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Chapter 17 Section 4

1) During WWII, many Americans migrated within the US for new work opportunities in defense industry towns, including over 1 million to California. African Americans also migrated northward in large numbers to escape racism and seek jobs. 2) The war economy provided jobs and higher wages, helping the middle class expand. The GI Bill assisted veterans with education, housing, and business loans. However, racial discrimination and tensions led to riots in cities like Detroit in 1943. 3) Returning to civilian life was an adjustment for families, as fathers reintegrated and millions of women who had worked lost their jobs. The war both created new families and strained existing ones separated by military service overseas.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
418 views6 pages

Chapter 17 Section 4

1) During WWII, many Americans migrated within the US for new work opportunities in defense industry towns, including over 1 million to California. African Americans also migrated northward in large numbers to escape racism and seek jobs. 2) The war economy provided jobs and higher wages, helping the middle class expand. The GI Bill assisted veterans with education, housing, and business loans. However, racial discrimination and tensions led to riots in cities like Detroit in 1943. 3) Returning to civilian life was an adjustment for families, as fathers reintegrated and millions of women who had worked lost their jobs. The war both created new families and strained existing ones separated by military service overseas.

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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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You are on page 1/ 6

590-595-Chapter 17

10/21/02

5:38 PM

Page 590

Page 1 of 6

The Home Front


MAIN IDEA
After World War II, Americans
adjusted to new economic
opportunities and harsh
social tensions.

WHY IT MATTERS NOW


Economic opportunities
afforded by World War II led to
a more diverse middle class in
the United States.

Terms & Names


GI Bill of Rights
James Farmer
Congress of
Racial Equality
(CORE)

internment
Japanese
American
Citizens League
(JACL)

One American's Story


The writer and poet Maya Angelou was a teenager living in
San Francisco when the United States got involved in World
War II. The first change she noticed was the disappearance
of the citys Japanese population. The second change was an
influx of workers, including many African Americans, from
the South. San Franciscans, she noted, maintained that
there was no racism in their city by the bay. But Angelou
knew differently.

A PERSONAL VOICE MAYA ANGELOU


A story went the rounds about a San Franciscan white

Image not available


for use on CD-ROM.
Please refer to the
image in the textbook.

matron who refused to sit beside a Negro civilian on the


streetcar, even after he made room for her on the seat. Her
explanation was that she would not sit beside a draft
dodger who was a Negro as well. She added that the least
he could do was fight for his country the way her son was
fighting on Iwo Jima. The story said that the man pulled his
body away from the window to show an armless sleeve. He
said quietly and with great dignity, Then ask your son to
look around for my arm, which I left over there.
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings

At the end of the war, returning veteranseven those who werent disabledhad
to begin dealing with the very real issues of reentry and adjustment to a society
that offered many opportunities but still had many unsolved problems.

Opportunity and Adjustment


In contrast to the Great Depression, World War II was a time of opportunity
for millions of Americans. Jobs abounded, and despite rationing and shortages,
people had money to spend. At the end of World War II, the nation emerged as
the worlds dominant economic and military power.

590

CHAPTER 17

Vocabulary
migration: the act
of moving from
one country or
region to another

POPULATION SHIFTS
In addition to revamping
the economy, the war
triggered one of the
greatest mass migrations
in American history.
Americans whose families had lived for decades
in one place suddenly
uprooted themselves to
seek work elsewhere.
More than a million
newcomers poured into
California between 1941
and 1944. Towns with
defense industries saw
their populations double
and even triple, sometimes almost overnight.
As shown in the map
to the right, African
Americans left the South
for cities in the North in
record numbers. A

The war gave women the


chance to prove they could be
just as productive as men. But
their pay usually did not reflect
their productivity.

African-American Migration, 19401950


New
England
West
Coast
Midwest

Mountain and
Plains States

+283,600

Middle
Atlantic

+386,800

Analyzing
Causes
A How did World
War II cause the
U.S. population
to shift?

ECONOMIC GAINS The war years were good ones for


working people. As defense industries boomed, unemployment fell to a low of 1.2 percent in 1944. Even with price
and wage controls, average weekly paychecks rose 35 percent during the war. And although workers still protested
long hours, overtime, and night shifts, they were able to
save money for the future. Some workers invested up to
half their paychecks in war bonds.
Farmers also prospered during the war. Unlike the
depression years, when farmers had battled dust storms
and floods, the early 1940s had good weather for growing
crops. Farmers benefited from improvements in farm
machinery and fertilizers and reaped the profits from
rising crop prices. As a result, crop production increased
by 50 percent, and farm income tripled. Before the war
ended, many farmers could pay off their mortgages.
Women also enjoyed employment gains during the
war, although many lost their jobs when the war ended.
Over 6 million women had entered the work force for
the first time, boosting the percentage of women in the
total work force to 35 percent. A third of those jobs
were in defense plants, which offered women more
challenging work and better pay than jobs traditionally associated with
women, such as as waitressing, clerking, and domestic service. With
men away at war, many women also took advantage of openings in
journalism and other professions. The war really created opportunities
for women, said Winona Espinosa, a wife and mother who became a
riveter and bus driver during the war. It was the first time we got a
chance to show that we could do a lot of things that only men had
done before.

+523,200

MAIN IDEA

Page 2 of 6

0
,30
26

A. Answer
In towns and
cities with
defense plants,
population
increased.
African
Americans left
the South for
factory jobs in
the North.

Page 591

00

Skillbuilder
Answers
1. The Midwest.
2. There were
defense jobs
in northern
factories.

5:38 PM

,9

10/21/02

590-595-Chapter 17

+2

South
1,244,800

GEOGRAPHY SKILLBUILDER
1. Movement To which geographic region did the greatest number
of African Americans migrate?

2. Movement How did the wartime economy contribute to this


mass migration?

The United States in World War II

591

590-595-Chapter 17

10/21/02

5:38 PM

Page 592

Page 3 of 6

Attending
Pennsylvania
State College
under the GI Bill
of Rights, William
Oskay, Jr., paid
$28 a month for
the trailer home
in which you see
him working.

SOCIAL ADJUSTMENTS Families adjusted to the changes brought on by war as


best they could. With millions of fathers in the armed forces, mothers struggled
to rear their children alone. Many young children got used to being left with
neighbors or relatives or in child-care centers as more and more mothers went to
work. Teenagers left at home without parents sometimes drifted into juvenile
delinquency. And when fathers finally did come home, there was often a painful
period of readjustment as family members got to know one another again.
The war helped create new families, too. Longtime sweetheartsas well as
couples who barely knew each otherrushed to marry before the soldier or sailor
was shipped overseas. In booming towns like Seattle, the number of marriage
licenses issued went up by as much as 300 percent early in the war. A New Yorker
observed in 1943, On Fridays and Saturdays, the City Hall area is blurred with
running soldiers, sailors, and girls hunting the license bureau, floral shops, ministers, blood-testing laboratories, and the Legal Aid Society.
In 1944, to help ease the transition of returning servicemen to civilian life,
Congress passed the Servicemens Readjustment Act, better known as the GI Bill
of Rights. This bill provided education and training for veterans, paid for by the
federal government. Just over half the returning soldiers, or about 7.8 million veterans, attended colleges and technical schools under the GI Bill. The act also provided federal loan guarantees to veterans buying homes or farms or starting new
businesses. B

Discrimination and Reaction


Despite the opportunities that opened up for women and minorities during the
war, old prejudices and policies persisted, both in the military and at home.
CIVIL RIGHTS PROTESTS African Americans made some progress on the home
front. During the war, thousands of African Americans left the South. The majority moved to the Midwest, where better jobs could be found. Between 1940 and
1944, the percentage of African Americans working in skilled or semiskilled jobs
rose from 16 to 30 percent.

592

CHAPTER 17

MAIN IDEA

Analyzing
Effects
B How did the
war affect families
and personal
lives?

B. Answer
During the war,
mothers
became single
parents and
women took
jobs outside the
home. The war
helped create
new families.

10/21/02

MAIN IDEA

Analyzing
Causes
C What caused
the race riots in
the 1940s?

C. Answer
Discrimination,
racism, concentration of minorities in cities.

5:38 PM

Page 593

Page 4 of 6

Wherever African Americans moved, however, discrimination presented


tough hurdles. In 1942, civil rights leader James Farmer founded an interracial
organization called the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) to confront
urban segregation in the North. That same year, CORE staged its first sit-in at a
segregated Chicago restaurant.
As African-American migrants moved into already overcrowded cities, tensions rose. In 1943, a tidal wave of racial violence swept across the country. The
worst conflict erupted in Detroit on a hot Sunday afternoon in June. What started
as a tussle between blacks and whites at a beach on the Detroit River mushroomed
into a riot when white sailors stationed nearby joined the fray. The fighting
raged for three days, fueled by false rumors that whites had murdered a black
woman and her child and that black rioters had killed 17 whites. By the time
President Roosevelt sent federal troops to restore order, 9 whites and 25 blacks lay
dead or dying.
The violence of 1943 revealed to many Americansblack and white alike
just how serious racial tensions had become in the United States. By 1945, more
than 400 committees had been established by American communities to improve
race relations. Progress was slow, but African Americans were determined not to
give up the gains they had made. C

TENSION IN LOS ANGELES Mexican Americans also experienced prejudice during the war years. In the violent summer of 1943, Los Angeles exploded
in anti-Mexican zoot-suit
riots. The zoot suit was a
style of dress adopted by
Mexican-American youths as
a symbol of their rebellion
against tradition. It consisted
of a long jacket and pleated
pants. Broad-brimmed hats
were often worn with the
suits.
The riots began when 11
sailors in Los Angeles
reported that they had been
attacked by zoot-suit-wearing Mexican Americans.
This charge triggered violence involving thousands
of servicemen and civilians.
Mobs poured into Mexican
neighborhoods and grabbed
any zoot-suiters they could find. The attackers ripped off their victims clothes
and beat them senseless. The riots lasted almost a week and resulted in the beating of hundreds of Mexican-American youth and other minorities.
Despite such unhappy experiences with racism, many Mexican Americans
believed that their sacrifices during wartime would lead to a better future.

A PERSONAL VOICE MANUEL DE LA RAZA


This war . . . is doing what we in our Mexican-American movement had planned

590-595-Chapter 17

These Mexican
Americans,
involved in the
1943 Los Angeles
riots, are seen
here leaving jail to
make court
appearances.

to do in one generation. . . . It has shown those across the tracks that we all
share the same problems. It has shown them what the Mexican American will do,
what responsibility he will take and what leadership qualities he will demonstrate.
After this struggle, the status of the Mexican Americans will be different.
quoted in A Different Mirror: A History of Multicultural America

The United States in World War II

593

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10/21/02

5:38 PM

Page 594

Page 5 of 6

Japanese Relocation Camps, 1942

IDAHO
Minidoka
Tule
Lake

Heart
Mountain
WYOMING

UTAH
CALIFORNIA
Topaz
Manzanar

COLORADO
Granada
(Amache)

ARIZONA
Poston
Gila River

ARKANSAS
Rohwer
Jerome

GEOGRAPHY SKILLBUILDER
1. Location How many Japanese internment
camps existed in 1942?

2. Place Why do you think the majority of these

On March 3, 1942, a
Japanese-American
mother carries her
sleeping daughter during
their relocation to an
internment camp.

camps were located in the West?

Internment of Japanese Americans


While Mexican Americans and African Americans struggled with racial tension,
the war produced tragic results for Japanese Americans. When the war began,
120,000 Japanese Americans lived in the United States. Most of them were citizens living on the West Coast.
The surprise Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in Hawaii had stunned the
nation. After the bombing, panic-stricken citizens feared that the Japanese would
soon attack the United States. Frightened people believed false rumors that
Japanese Americans were committing sabotage by mining coastal harbors and
poisoning vegetables.
This sense of fear and uncertainty caused a wave of prejudice against Japanese
Americans. Early in 1942, the War Department called for the mass evacuation of
all Japanese Americans from Hawaii. General Delos Emmons, the military governor of Hawaii, resisted the order because 37 percent of the people in Hawaii were
Japanese Americans. To remove them would have destroyed the islands economy
and hindered U.S. military operations there. However, he was eventually forced
to order the internment, or confinement, of 1,444 Japanese Americans, 1 percent of Hawaiis Japanese-American population.
On the West Coast, however, panic and prejudice ruled the day. In California,
only 1 percent of the people were Japanese, but they constituted a minority large
enough to stimulate the prejudice of many whites, without being large enough to
effectively resist internment. Newspapers whipped up anti-Japanese sentiment by
running ugly stories attacking Japanese Americans.
On February 19, 1942, President Roosevelt signed an order requiring the
removal of people of Japanese ancestry from California and parts of Washington,
Oregon, and Arizona. Based on strong recommendations from the military, he
justified this step as necessary for national security. In the following weeks, the
army rounded up some 110,000 Japanese Americans and shipped them to ten
hastily constructed remote relocation centers, euphemisms for prison camps.

594

CHAPTER 17

Skillbuilder
Answers
1. There were
ten internment
camps.
2. The West was
less populated.
The internment
camps were
situated in
remote areas

590-595-Chapter 17

10/21/02

MAIN IDEA

Analyzing
Motives
D Why did
President
Roosevelt order
the internment of
Japanese
Americans?

D. Answer
Because some
people perceived them as
a threat to
national security

5:38 PM

Page 595

Page 6 of 6

About two-thirds were Nisei, or Japanese people born in this country of parents
who emigrated from Japan. Thousands of Nisei had already joined the armed
forces, and to Ted Nakashima, an architectural draftsman from Seattle, the evacuation seemed utterly senseless. D

A PERSONAL VOICE TED NAKASHIMA


[There are] electricians, plumbers, draftsmen, mechanics, carpenters, painters,
farmersevery trademen who are able and willing to do all they can to lick the
Axis. . . . Were on this side and we want to help. Why wont America let us?
from New Republic magazine, June 15, 1942

No specific charges were ever filed against Japanese Americans, and no evidence of subversion was ever found. Faced with expulsion, terrified families were
forced to sell their homes, businesses, and all their belongings for less than their
true value.
Japanese Americans fought for justice, both in the courts and in Congress.
The initial results were discouraging. In 1944, the Supreme Court decided, in
Korematsu v. United States, that the governments policy of evacuating Japanese
Americans to camps was justified on the basis of military necessity. (See pages
596597.) After the war, however, the Japanese American Citizens League
(JACL) pushed the government to compensate those sent to the camps for their
lost property. In 1965, Congress authorized the spending of $38 million for that
purposeless than a tenth of Japanese Americans actual losses.
The JACL did not give up its quest for justice. In 1978, it called for the payment of reparations, or restitution, to each individual that suffered internment. A
decade later, Congress passed, and President Ronald Reagan signed, a bill that
promised $20,000 to every Japanese American sent to a relocation camp. When
the checks were sent in 1990, a letter from President George Bush accompanied
them, in which he stated, We can never fully right the wrongs of the past. But
we can take a clear stand for justice and recognize that serious injustices were
done to Japanese Americans during World War II.

1. TERMS & NAMES For each term or name, write a sentence explaining its significance.
GI Bill of Rights
James Farmer

Congress of Racial
Equality (CORE)

internment

Japanese American Citizens


League (JACL)

MAIN IDEA

CRITICAL THINKING

2. TAKING NOTES
List the advances and problems in
the economy and in civil rights
during World War II.

3. COMPARING
How were the experiences of African
Americans, Mexican Americans, and
Japanese Americans similar during
World War II? How were they
different?

Advances

Problems

Economy
Civil Rights
Which of these advances and
problems do you think had the most
far-reaching effect? Explain your
answer.

4. DEVELOPING HISTORICAL
PERSPECTIVE
Do you think that the governments
policy of evacuating Japanese
Americans to camps was justified on
the basis of military necessity?
Explain your answer.

5. ANALYZING EFFECTS
What effect did World War II have on
American families? Think About:
the role of women in families
and the economy
the relationship between the
races
the impact of the federal government on society

The United States in World War II

595

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