1 / 19

Chapter 11 Sec. 2

Chapter 11 Sec. 2. The Home Front. Review. “Europe First” Strategy Battle of Stalingrad Invasion of North Africa Allied Bombing strategies Battle of Midway. So………. How did the war Change America at home?. People and Terms. Vocabulary Terms. Definitions. A. Phillip Randolph

dustin
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 11 Sec. 2

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. Chapter 11 Sec. 2 The Home Front

  2. Review • “Europe First” Strategy • Battle of Stalingrad • Invasion of North Africa • Allied Bombing strategies • Battle of Midway

  3. So………. • How did the war Change America at home?

  4. People and Terms Vocabulary Terms Definitions • A. Phillip Randolph • Executive Order 8802 • Bracero program • Internment

  5. People and Terms cont. Vocabulary Terms Definitions • Korematsu v. United States • 442nd Regimental Combat Team • Rationing • OWI • Executive Order 9066

  6. New Economic Opportunities • American industry converted from peace time production to war time production • TO meet wartime production quotas Governemnt and industries urged women to “do their part” • Women made up 1/3 of the wartime workforce

  7. Women Work for Victory • Two new fields of work • Heavy industry • Secretarial and clerical • ¾ of women working in war industries were married • 60% were older than 35 years of age • Children's lives • Government spent $50 million building day care centers for children

  8. African Americans Demand Fair Employment • Out of 100,00 Americans working in the aircraft industry, on 240 were African Americans • A. Phillip Randolph • “We loyal Negro Americans citizens demand the right to work and fight for our country.” • Executive Order 8802 • Measure that assured fair hiring practices in any job funded with government money • Established the Fair Employment Practices Committee to enforce these requirements

  9. Workers on the Move • Wartime needs encouraged migration as people moved in search of work • South • lost residents in rural areas but gained 1 million people as a whole • North • Older industrial cities boomed

  10. The Population Starts to Shift • South and Southwest • Became a growing cultural, social, economic, and political force • Bracero program • Bringing laborers from Mexico to work on American farms • Several hundred thousand “braceros” migrated to the U.S. during the war

  11. Migration Triggers Conflict • Summer 1943 Detroit Michigan • Conflict over the construction of housing for black workers drawn north to defense plants • 100,00 whites and blacks broke into scattered fights at a city park • 34 people killed • June 1943 Los Angeles • “Zoot Suit Riots” • Off-duty sailors attacked Mexican “zooters”

  12. A Challenge to Civil Liberties • Federal Government began creating policies toward immigrants and aliens from the Axis nations • All resident “enemy aliens” were required the register with the government

  13. Aliens Face Restrictions • German, Italian, and Japanese forced to leave the West Coast temporarily in winter 1942 • Executive Order 9066 • Designated certain areas as war zones from which anyone might be removed for any reason • Germans and Italians taken off “threat” list • Japanese face harsher treatment because: • Racism, the smaller number of Japanese Americans, their lack of political influence, their isolation from other Americans

  14. Japanese Americans Are Interned • Internment • Temporarily imprisonment of members of a specific group • “The resettlement center is actually a jail-armed guards in towers with spotlights and deadly tommy guns, fifteen feet of barbed-wire fences, everyone confined to quarters of nine… What really hurts [is being called] ‘Japs.’ ‘Japs’ are the guys we are fighting.”

  15. Japanese Americans Are Interned cont. • Korematsu v. United States • 1944 • Supreme court upheld the governments wartime internment policy • 422nd Regimental Combat Team • Fought in the Italian campaign and became the most decorated military in American History • 422nd helped counter the notion that Japanese Americans were not loyal citizens

  16. Supporting the War Effort • War cost = $330 billion • National debt increased from $42 billion to $269 billion in six years • How did the government raise funds • 5% tax on all working Americans • War bonds

  17. The Government Manages the Economy • Office of Price Administration • Created by FDR • Had authority to control wages and set maximum prices • Rationing • Limiting the amount f certain goods that civilians can buy • Black market • An illegal underground network for the sale of restricted goods

  18. Media Boosts Morale • Office of War Information (OWI) • Worked closely wit the media to encourage support of the war effort • Tried to spotlight common needs • Minimize racial and economic divisions • Downplay problem of poverty and crime • Radio, print, and film industries reminded Americans that they were in a struggle between dictatorship and democracy

  19. Now In Class……. • Answer the questions as well as fill out the chart attached with this packet

More Related