WORLD WAR II
Interpreting
Primary Sources
It seems to
be unfortunately true that the epidemic of world lawlessness is spreading. When an epidemic of physical disease starts
to spread, the community approves and joins in a quarantine of the patients in
order to protect the health of the community against the spread of the disease....War
is a contagion, whether it be declared or undeclared....We are determined to
keep out of war, yet we cannot insure ourselves against the disastrous effects
of war and the dangers of involvement.
We are adopting such measures as will minimize our risk of involvement,
but we cannot have complete protection in a world of disorder in which
confidence and security have broken down.
--President
Roosevelt, 1937
There can be
no objection to any hand our government may take which strives to bring peace
to the world so long as that hand does not tie 130,000,000 people into another
world death march....We reach now a condition on all fours with that prevailing
just before our plunge into the European war in 1917. Will we blindly repeat that futile venture? Can we easily forget that we won nothing we
fought for then--that we lost every cause declared to be responsible for our
entry then?
--Senator
Gerald P. Nye, 1937
Our whole
program of aid for the democracies has been based on hardheaded concern for our
own security and for the kind of safe civilized world in which we wish to
live. Ever dollar of material we send
helps to keep the dictators away from our own hemisphere. Every day that they are held off gives us
time to build more guns and tanks and planes and ships.
--President
Roosevelt, May, 1941
We know that
our fate is tied up with the fate of the democratic way of life. And so, out of the depths of our hearts, a
cry goes out for the triumph of the United Nations. But...unless this war sounds the death knell to the old
Anglo-American empire systems, the hapless story of which is one of
exploitation for the profit and power of a monopoly capitalist economy, it will
have been fought in vain. Our aim then
must not only be to defeat nazism, fascism, and militarism on the battlefield,
but to win the peace, for democracy, for freedom and the Brotherhood of Man
without regard to his pigmentation, land of his birth or the God of his
fathers....
White
citizens...should [not] be taken into the March on Washington Movement as
members. The essential value of an
all-Negro movement as the March on Washington is that it helps to create faith
by Negroes in Negroes. It develops a
sense of self-reliance with Negroes depending on Negroes in vital matters. It helps to break down the slave psychology
and inferiority-complex in Negroes which comes and is nourished with Negroes
relying on white people for direction and support.
--A. Philip
Randolph, 1942, proposing a march on Washington
Questions to
think about:
1. Did
President Roosevelt try as hard as he could to avoid American involvement in
World War II or did he actually seek American involvement?
2. Could American involvement in the war have
been avoided?
3. Should the United States have been better
prepared for war? Why wasn't it?
4. Would stronger American policies in the
l930s have forced Germany, Italy and Japan to adhere to the principles of
international law?
5. What should the American role be when other
nations are threatened by military aggression?
6. Describe the status of black Americans
during the war. Do you agree with A.
Philip Randolph's proposal to limit leadership in a march on Washington to
blacks only?
INTERPRETING
STATISTICS: IMPACT OF WORLD WAR II
Distribution
of Family Income
1941 1944
Wealthiest
5% 24 20.7
Wealthiest
20% 48.8 45.8
Second
Wealthiest 20% 22.3 22.2
Middle
20% 15.3 16.2
Second
Poorest 20% 9.5 10.9
Poorest
20% 4.1 4.9
Labor Force
Participation
Males Females
1940 55
percent 28
1944 62 37
1947 57 31
Average
Earnings
1940 $1,300
1944 2,108
1947 2,589
Personal Savings
1940 $
4.2 billion
1941 11.1
1942 27.7
1943 33.0
1944 36.9
1945 28.7
1946 13.5
1947 4.7
Questions
to think about:
1. What impact did World War II have on family
income, the distribution of income, earnings, labor force participation, and
savings?
2. What happened to women's participation in
the labor force during and after the war?
Wartime
expenditures
Percent of
National IncomeSpent on Defense, 1937
U.S. 1.5 percent
British
Empire 5.7
France 9.1
Germany 23.5
Japan 28.2
USSR 26.4
Armaments
Production, 1940-1943
1940 1943
U.S. $1.5
billion $37.5 billion
Britain 3.5 11.1
USSR 5.0 13.9
Germany 6.0 13.8
Japan 1.0 4.5
Federal
Government Spending
1940 9.1 billion
1941 13.3
1942 34.0
1943 79.4
1944 95.1
1945 98.4
1946 60.4
1947 39.0
Questions
to think about:
1. What happened to federal spending during the
second world war?
2. Compare armaments production by the allied
and axis powers.