360 likes | 524 Views
Mobilizing an “Arsenal of Democracy”. The Home Front. WW2 impacted all aspects of US life: FDR hoped US would be the great “arsenal of democracy” Boost of wartime industry ended the Great Depression War altered lives of women, Af-Ams, Jap-Ams, & Mex-Ams. Mobilization.
E N D
The Home Front • WW2 impacted all aspects of US life: • FDR hoped US would be the great “arsenal of democracy” • Boost of wartime industry ended the Great Depression • War altered lives of women, Af-Ams, Jap-Ams, & Mex-Ams
Mobilization The power to create new gov’t agencies to censor the press to limit civil liberties & seize personal property • US gov grew to largest size ever • To win 2 wars • To meet civilian demands US gov spent $250 million/day 1941 - 1945 2x as much as all previous gov spending combined
Mobilization Office of War Information directed press, print, radio, & film propaganda Office of War Mobilization coordinated the draft, consumer prices, & the labor force • War Powers Act gave POTUS unprecedented power • Bureaucracies formed to: • Direct the economy • Create propaganda • Sell war bonds • Prevent enemy subversion Office of Strategic Services gathered enemy intelligence & conducted espionage
Propaganda: Fighting the Enemy on the Battlefield & on the Home Front
Hollywood Pitches In Jimmy Stewart goes off to war
The Wartime Economy • Most decisive factor for Allied victory: US industrial production • Heavy industry converted to war & directed by War Production Board • 15m US soldiers fought but 60m workers & farmers supplied them U.S. made 2x more goods than Germany & 5x more than Japan
Ford made one B-24 bomber every hour Ford’s Willow Run Factory
Henry Kaiser’s West Coast Shipyards The Allies won the Battle of the Atlantic, in part, because US produced ships faster than German U-boats could sink them Kaiser standardized battleship building & reduced the time it took to make a battleship from 355 days to 14 days
Regional Changes • War transformed Western US: • CA became major industrial center to support war effort in the Pacific • And Southern US: • 60 of 100 new military bases were built in the South • Textile factories & industrial jobs helped end sharecropping & tenant farming 9m workers moved to new factories & shipyards in South & West
Women • War presented new economic opportunities for women: • Dramatic rise in employment • Most new female workers were married, many middle-aged • Previously exclusively male fields • Temporarily redefined “woman’s sphere” from “just at home” “To hell with the life I have had. This war is too [serious], and it is too [important] to win it.”
Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service (WAVES) Women’s Army Air Corps Pilots Join the Women’s Army Corps (WACs)
Families • Uncertainties of war & economic affluence of 40s led to a dramatic rise in marriage • Influx of women into workforce led to demand for daycare centers & to increase in child delinquency • Public health improved – more families had access to doctors, dentists, & prescription drugs …and high divorce rates
African-Americans • 1m Af-Ams served in military but few saw combat • Workplace discrimination led A. Philip Randolph to pressure FDR to create Fair Employment Practices Comm • Great Migration continued to the North & West – made race relations a national issue Banned discrimination in defense industries & gov
Segregated units…again Tuskegee Airmen
Double V: Victory at Home & Abroad A. Philip Randolph threatened a “March on Washington” to protest war time discrimination Other groups, like the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), staged sit-ins in restaurants in major cities to protest discrimination
Mexican-Americans • Served in quasi-segregated military units, often in the most hazardous branches • Mexican-American workers found jobs in SW agriculture & west coast industry • Faced discrimination, especially during the Zoot Suit Riots
Zoot Suit Riots – LA • Fashion popular with 1940s LA Mex-Ams • Used lots of fabric • Strictly rationed
Zoot Suit Riots – LA • Zoot Suits effectively illegal • Underground tailors violating war effort • Seen as unpatriotic
Zoot Suit Riots – LA • GIs stationed in LA beat up men wearing zoot suits • Police arrested “zoot suiters” after being beaten
Japanese-Americans • After Pearl Harbor, many in US feared J-Ams were helping prepare for Japanese invasion in the West • Civil liberties restricted: • Issei had assets frozen • Used racial stereotypes (“Japs”) • 1942: FDR ordered 112,000 J-Ams moved to internment camps
Japanese- American Internment Camps Families were given one week to close their businesses & homes The all Japanese-American 442nd Division fought in Europe & received over 1,000 citations for bravery
Win-the-War Politics • 1944: FDR used war to strengthen leadership: • “Mr. New Deal” became “Mr. Win the War” • Opponent Thomas Dewey made communism & FDR’s health focus of the election • FDR switched VPs from liberal Henry Wallace to moderate Harry Truman to gain appeal