1 / 13

Life on the Home Front

Life on the Home Front. Patriotism Inspires E xceptional A ctions. War Bonds – citizens bought them to help pay for the war (people gave $ to the gov’t and 10 years later, could get more back) Volunteerism – willingness of Americans to get involved. Paying for the War. Rationing

amelia
Télécharger la présentation

Life on the Home Front

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Life on the Home Front Patriotism Inspires Exceptional Actions

  2. War Bonds – citizens bought them to help pay for the war (people gave $ to the gov’t and 10 years later, could get more back) • Volunteerism – willingness of Americans to get involved Paying for the War

  3. Rationing • Government limited food/clothing/gas so there would be enough to supply the military • Stamps were issued based on family size • Victory Gardens • People grew and canned their own gardens to provide more food Rationing & Victory Gardens

  4. Created by the President • Produced – Pro-Allie, Anti-Axis propaganda • Radio Programs & Newsreels • Required all movies to contribute to the war effort • Tried to stir up distrust of German, Italian, and Japanese leaders • Was this constitutional? Office of War Information

  5. GI – Means “Government Issue” – was stamped on military supplies • Many willingly joined the service, especially after Pearl Harbor • Despite training, few were really ready for combat (emotionally) GI’s

  6. After Pearl Harbor, many questioned the loyalty of Japanese Americans • Roosevelt declared non-US citizen German, Italian, & Japanese to be “enemy allies” • Many German & Italian aliens & sent them to Internment Camps in the central US • Executive Order 9066-People of Japanese ancestry on the West Coast were evacuated to internment camps (both citizens and not) • Korematsuvs United States – Japanese American that sued the US about the constitutionality of interning citizens – the court found against him Japanese Americans

  7. Camp in Amache, Colorado Gathering in Puyallup, WA

  8. Women stepped in to jobs left by the men at war • Many did manufacturing jobs • “Rosie the Riveter” was term given to women in factories • WACS (Women’s Army Corps) – attended basic training and most took clerical jobs in the military Women in the Workforce

  9. Tuskegee Airmen • 1st black combat unit • Fighter Pilot unit • Didn’t lose a single bomber assigned to them • Double V • Fought for Victory in the War • Fought for Victory against segregation at home • Employment • Like women, African Americans filled empty jobs left by soldiers African Americans

  10. Native Americans enlisted for military service at higher proportions than any other minority group. • Many men and women left the reservation for the first time to work in defense industries. • Navajo Code Talkers – US needed an code the Japanese couldn’t decipher. Navajo is unwritten and very complex. Native Americans

  11. Many served in the military • Faced continued segregation/discrimination issues • Agricultural Industries recruited men from Mexico to fill jobs left by those in the military Mexican Americans

  12. Faced discrimination at home • Wanted the US to do more about condition of Jews in Europe Jewish Americans

More Related