5 million volunteers5 million volunteers selective service act added 5 million moreselective service...
TRANSCRIPT
• 5 million volunteers
• Selective Service Act added 5 million more
• G.I. – “Government Issue” - first applied to uniforms, weapons, equipment; to the soldiers
Less pay, rank and benefits than men
Women’s Auxiliary Army Corps (WAAC)
250,000 served
WAVE Radio Operator
John Falter
Women's Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron (WAFs)
Los Angeles – 1/10th of city’s population but suffered 1/5th of city’s casualties
Post war, many veterans used the G.I. Bill to earn a college education.
• Segregated units: mostly non-combat roles
• Just carve on my tombstone, ‘Here lies a black man killed fighting a yellow man for the protection of a white man.’”
• More than a million served
Lt. Gen. George S. Patton, U.S. Third Army commander, pins the Silver Star on Private Ernest A. Jenkins of New York City for his conspicuous gallantry in the liberation of Chateaudun, France. October 13,
33,000 in uniform
13,000 joined; one of every five living hereServed as interpreters throughout the war.
Radio Intercept Section, 6th AAF Radio Squadron Mobile 10th AAF, CBI Theater, September 1944.L-R: Teiho Chena, Ted Tdukiyama, Tom Goto, and Mark Akisada
Some spies were discovered.
• 25,000
• Opportunity to leave reservation and meet non-Indians“We would not
need the Selective Service Act if all volunteered like
the Indians.”•Code talkers
Women 6 out of 18 million workers Earned 60% of a man’s salary 2 million minorities
Rosie is provided by Curtis Publishing. Permission Requested.
- mostly menial jobsRoosevelt’s executive order – “To provide for the full and equitable participation of all workers without racial discrimination.”
African-Americans
Pesticides (DDT) – insects and liceAs a pesticide, DDT was first used during WWII. It was so effective as an insect killer that some called it the "atomic bomb" of pesticides.
After WWII, the U.S. realized that DDT could also be used on farms to control some common agricultural pests.
Atomic bomb – Manhattan Project
Developed by American scientists, the first atomic bomb was detonated at the Trinity test site near Alamogordo, New Mexico, on
July 16, 1945. The test convinced the United States government that such weapons were
viable in warfare.
Penicillin
A magazine ad for penicillin during WWII
The technique to produce large
amounts of penicillin was
perfected by an American drug company. This
technique allowed the Allies to
produce enough penicillin to aide throughout the
war.
d. Blood bank
In 1938, Dr. Charles Drew, a leading authority on mass transfusion and blood processing methods, set up a blood plasma system.In September 1945, the American Red Cross had collected over 13 million units of blood and converted nearly all of it into plasma.
An American medic administers plasma to a wounded soldier. NARA
a. Propaganda films – Frank Capra’s “Why We Fight” series
USO shows
Bob Hope and his USO group
in Guadalcanal.
Celebrities – 1 Jimmy Stewart and Stan Musial held up their careers to serve John Wayne booed by Marines on a USO tour for not serving
Office of Price Administration (OPA)1. Froze prices, rents and wages to curb inflation2. Rationing – foods such as meat, sugar (needed for explosives), butter, cheese, coffee, and vegetables
Rationing fuel and materials vital to the war such as nylon, gas, oil, metals, rubber and plastic
C. War Productions Board (WPB)
Decided what companies would convert and allocated raw materials Organization of scrap drives – iron, tin cans, paper, rags, cooking fat
National War Labor Board (NWLB)1. Limited wages2. Workers could not change unions
Department of the Treasury War bonds
Japanese Internment Camps