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Waging War in America. WWI at Home Mrs. Huston. Quote from President Wilson. “It is not an army that we must shape and train for war, it is a nation.”. Wartime Agencies. War Industries Board Reorganized industry to maximize wartime production Railroad Administration
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Waging War in America WWI at Home Mrs. Huston
Quote from President Wilson “It is not an army that we must shape and train for war, it is a nation.”
Wartime Agencies • War Industries Board • Reorganized industry to maximize wartime production • Railroad Administration • Modernized and operated the nation’s railroads • Food Administration • Increased agricultural production, supervised food distribution and farm labor
More Agencies … • National War Labor Board • Resolved labor-management disputes • Improved labor conditions • Recognized union rights as a means to promote production and efficiency • Committee on Public Information • Managed propaganda to build public support for the war effort
War Industries Board • Most important agency • Set industrial priorities • Coordinated military purchasing • Supervised business • Led by Bernard Baruch
Growth of Power • The WIB had unprecedented power • Set prices • Allocated scarce materials • Standardized products & procedures • Examples: number of color of typewriter ribbon available dropped from 150 to 5 • Aimed at business-government integration
The Labor Movement • In exchange for labor’s cooperation, the National War Labor Board guaranteed rights of unions to organize and bargain collectively • Membership in unions sharply increased
Accomplishments • Under the NWLB • Improved working conditions • Higher wages (connected to inflation) • Shorter hours 8 hour days (48 hour week)
Women & Minorities • Women urged to join the workforce “For every fighter, a woman worker.” • Took jobs formerly closed to them • Built airplanes • Produced guns and ammunition • Manufactured tents, etc.
Women, cont. • 100,000 women worked in munitions plants • 40,000 in steel industry • Caused openings in domestic, clerical, & industrial employment for black women as well
Black Women • Racial & gender segregation continued • Wartime improvements were temporary • Government efforts half-hearted
Reforms gained • Although workplace reforms were short-lived for women, the war did help them achieve women’s suffrage and prohibition
Changes for African Americans • Demand for industrial labor caused huge migration from rural South to Northern cities • Still encountered racial discrimination and violence • Some riots by whites in E. St. Louis
Financing the War • Two main sources of funding • Borrowed money • Raised taxes
Income Taxes • Begun in 1917 & 1918 • Graduated: increased on • Larger incomes • Corporate profits • Wealthy estates
Borrowing • 2/3 of the money raised this way • Most from banks & wealthy investors • Government also sold Liberty Bonds to public • Raised by celebrities • Billed as patriotic duty
Emotional Support • Loyalty • Fear • Patriotism • Obedience
Conquering Minds • Established propaganda agencies • Enacted legislation • Goals • Social control • Behavior regulation • Nativism
Committee on Public Information • Purpose was manipulation, not information • Used various media • Press releases • Advertisements • Cartoons • Canned editorials • Posters • Pamphlets • Poems
“Live Action” • CPI made newsreels & war movies • Speakers
Propaganda Themes • National Unity • The loathsome character of the enemy • The war as a grand crusade for liberty and democracy
Promoted fear, hatred & prejudice • Germans portrayed as brutal, even subhuman, rapists, murderers • Any dissent was unpatriotic, possibly treasonous • Disagreement was dangerous to national survival
Suppressing Disloyalty/Dissent • Tarnished the nation’s professed idealistic goals • Established unfortunate precedents for the future
Espionage Act • Heavy fines • Up to 20 years in prison • For “obstructing the war effort” • Used to crush dissent and criticism
Sedition Act of 1918 • Severe penalties for speaking or writing against • The draft • Bond sales • War production • Government personnel or policies
Congress rejected a proposed amendment stipulating that “nothing in this act shall be construed as limiting the liberty or impairing the right of any individual to publish or speak what is true, with good motives, and for justifiable ends.”
Other Measures • Postmaster banned anti-war newspapers & magazines from the mail • Imprisonment of “radicals” • Government use of private vigilantes
Business Abuses • Promoted their own interests • Hurt farmers, workers and reformers • Targeted labor organizations • Particularly the Industrial Workers of the World • Accused of sabotage, etc. • Government assisted • Ugly mood persisted after the war