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A PEOPLE and A NATION EIGHTH EDITION Norton • Katzman • Blight • Chudacoff • Paterson • Tuttle • Escott • Bailey • Logevall Chapter 27: The Second World War at Home and Abroad, 1941–1945 Ch. 27: WWII at Home and Abroad, 1941–1945 • Turning point for USA & its people • Change status of USA in world • Allied cooperation tenuous throughout war • Home front change with migration • New race/gender/economic opportunities • US Gov’t mobilize industry, labor, science, & technology for war Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 2 I. A Nation Unprepared • • • • • • Despite pre-war rearmament, USA not ready War initially not go well for Allies Hitler dominate Europe by late 1941 Japan expand rapidly at start of Pacific war Capture Southeast Asia, incl. Philippines Doolittle raid convince Japan to seek Midway • Key US advantage = MAGIC intercepts • Midway (June 1942) turn tide of Pacific war Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 3 II. Europe First Strategy • FDR pursue Europe First strategy • If Hitler win Europe, could directly threaten USA • Tensions among 3 major allies = another problem • Fear separate peace by USSR • Stalin want second front in France ASAP • Relieve German pressure on USSR • Churchill oppose second front Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 4 III. Second Front Controversy • • • • • • • Churchill fear high causalities of invasion Want operations to protect British empire FDR initially side with Churchill Agree to invasion of N. Africa (1942) Stalingrad (1942–43) = turning point USSR stop Hitler’s army Begin German retreat from USSR Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 5 IV. The Production Front: Business • FDR see mass production as key US advantage • War Production Board (1942) oversee conversion to wartime economy • WPB guarantee profits in “cost + fixedfee” contracts as well as generous tax deductions • Corporate profits double, 1939-1943 • Big business grow bigger as ⅔ of all WPB contracts go to 100 largest businesses Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 6 V. Universities & War; Opportunities for Workers • Big US Gov’t grants mobilize higher ed for war • $117 million to MIT; Manhattan Project = $2 billion • Universities join new military-industrial complex • Massive labor shortage • Increase production while withdraw 16 million • New jobs for women, African Americans, Mexican Americans, & poor whites from South • Business resist change (hiring blacks, women) Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 7 VI.Opportunities for African Americans & Mexicans • Blacks resist discrimination w/ protest • Randolph & proposed March on DC, 1941 • FDR issue order to ban discrimination in hiring for defense industries & US Gov’t • New defense jobs spur 1.5 million blacks to migrate from South to cities in North & West • US Gov’t encourage Mexican immigration • Gain jobs, but like blacks, Mexicans suffer discrimination & segregation Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 8 VII. Women at Work • Over 6 million women enter workforce • Unlike 1930s, women workers receive praise • Many women (both white & black) enter traditionally male jobs (riveters, welders) • Some businesses offer workers healthcare • US Gov’t fund childcare centers Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 9 VIII. Organized Labor; Success on Production Front • Unions work with US Gov’t via no strike pledge • National War Labor Board (NWLB) mediate union/management conflicts • Union membership almost double • Strikes occur when NWLB limit raises • US Gov’t pass War Labor Disputes Act (1943) • Mass production achieve huge increase in key war products (planes, ships, etc.) Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 10 IX. Life on the Homefront • Mobilization end Depression, spur prosperity • Americans volunteer help (victory gardens) • Office of Price Administration (OPA) institute rationing of key goods (food, gas) • To ensure support, Office of War Information (1942) sell war at home • Near unanimous support for war; popular culture see it as fight for US way of life Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 11 X. Wartime Prosperity • • • • • • • Employment, wages, & savings skyrocket OPA set prices to control inflation US Gov’t finance war with deficits US debt balloon ($49 billion to $259 billion) Map 27.2: 15 million people move during war Strain resources of burgeoning cities/towns Some in North dislike poor whites from South Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 12 XI. Racial Conflicts • Competition (jobs/housing) increase tension • Mobs of whites attack African Americans • 250 race riots (1943); worse one in Detroit • Mexicans suffer LA zoot suit riots (1943) Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 13 XII. Families in Wartime • 3 million families suffer wartime separation • Marriage & birth rates soar (“goodbye babies”) • More divorces too as hasty marriages unable to survive strains of war • Working mothers suffer criticism that they neglect children (“victory girls”) • Some males vets have trouble accepting new independence in their wives Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 14 XIII. The Limits of American Ideals • Tension between ideals and wartime practices • US Gov’t use censorship & some propaganda de-humanize enemy, but less then WWI • US Gov’t intern 14,426 Europeans on spy fears • Intern 112,000 Japanese Americans (most US citizens) as “enemy race” • None ever charged with treason; some enlist in military; internees lose homes/businesses Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 15 XIV. Segregation at Home and in Military • NAACP grow & advocate “Double V” • Focus on parallels (Axis racism with Jim Crow) • CORE (1942) begin nonviolent direct actions • 887,000 black men & women serve in war • Serve in segregated, usually service, units • Red Cross segregate blood • Military resist integration Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 16 XIV. Segregation at Home and in Military (cont.) • Navy disregard safety of black sailors, CA, ‘44 • Black soldiers suffer violence by white soldiers & civilians • Black combat units perform well (pilots) • WWII = turning point for civil rights Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 17 XV. America and the Holocaust • Most tragic failure to live up to US ideals • Hitler murder 11 million Jews, “undesirables” • Allies not attack Nazi death camps from air • Not till 1944 does USA help save 200,000 Jews Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 18 XVI. Life in the Military • Over 15 million men (draftees = 10 million) • War broaden horizons; vets make contact with different races, ethnic groups, regions • 350,000 women volunteer as clerks/nurses • Poor whites compose most combat units • Combat = carnage from high tech weapons • 300,000 combat deaths; 1 million wounded Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 19 XVII. War in Europe • • • • • USA & England continue to delay 2nd Front Strain relations between Allies At Tehran (1943) FDR overrule Churchill Set cross-channel invasion for 1944 D-Day (June ‘44) = largest amphibious landing • USA/ England move in from west as USSR invade Germany from east (Map 27.3) • USA/ England win Battle of Bulge (1944–45) Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 20 XVIII. The Yalta Conference (Feb. 1945) • England want to preserve empire • USSR want reparations to help rebuild • Also want Poland as buffer against Germany • Install pro-USSR government in Poland • USA want to avoid errors of WWI peace • Want to advance self-determination & US power • FDR want 4 Policemen to guide world Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 21 XVIII. The Yalta Conference (cont.) • • • • Military positions shape settlement USSR dominate E. Europe, esp. Poland Each of the Big 3 compromise Set up new UN; strong Security Council (4 Policemen) & weak General Assembly • Stalin agree to enter war against Japan • Also allow France a German/Berlin zone • Sign treaty with pro-US Jiang Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 22 XIX. Harry Truman • FDR pick inexperienced Truman as VP in 1944 • Germany surrender May 1945 • After death of FDR (April) & defeat of Hitler, less cooperation between Allies • Each of Big 3 jockey for influence • HST less patient with USSR at Potsdam (July) • With atomic bomb, USA has less need of USSR Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 23 XX. War in the Pacific • USA fight in carrier battles & difficult “island-hop” invasions against Japan • USA take Solomon, Gilbert, Marshall, Mariana islands and retake Philippines (1942–44) • USA attack Japanese shipping to disrupt flow of vital war materials/supplies • At Iwo Jima (Feb/Mar 1945) both sides suffer huge losses; same at Okinawa (April/June) Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 24 XXI. Bombing of Japan • Fire bomb of Tokyo (May 1945) kill 100,000 • Bombing in first ½ of ’45 kill almost 1 million • Japanese leaders reject unconditional surrender (especially on Emperor) • Extensive bombing during WWII = context to understand US decision to use atomic bombs • Bombing of civilians widespread in WWII • 225,000 die at Dresden, Feb. 1945 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 25 XXII. The Atomic Bombs (August 6 and 9, 1945) • With massive blast, fires, & radiation, 130,000 die at Hiroshima; 60,000 at Nagasaki • Primary goal of Manhattan Project = end war ASAP & save US lives • Truman & others want to avoid invasion of Japan • Reject peace feelers as unlikely to make Japan surrender fully Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 26 XXII. The Atomic Bombs (cont.) • Anger at Japanese “beasts” (Pearl Harbor, Bataan March) affect Truman/others • US leaders also assume monopoly on ABomb will benefit postwar USA • Might deter postwar aggression • Might encourage USSR concessions (E. Europe) • Might end Pacific War before USSR entry Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 27 XXIII. Effect of WWII • • • • 55 million soldiers & civilians die in WWII USSR lose 21 million USA escape war’s devastation Emerge as dominate economic/military power in world • WWII change USA at home & abroad Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 28 Summary: Discuss Links to the World & Legacy • War brides as new link between USA & world? • 60,000 US men marry foreign women • Most adjust to USA, but some face racism • Fears of nuclear proliferation as a legacy of WWII? • Why do some skeptics see “hypocrisy” in Non-Proliferation Treaty? • Current “nightmare scenario” on nuclear use? Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 27 | 29