the world war ii experience of minorities african-americans women mexican-americans japanese...

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The World War II Experience of Minorities

• African-Americans

• Women

• Mexican-Americans

• Japanese Americans

• during WWII African Americans were asked to actively participate in fighting for democracy in Europe

• African Americans served in military & were a source of labor in factories at home

• many felt conflicted about supporting democracy abroad when they were denied democracy at home

• Double V Campaign emerges to encourage (V #1) - victory in war and (V #2) expanded freedoms at home

• Legal Segregation (“de-jure segregation”)

• “Jim Crow” Segregation Laws

• began after Reconstruction

• laws segregating Blacks and Whites in the South

• Poll Taxes & Grandfather Clauses

• created to prevent Blacks from voting in the South

• Plessy v. Ferguson

• Supreme Court case that upheld segregation

• “separate but equal” facilities

• African Americans in American Wars

• Revolutionary War

• about 5,000 Blacks fought for the Patriots

• Civil War

• about 180,000 fought for the North in segregated units

• World War I

• many Black volunteers

• more than 350,000 served (still segregated)

• World War II

• more than 1 million served (still segregated)

African Americans served in segregated units in most of these wars. Why would they continue to volunteer to fight?

Growing Racial Friction in Northern Cities

• Farming in the south was increasingly mechanized (less need for sharecroppers)

• FDR, threatened in 1941 by black leaders (A. Phillip Randolph) with a strike, agreed to outlaw discrimination in defense industries

• When white men went off to war, a mass migration of blacks to northern industrial cities began

• Blacks and whites were increasingly ‘crammed together in Northern cities rioting and racial crimes

Women (cont.)

• 12 million (1941) 18 million (1944) in the workforce

• Unequal wages • ‘Double Shift’ • (WACs) First women in American history in

combat roles – Supporting roles (but still) – 200 women killed on the battlefield during the war

• New Roles in War would lead to a movement for women’s rights in the decades after the war

Mexican-Americans

• Like other minorities, saw new opportunities in war time

• American laws were passed to allow some non-citizens to enter the U.S. to work during wartime, to deal with labor shortage during the war– (interesting tie to today, yes? Immigration

question is not new)

Zoot Suit Riots

• Clashes between white servicemen (members of the military) and Mexican-Americans in Los Angeles

• Police didn’t do much to stop the servicemen

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