the war at home

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The War at Home

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The War at Home. Americans trying to eliminate internal enemies Resulted in attacks on immigrants. Concern Over Patriotism. People moved to find jobs Women took “men’s” jobs The President now had control of the economy. Economy Changed People’s Lives. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The War at Home

The War at Home

Page 2: The War at Home

Concern Over Patriotism

• Americans trying to eliminate internal enemies

• Resulted in attacks on immigrants

Page 3: The War at Home

Economy Changed People’s Lives

• People moved to find jobs

• Women took “men’s” jobs

• The President now had control of the economy

Page 4: The War at Home

War Industries Board

• Encouraged mass production to increase efficiency

• Eliminate waste• Set product quotas• Allocated raw

materials• Increased U.S.

production by 20%

Page 5: The War at Home

War Industries board

• Led by Bernard M. Baruch

• Changed women’s clothing-Took steel from women’s corsets(80,000 tons)

• No more leather shoes

• Shorter skirts

Page 6: The War at Home

War Industries Board

• Encouraged conservation

• Gasless Sundays• Lightless nights• Daylight-savings time

Page 7: The War at Home

War Economy

• Some wages increased

May have risen by as much as 20%

• Some wages decreased

May have lost 35% of earning power

Union membership increased

Page 8: The War at Home

War Economy

• 6,000 strikes broke out to protest high prices and low wages

• Wilson creates National War Labor Board to deal with labor disputes

Page 9: The War at Home

War Economy

• “Work or Fight”• NWLB pushed for 8

hour days • safety inspections• Pushed to observe

ban on child labor

Page 10: The War at Home

War Economy

• Food Administration-conserve Food

• Led by Herbert Hoover

• “meatless” and “sweetless” days

Page 11: The War at Home

War Economy

• People planted “Victory Gardens”

• American food shipments to Allies tripled

Page 12: The War at Home

Selling the War

• U.S. spent $33 billion on war

• Raised 1/3 of this amount through taxes

• Government sold bonds

Page 13: The War at Home

Committee on Public Information

• Government’s 1st propaganda agency

• Was to popularize war

• Led by George Creel-a muckraking journalist

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Page 17: The War at Home

Drive for Conformity

• Targeted immigrants• Americans w/

German sounding names lost job

• Towns w/ German names changed names

Page 18: The War at Home

Espionage and Sedition Acts

• Fined $10,000 and imprisoned for 20 yrs for interfering with draft

• Obstructing sale of liberty bonds

• Saying anything disloyal about war effort

Page 19: The War at Home

Espionage and Sedition Acts

• Clear violation of 1st Amendment

• Led to 6,000 arrests• 1,500 convictions

Page 20: The War at Home

African American Support

• W.E.B. Dubois• Cooperation would

cause leadership to listen to calls for racial justice

Page 21: The War at Home

African American Opposition

• William Monroe Trotter- victims of racism should not support a racist government

Page 22: The War at Home

The Great Migration

• Thousands of southern blacks moved to cities in the north

Page 23: The War at Home

Why the Migration?

• 1. Escape racial discrimination in the South

• 2. Drought in the South ruined many cotton fields

• 3. Increased job opportunities

• 4. Rumors of prosperous northern African Americans

Page 24: The War at Home

Women in the War

• Filled roles formerly held by men

• Driving cabs• Delivery trucks• Railroad workers• Cooks• Dockworkers• Bricklayers• Coal miners• Ship building

Page 25: The War at Home

Female Opposition

Jane Adams founded Women’s Peace Party

Page 26: The War at Home

Flu Epidemic

• Fall of 1918• 25% of Americans

became ill

Page 27: The War at Home

Flu Epidemic

• Corpses lay unburied for days

• 500,000 Americans killed

• 40 million world wide• Flu disappeared in

1919