WORLD WAR TWO: The HOME FRONT
Copyright © 2005-6, Henry J. Sage
Reflections
The author grew up near New York City during World War II and recalls quite vividly many of the things that were taken for granted as part of the war situation. For example, people on the East Coast were concerned about the possibility, however remote, that we might be attacked from the air by Germany. A submarine was spotted off the coast of Long Island, and although the Germans did not have aircraft carriers, the possibility of an air raid was taken seriously.
Thus I recall regular air raid drills in our neighborhood. Responsible citizens would be designated air raid wardens, and when the sirens went off at the village firehouse, people were obliged to either turn off all their lights or completely pull down opaque shades that would prevent light from escaping. The warden, wearing a protective helmet, would patrol the neighborhood on foot with a flashlight (all streetlights were turned off) and politely correct all those who perhaps allowed a small beam of light to escape from a window. In our block during warm weather the neighbors would sit on their porches smoking cigarettes and listening to the latest news on the radio.(Everybody smoked, and television had not yet arrived.)
Automobiles were allowed to drive during air raids, but the top halves of all automobile headlights had to be painted black. And there were, in fact, very few automobiles on the road in those days. With gasoline and rubber tires being strictly rationed, people drove as little as possible. Many good citizens simply put their automobiles up on blocks for the duration of the war and did not drive them again until it was over. I recall driving with my uncle, who would turn his engine off and coast every time he was moving downhill in order to save a few drops of gasoline.
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Meat, butter, sugar and certain other commodities were rationed because the fat content was needed to make explosives or provide for other war-related needs. Recycling was big during World War II, a phenomenon that disappeared for a few decades until environmental issues came to the fore. But we saved newspapers, tin cans and all sorts of scrap metal—collections were held regularly to gather in these vital materials. Ration books were issued to families and stamps were required in order to purchase rationed commodities. people were encouraged to economize by all possible means—nothing was to be wasted.
Although the United States was fighting against what it saw as totalitarian regimes, and the level of control which the government tried to exercise over the American people was nevertheless astounding. The War Department had a motion picture section that was designed to influence what film makers could put on the screen that might affect the war effort. In those pre-television days people got their visual news from newsreels in movie theaters preceding the main attraction. At the direction of the government, newsreels were not to show any pictures of American battlefield casualties until late in 1943. If all that can be seen as thought control, the American people generally understood that it was for a good cause.
Huge rallies were held in theaters and parks for the sale of war bonds. Patriotic announcements in movie theaters preceded most films, asking people not to discuss troop movements, to buy war bonds, and the support their fathers, sons and husbands who were serving overseas. It was even considered unpatriotic for a woman to end a romantic relationship with a soldier overseas lest it damage his morale. A popular song written with servicemen in mind proclaimed that their women were being “good as gold” because all the men back home were “either too young or too old.” As schoolchildren we purchased savings stamps with our quarters and when we had $18.75 pasted into our books, we took them to the bank or post office and turned them in for a $25 war bond.
Cartoons of Hitler, Tojo and Mussolini were commonly seen alongside patriotic posters proclaiming that “Uncle Sam wants you!” It was a total war, and the entire population was involved. Because of the huge demand for workers in automobile, steel and other plants that were vital to the war effort, workers in those industries were exempt from the draft. For a time the government contemplated in drafting manned to go to work in factories, but the idea was abandoned because it might be a violation of civil rights, a rather curious decision when one considers that there was no hesitation to draft a man into the armed forces were they might be killed in combat.
American Industry at War
Historians have pointed out that World War II was won not only on the battlefields of North Africa, Europe, the Pacific Islands and Asia, but that it was also won in Pittsburgh, Birmingham, St. Louis, on the West Coast and in all the other areas where the war industries were congregated. Beginning in the spring of 1942, factories ran 24 hours a day, six or seven days a week. Unemployment during the war dropped to slightly over 1% of the working age population. The government spent twice as much money 1941-1945 as in all of American history to that point put together, and by 1944 almost 90% of government spending went to the war cause.
The quantity of goods and the speed with which they were produced astonished observers. The aircraft industry produced 324,750 planes during the war, with ever increasing efficiency. In 1941, production of a B-17 required 55,000 individual work hours. By 1944, the figure was down to 19,000 hours. The Kaiser shipbuilding company turned out ships with amazing speed, and in one exercise just to prove a point, they actually constructed a vessel from the keel up in 4 days, 15 hours and 30 minutes. The ship, the S.S. ROBERT E PEARY, sailed seven days after the keel was laid.
Although there were those who profiteered from those sorts of things, and although a black market existed (a grocer in our village was happy to provide an extra ration of meat in exchange for a few extra dollars), most Americans simply accepted things as they were. Since silk and nylon had disappeared from stores—they were going into parachutes—women put makeup on their legs and traced with an eyebrow pencil what was meant to look like a seam on the back of their “stockings.”
Such was the devotion of the American people toward the war cause that one phrase frequently uttered in when some thoughtless person was observed doing something not in the best interest of the country was: “Don't you know there's a war on?!” It was everybody's war, as one can readily say that if a family existed that wasn't touched in some way or other by the enormous effort put forth to win World War II, that family was probably very isolated from the rest of American society.
Reflections on Memorial Day in my Home Town.
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