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The Home Front. How American citizens waged war at home and supported their loved ones abroad. Rationing. Equal distribution of available resources or using sparingly. How it worked: B ased on number of people in family S pecific things, specific duration Price ceilings
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The Home Front How American citizens waged war at home and supported their loved ones abroad.
Rationing • Equal distribution of available resources or using sparingly. • How it worked: • Based on number of people in family • Specific things, specific duration • Price ceilings • Maximum price set by government • Ration stamp AND money • What was rationed: • Sugar (1st) • Coffee • Meat • Butter • Tires • Gas • Nylons • Make-up • Clothing
Victory Gardens • 20 million+ planted • 9-10 million tons • 50% of total production • People stopped growing these gardens at wars end • Canning/other forms of preservation Civic Duties • V-mail • Paper was in short supply • Long time, heavy • Only source of contact • VERY important • So…. • Go to Post Office get special card • Write and return • Photographed • Film sent overseas • Lighter! • The pictures were printed and mailed • Families with men in the War put stars in their windows representing the number serving. • Blue for active • Gold for lost in action
Civic Duties Continued… • Conservation and Recycling • Metal (car bumpers to bottle caps to lipstick cases) • Steel and aluminum • Collected in “Scrap Drives” – often by young boys • Paper • Gas/Oil • Rubber and Tin • Cooking fats • Silk and Nylon
War Bonds • Defense Bonds first • War Bonds after Pearl Harbor • $25 • Stamps forsmaller amounts • collected • Children and Adults • $25 after 10 years = $25.73 • Sold everywhere • In towns – Girl and Boy Scouts • By celebrities and sports leagues • Exhibition games, selling kisses, radio-thons • Total $185.7 BILLION • Over ½ population buys them • Helps fund the War Effort and promote Saving!
Women & Minorities in Workplace • Industry increasing, unemployment decreasing • Manpower surplus, Severe shortage in manpower • Men to War – Jobs replaced • Private Employers/Government encouraged women/minorities to work • 750,000 African Americas migrated to N. and W. industrial cities • 1940:12 million women (1/4) in workforce • War End: 18 million (1/3) in workforce • Where did they work? • Riveters and Welders • Weapons testers • Volunteer Firefighters • Factory workers • Seamstresses making military clothing • Clerical positions • 3 million in the War industry – remainder in more typical jobs.
Propaganda • War posters and Video Newsreels • Office of War Information (OWI) • Aimed at all aspects of American society • Women, Children, Minorities • Promoted Democracy, War Aims, Ideals • Bring American People together • Support War • Helped by new technology and media
Japanese Internment • FDR Executive Order 9066 • Authorizing mass incarceration • Around 130,000 Japanese-Americans interned • 2/3rds are American citizens, ½ are children • Germans and Italians Americans too • Forced to either leave behind or sell for virtually nothing all of their possessions, homes, and businesses/farms • President Reagan issues Reparations • $20,000 to surviving detainees • President Bush, Sr. issues an apology
Organization & Volunteerism • Civil Defense • Air raid wardens • Fire and Police Auxiliaries • Black-out monitors • Organized War Bond sales • Collection drives for scrap metal and other products • Rolled bandages, knit socks, etc. • Red Cross • Victory Corps • Volunteer Ambulance drivers
Pop- Culture • Tattoos • Common on servicemen • Pin-ups • Images sent to soldiers • Hollywood starlets and “hometown” girls • Movies and Radio • ¾ Newsreels showed military hostilities/war related info • FDR fireside chats continue thru WWII • Heavy censorship • At Movies: • 2 feature films • Serial (like TV) • Previews • Cartoons • Newsreels
Fun Facts!!! • Copper and Nickel get removed from money!!! • Women started playing in major league sports • Girls’s Professional Baseball League • (Movie: A League of their Own) • Celebrities and Sports Teams would put on exhibitions to help sell war bonds! • Clark Cable and Humphrey Bogart, both famous Hollywood actors, join the military and go to War. • Superman did not join the War, because they were afraid it would make the War look too easy. • Captain America – 1944 – In red and white tights to do battle with the Nazi’s! • Wonder Woman too! • USO organized many functions for soldiers • Dances, coffee and donut socials, and shows • My Grandmother and Grandfather met at one of the dances!