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Chapter 25: WWII Americans at Home Section 1: Mobilization.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 25: WWII Americans at Home Section 1: Mobilization."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 25: WWII Americans at Home Section 1: Mobilization

2 Mobilizing the Armed Forces Sept 1940- Congress passed the Selective Training & Service Act- required all males 21-36 to register for military service –Boosted defense spending from 2 to 10 billion

3 The GI War More than 16 million served as soldiers, sailors, & aviators –Called GI’s- government issued

4 Diversity in the Armed Forces 300,000 Mexican Americans 25,000 Native Americans –Navajos developed a secret code, based on their language “Code talkers” provided important, secure communication links

5 1 million African Americans –First limited to supporting roles –Late 1942- given the opportunity to fight –Fought in separate units Tuskegee Airmen- 1 st African American flying unit in the US –Late 1944- accepted into white combat units

6 Women in the Military 350,000 volunteered –All areas except combat Clerks, typists, airfield control tower operators, mechanics, photographers, & drivers

7 Preparing the Economy for War Allied production of goods were way down

8 War Production Jan. 1942- government set up the War Productions Board (WPB) to set up industries to produce wartime goods –Halted the production of many consumer goods

9 Armed forces decided which company would receive contracts to manufacture military hardware May 1943- FDR appointed James Byrnes to head the Office of War Mobilization –Super agency in the centralization of resources

10 Liberty ships- large, sturdy merchant ships that carried supplies or troops Government established the “cost plus” system for military contracts to motivate businesses & guarantee profits

11 Military paid development & production costs & added a percentage of costs as profits for the manufacturer 1944- the US production levels doubled all of the Axis nations

12 The Wartime Work Force Unemployment virtually vanished –Earnings went up more than 50% between 1940-1945 Union membership rose –1940-41 increased by 1.5 million

13 Two weeks after Pearl Harbor, labor & business representatives agreed to refrain from strikes & “lockouts” (employers keep employees out of the workplace to avoid meeting their demands) –Cost of living went up & strikes were hard to avoid

14 Most serious occurred in the coal industry –United Mine Workers Union called four strikes in 1943 –Congress passed the Smith- Connally Act limiting future strike activity

15 Financing the War Spending increased from 8.9 billion in 1935 to 95.2 in 1945 –GNP more than doubled –Between 1941 & 1945 government spent $321 billion on the war Higher taxes paid for 41%

16 Government borrowed the rest from banks, private investors, & the public –War bonds brought in $196 billion Deficit spending helped the US field a well equipped army & navy, bring prosperity to workers & pull the US out of the Depression –Boosted the national debt from 43 t0 259 billion

17 Daily Life on the Home Front 30 million moved during the war –Birthrate up- population grew by 7.5 million from 1940-1945

18 Shortages & Controls People finally had extra money, but rationing led to few consumer goods Metal went to make guns, rubber to make army truck tires, nylon to make parachutes

19 Food shortages –US got cut off from receiving sugar, tropical fruits & coffee April 1941 Office of Price Administration (OPA) was established –Job was to control inflation by limiting prices & rents

20 Problems –Company would cut back of goods that weren’t profitable, thus creating shortages –People found ways to get around the limits

21 Rationing –Goal was a fair distribution of scarce items –1943 OPA assigned point values to sugar, coffee, meat, butter, canned fruit, & shoes –Issued ration coupons –Gas was strictly rationed on the basis of needed

22 Popular Culture People bought & read more books & magazines Went to baseball games 60% went to the movies every week

23 Enlisting Public Support FDR established the Office of War Information (June 1942) to work with magazine publishers, ad agencies, & radio stations –Hired writers & artists to create posters & ads that stirred American patriotic feelings

24 Victory Gardens- add to home food supply –By 1943- produced 1/3 of our vegetables


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