WWI on the American Home Front

20
WWI Chapter 12.4 Americans on the Home Front

description

How were Americans working at home in order to support the war effort?

Transcript of WWI on the American Home Front

Page 1: WWI on the American Home Front

WWI Chapter 12.4Americans on the Home Front

Page 2: WWI on the American Home Front

• Notes (#23)==Answer the 3 Qs on the top of p. 432

• What steps did the government take to finance the war & manage the economy?

• How did the government enforce loyalty to the war effort?

• How did the war change the lives of Americans on the home front?

• *Lists or bullet points are fine*

Page 3: WWI on the American Home Front

President Wilson

• “There are no armies…; there are entire nations armed.”

Page 4: WWI on the American Home Front

Financing the War

• Liberty Bonds • Redeemed for original value + interest• Boy and Girl Scouts sold them to public• “Every Scout to Save a Soldier”

• 75,000 “Four-Minute Men”• Artists and actors also helped sell bonds• Paid for ¼ of U.S. war costs; $20 billion+• “Buy Bonds Till It Hurts”• “The Soldier Gives—You Must Lend”

Page 5: WWI on the American Home Front
Page 6: WWI on the American Home Front
Page 7: WWI on the American Home Front

Managing the Economy

• Industry switched from commercial to war goods• “Dollar-a-year” men• Business men moved to Washington, DC to head up new gov’t

agencies

• War Industries Board – Bernard Baruch• Handed out raw materials, told what and how much to

produce, and how much to sell them for (fixed prices)

Page 8: WWI on the American Home Front

Managing the Economy

• National War Labor Board, led by Taft (former President)• Unions gain some rights

• Un-patriotic to protest/strike/miss work• Samuel Gompers promised to limit strikes/labor unrest

Page 9: WWI on the American Home Front

Managing the War

• Lever Food and Fuel Control Act – August, 1917• President manages production and distribution of food and

fuels necessary for war effort• Increased farm output, price controls on food, and rationing –

Herbert Hoover (future President)• “Food will win the war”• “Gospel of the Clean Plate,” see quote on p. 434• Daylight Savings Time – more sunlight during the day for

work and less fuel used• Increased production during summer/fall• Still have this today, should we?

Page 10: WWI on the American Home Front

• Herbert Hoover• Head of the Food

Administration during WWI

• President from 1929 to 1933

Page 11: WWI on the American Home Front
Page 12: WWI on the American Home Front
Page 13: WWI on the American Home Front
Page 14: WWI on the American Home Front

Enforcing Loyalty

• Government censorship on press and banning of publications from mail

• Committee on Public Information• George Creel (former muckraker)• Rally support for war• Films, pamphlets, posters

Page 15: WWI on the American Home Front
Page 16: WWI on the American Home Front

Enforcing Loyalty

• Fear of spies/espionage• Might undermine the war efforts• National Security League preached “100% Americanism”• Non-profit, non-partisan group• Nativists

• Fear of Foreigners• Literacy tests for immigrants• German hate• “Salisbury steak” & “police dogs”

• Espionage and Sedition Acts (1917 & 1918)• Broke 1st amendment rights• Over 1000 convictions, including Eugene Debs

Page 17: WWI on the American Home Front

Enforcing Loyalty

• Gov’t esp. cracked down on “radicals”• Socialists, communists, anarchists• The IWW or “Wobblies”

• Early stages of the “Red Scare”• * more on this later*

Page 18: WWI on the American Home Front
Page 19: WWI on the American Home Front

Changing People’s Lives

• After the War• Stalled flow of immigrants from Europe• Business needed workers – African Americans & Mexican

Americans & Women• 400K women in industrial work during WWI

• African American “Great Migration” to North during war• 500K moved from South (mostly rural) to North (mostly

urban)

Page 20: WWI on the American Home Front

• Notes (#23)==Answer the 3 Qs on the top of p. 432

• What steps did the government take to finance the war & manage the economy?

• How did the government enforce loyalty to the war effort?

• How did the war change the lives of Americans on the home front?

• *Lists or bullet points are fine*