Social Impact of World War II
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Transcript Social Impact of World War II
Social Impact of
World War II
Minorities in the United
States: 1939-1945
Daily Life in the United States
during World War II
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Pre-World War II
Idealism
World War II
changed
American
society
dramatically
African-American Experience in
World War II
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Blacks on the Homefront
Patriotic, Supportive of War
Effort
Economic Discrimination
Last Hired - First Fired
during Depression Years
FDR signed Executive
Order 8802 - no
discrimination based on
race in hiring (applied to
Defense jobs)
African-Americans in the War
Black Military
Participation
Segregated Armed
Forces
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Separate Units and
limited opportunities
Most famous AfricanAmerican military group
of WW 11 = The
Tuskegee Airmen
The Tuskegee Airmen
Group of Black Pilots - 99th Pursuit
“Fighter” Squadron
Trained in Tuskegee, Alabama
Decorated as an escort squadron fought over Italy.
Col. Paul Adams from Lincoln served
as a Tuskegee Airman
Segregation in the Military
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Native American Contributions
during World War II
25,000 Native
American joined armed
forces
23,000 worked at
Wartime plants and
factories
Notable were the
Navajo codetalkers
(Communicated in the
Navajo language)
Japanese military
never broke the code
Movie recently:
Windtalkers
Mexican-American contributions
during World War II
Bracero Program Mexican farm
laborers came to
the U.S.
1942-1947 200,000 braceros
worked
Most lived in barrios
Zoot-Suit Riots (Los
Angeles) - Off duty
Gis targeted
Mexican American
youth for styles of
clothing (zoot-suits)
- 1943
Native and Mexican-Americans in
WWII
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Japanese-American Experience
during World War II
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110,000 Americans of
Japanese descent “interned” at
camps in Western United
States
Executive Order 9066 by FDR
made it official
Japanese legal challenges =
Korematsu v. United States
(1944)
Ruled in favor of US policy
1988 - Congress awarded
each surviving internee
$20,000
Official U.S. apology
An Internment Camp - Manzanar
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Japanese 442nd Infantry
Regiment
Japanese-American
combat unit
Stationed in Italy
Most highly decorated
unit in US military history
21 medal of honor
recipients
Most of their families
were “interned” in the US
Japanese-Americans
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Women in World War II America
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At Home…
Many jobs taken
in absence of men
“Rosie the
Riveter”
Women in World War II America
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Women in the Armed
Services
WACs, WAVEs, SPARs
Served in different noncombat capacities
Mostly nurses, or support
staff positions
Women and the War Effort
World War II Culture Shift
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