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American Homefront WWII

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Title: American Homefront WWII


1
American Homefront WWII
  • War Posters, Minorities, and Japanese Internment

2
Homefront Themes
  • Arsenal of Democracy
  • Need to out produce enemies
  • Need for Speed

3
Recruitment
  • First Peacetime Draft

4
WPB War Production Board
US Home Front How Can You Do Your Part?
5
Conservation of Materials
Office of Price Administration
6
Rosie the Riveter
Women in Govt. jobs and Armed Forces
7
Rosie the Riveter
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vbU2tt1h53jM

8
How to pay for War?
Victory Bonds
Income Taxes taken from paychecks
9
Labor
A. Philip Randolph
- War Labor Board - Smith-Connally Anti-Strike Act
  • African Americans in War Industries
  • Fair Employment Practices Committee
  • (FEPC)

10
Smith-Connally (War Labor disputes Act)
  • 1943--The Act allowed the federal government to
    seize and operate industries threatened by or
    under strikes that would interfere with war
    production, and prohibited unions from making
    contributions in federal elections.

11
Fair Employment Practices Committee
  • Executive Order 8802 was signed by President
    Franklin D. Roosevelt on June 25, 1941, to
    prohibit racial discrimination in the national
    defense industry. It was the first federal
    action, though not a law, to promote equal
    opportunity and prohibit employment
    discrimination in the United States. The
    President's statement that accompanied the Order
    cited the war effort, saying that "the democratic
    way of life within the nation can be defended
    successfully only with the help and support of
    all groups," and cited reports of discrimination
  • There is evidence available that needed workers
    have been barred from industries engaged in
    defense production solely because of
    considerations of race, creed, color or national
    origin, to the detriment of workers' morale and
    of national unity

12
A. Philip Randolph
  • Action Randolph threatens to march on Washington
    in June, 1941.
  • Result FDR issued Executive Order 8802 (Fair
    Employment Act), barring discrimination in
    defense industries and federal bureaus.
    _______________________________________
  • Action After WWII, Randolph led a campaign in
    favor of racial equality in the military.
  • Result Truman issued executive order 9981 in
    July, 1948, banning segregation in the armed
    forces.

13
Minorities in Armed Service
Dorie Miller
Tuskegee Airmen
Nisei Soldiers
  • Navajo Codetalkers

14
Silence
15
loose lips sink ships
16
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17
Effects of the War on the Home front
  • End of the Great Depression
  • Increase in wagesgt Post-war prosperity
  • Conservationgt Post-war consumption
  • Govt. influence on eco. and debt
  • Civil Rights movement/ Opportunities (Women and
    minorities)
  • CIA search for Communists

18
Assessing Japanese Internment
  • Exec. Order 9066
  • Court Cases
  • Korematsu v. US
  • Endo Case
  • 1988 Settlement

19
Justification
  • Was justified by the Government in two ways
  • 1. The Government claimed that American citizens
    of Japanese ancestry were more loyal to Japan
    than to their own country.
  • 2. The Government claimed that because Japan had
    attacked the U.S. territory of Hawaii, those
    Americans of Japanese ancestry might have helped
    Japan.

20
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21
Non-citizen Italians and Germans (shown on this
map) were also relocated
22
  • The population of German citizens in the United
    States  not to mention American citizens of
    German birth  was far too large for a general
    policy of internment comparable to that used in
    the case of the Japanese in America.
  • Instead, German citizens were detained and
    evicted from coastal areas on an individual
    basis. The War Department considered mass
    expulsions from coastal areas for reasons of
    military security, but never executed such plans.

23
Camp Conditions
  • These camps were over crowded and provided poor
    living conditions.
  • The buildings were small framed buildings with no
    plumbing or cooking areas.
  • Coal was hard to find to keep them warm so they
    slept under many blankets.
  • entire families lived in one room cell
  • had to use communal areas for washing, laundry
    and eating
  • Food was very expensive (48 cents per internee).
  • Leadership positions were only offered to the
    Nisei (American-born Japanese) and not the older
    generations (Called the lssei), who were forced
    to watch their children be promoted while they
    themselves were demoted.

24
Fred Korematsu
  • Fred Korematsu was born and raised in Alameda
    County, California.
  • He was of Japanese ancestry but knew nothing when
    it came to the country of Japan.
  • In June 1941 he tried to enlist in the Navy but
    denied due to his poor health
  • Fred ended up working in a shipyard as a welder

25
Korematsu Case
  • May 9, 1942 all the Japanese people are ordered
    to leave the Pacific Coastal region.
  • Korematsu disobeyed because he believed that as a
    U.S citizen the evacuation order should not apply
    to him.
  • He was then arrested and charged with violating
    the order of commander of Military Area No. 1.
  • His claim was that military commanders had denied
    Japanese Americans their constitutional rights
  • After losing in the Court of Appeals, he appealed
    to the United States Supreme Court, challenging
    the constitutionality of the deportation center.
  • Court upheld the exclusion of Japanese Americans
    from the Pacific coastal region.
  • They said that the needs of national security
    justified the orders.
  • The ruling has never been revoked by law but in
    1988 congress offered payments of 20,000 as
    compensation

26
Korematsu
  • Korematsu v. United States, (1944), was a
    landmark United States Supreme Court case
    concerning the constitutionality of Executive
    Order 9066, which ordered Japanese Americans into
    internment camps during World War II regardless
    of citizenship.

27
Endo Case
  • Ex parte Endo, or Ex parte Mitsuye Endo, (1944)
    was a United States Supreme Court decision,
    handed down on December 18, 1944, the same day as
    their decision in Korematsu v. United States. In
    their decision, the Supreme Court ruled that,
    regardless of whether the United States
    Government had a right to exclude people of
    Japanese ancestry from the West Coast during
    World War II, they could not continue to detain a
    citizen that the government itself conceded was
    loyal to the United States. This decision helped
    lead to the re-opening of the West Coast for
    resettlement by Japanese-American citizens
    following their internment in camps across the
    United States during World War II.

28
  • In 1988, Congress passed and President Ronald
    Reagan signed legislation which apologized for
    the internment on behalf of the U.S. government.
    The legislation said that government actions were
    based on "race prejudice, war hysteria, and a
    failure of political leadership". The U.S.
    government eventually disbursed more than
    1.6 billion in reparations to Japanese Americans
    who had been interned and their heirs.

29
The Ugly Side of the Homefront
30
Life Magazine December 1941
  • http//www.english.illinois.edu/maps/poets/a_f/fos
    ter/lifemag.htm

Japanese
Chinese
31
Origins of Japanese Internment
32
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33
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34
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35
George Takei
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vyogXJl9H9z0

36
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37
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38
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39
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40
Zoot Suit Riots
41
Jewish Refugees
  • St. Louis
  • Reports of Discrimination
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