen served sandwiches, coffee, cookies and cakes during stops.
Retaking Europe (Section 2) • Roosevelt and Churchill met in August 1941 to decide what the goals of their alliance would be.
The Atlantic Charter • There would be no enlargement of territories. • Freedom of people to choose their government • Final destruction of the Nazis.
Battle of the Atlantic • How to get supplies to the British? • Wolf Packs • 20 U boats that hunted enemy convoys in packs. • Took out 175 allied ships in 1942 alone. • Some in sight of the US coastline.
How to combat the wolf packs? • SONAR (kinda worked) • Long range sub hunting aircraft • Better depth charges • Cut off U Boats from their ports in Germany and France.
The Major Players of the Atlantic War; Western Front; European Theatre • Churchill – Prime Minister of England • Roosevelt – US President • Josef Stalin – Chairman of Soviet Union
Players for the Fascists • Hitler – Germany • Mussolini - Italy
The Generals: Allies • Dwight “Ike” Eisenhower (1890 – 1969) • Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces • Excelled at • Staffing issues • Diplomacy
The Generals: United States • George Patton : 1885 – 1945. • As a boy knew he wanted to be a hero. • LOVED war. • Early on realized the potential for tanks. • Did NOT have good diplomacy skills.
The Generals: Allies • England’s Field Marshal Montgomery – • Not a particularly great general – but he made sure people thought he was great.
The BRILLIANT Nazi Generals • Rommel “The Desert Fox” • Erwin Rommel (1891 – 1944) • Great tank commander • Used surprise and bold moves. • Was NOT a member of the Nazi party
The BRILLIANT Nazi Admirals • Admiral Karl Donitz • U boat strategy • Sea mine technology • Ice water instead of blood in his veins.
The North Africa Campaign • February 1943: US had their butts kicked by the Nazis. • May 1943: US came back, defeated Nazis and took 240,000 German and Italians prisoners. • 2000 ended up in POW camps in Nebraska.
Invasion of Italy: Start of Retaking Europe • 7th Army under Patton took Sicily and the English started to invade the mainland of Italy.
Invasion of Italy • Mussolini’s Fascists turned against him. • Nazis rescued Mussolini • Set him up in a Puppet Government in northern Italy
It sure wasn’t over yet! • Battle of Anzio and Cassino trapped Americans and English and went from January – May 1944. • Allies v. German Nazis • April 1945 Italy was in Allied control.
The End for Mussolini • Caught by the Italians as he tried to leave Italy and escape to Germany. • Ended by the Italians.
The War in the Soviet Union • The Germans advance in Russia 1941 – 1942. • Blitzkrieg • Nazis were first greeted as liberators by the ethnic nationalities in Russia. • They hated Stalin.
The War in the Soviet Union • Nazis turned on the local people. • Executions • Forced labor People engaged in guerrilla actions against the Nazis.
Russia’s Fight • Guerrilla Warfare • Scorched Earth Policy • Stalin BEGGED Roosevelt and Churchill to invade Western Europe to take some pressure off the Red Army.
Russia’s BEST weapon • The Russian winter
Important Soviet Battles • Battle of Stalingrad • September 1942 – January 1943
Important Soviet Battles • Siege of Leningrad (St. Petersburg today)