After studying the following documents, answer the question: were women and minorities better off after WW II?

Similar documents
Headquarters Western Defense Command and Fourth Army. Presidio of San Francisco, California May

Document #2: The War Production Board (WPB)

World War II ( ) Lesson 5 The Home Front

IN-CLASS INTRODUCTION. Literary Intro. Historical Info

In 2013, Rosario Ventura and her husband

APUSH WORLD WAR II REVIEWED!

Hey, I m (NAME) and today we re gonna be talking about what was happening on the Home Front during World War Two.

The Little White House NEWSLETTER

Isaac Santner Academic Literacy 3/11/2013 Picture 1

FREEDOM AND DIGNITY PROJECT Learning Experience Module Michael Brown & Jeff Kaiser

Was the decision by the Canadian government to evacuate Japanese Canadians justified? Historical Perspective

Read the Directions sheets for step-by-step instructions.

Washington County Museum Oral History Interview with Daniel Garza At: Centro Cultural Date: May 17, 1978

Document A: Newark Anniversary Guide (Excerpt)

Follow this and additional works at:

Why were Japanese-Americans interned during WWII?

Try to answer the following question using the documents on the following pages. Why were the Japanese interned in camps during WWII?

Japanese Internment Timeline

W.W.II Part 2. Chapter 25

Japanese Internment Timeline

The Japanese American World War II Experience

Bittersweet Harvest: The Bracero Program,

AFRICAN AMERICANS AT WORK IN POST-WWII LOS ANGELES. Lesson Plan

SHOW TIME. for Teachers. Presented by Theatreworks/USA. Welcome to Show Time, Produced by Living Voices. Co-produced by The Wing Luke Asian Museum

The US faced profound domestic and global challenges as the country battled through the Great Depression and world wars.

America s Changing Workforce During Peace and War ( )

Follow this and additional works at:

Introduction to World War II By USHistory.org 2017

The Debate Over Guest-Worker Programs. (Shutterstock.com)

Follow this and additional works at: Part of the Labor History Commons, and the Oral History Commons

Japanese Internment Timeline

World War II. Allied Strategy. Getting Ready for WWII 3/18/15. Chapter 35

5th Social Studies practice test

Learning from Documents

TEACHER S PET PUBLICATIONS. LitPlan Teacher Pack for Farewell To Manzanar based on the book by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston & James D.

Although women and African Americans gained

5. Base your answer on the map below and on your knowledge of social studies.

US HISTORY DBQ: JAPANESE INTERNMENT

KEY TERMS, PEOPLE, AND PLACES

CHAPTER 34 Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Shadow of War,

Name: Class: Date: World War II and the Holocaust: Reading Essentials and Study Guide: Lesson 3

Chapter 11: US-Mexico Borderlands

The Baby Boom, which led to changing demographics. Role of Eleanor Roosevelt in expanding human rights

lived in this land for SF Bay Before European migration million+ Native peoples. Ohlone people who first to U.S = home to 10 Area.

AP HUG Semester One Final Review Packet-Ch. 3

The Internment of Italian Americans During World War II

During World War II, the U.S. government ordered 120,000

Courage and Compassion

Timorese migrant workers in the Australian Seasonal Worker Program

Unit 7 Study Guide. Period 7.2:

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

Representatives of the Governments of 13 Latin American Countries

Great Depression

Santa Clara Valley Women Cannery Workers

Japanese Relocation During World War II By National Archives 2016

Unit 7 Graphic Organizer. Standard 17 Great Depression Standard 18 New Deal Standard 19 World War II

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Turning Points in World War II

Content Statement Summarize how atomic weapons have changed the nature of war, altered the balance of power and began the nuclear age.

Reasons to Immigrate:

You ve probably heard a lot of talk about

Rights for Other Americans

Here we go again. EQ: Why was there a WWII?

Okie Life in California

$100 People. WWII and Cold War. The man who made demands at Yalta who led to the dropping of the "iron curtain" around the eastern European countries.

05 WLE SS All Domains (05wlessalldomains)

Gilded Age: Immigration/ Urbanization. Immigration LIFE IN THE NEW LAND. Chapter 7-1, 2

Document A: American Federation of Labor

The AP U.S. History Curriculum Framework PERIOD 7:

The United States Lesson 2: History of the United States

THE GREAT DEPRESSION

Japanese Internment and Korematsu v. United States

University of North Texas Libraries

The Chicano Movement

Starter April 18th. Predict what is this cartoon trying to say about Japan?

Test Examples. Vertical Integration

World War II Leaders Battles Maps

Name. 2. How do people act when they meet a new person and are able to communicate with them?

Mrs. Morgan s Class. (and how it works)

Georgia. Flappers, Depression, and the Global War. and the American Experience. Chapter 11: Study Presentation Clairmont Press

Document-Based Activities

WWII APUSH SPRING BREAK PROJECT

Remember to add header to each slide! Title Slide with Book Title and Author, which might just be an image of the book cover.

Japanese-American Internment

Unit 4 Mexican Colonization and the Empresario System

WORLD WAR II. War is Hell - William Tecumseh Sherman

GUESS THE COUNTRY A Workshop on the History of Immigrants Rights

Japanese American Internment. Photo By:

ORGANIZATION FOR BREAKING THE POVERTY CYCLE IN RURAL AREAS

THEIR SACRIFICE, OUR FREEDOM WORLD WAR II IN EUROPE

Is the Grass Greener on the Other Side?

Japanese-American Internment Camps: Imprisoned in their Own Country

American History 11R

Serving International Refugees without leaving Home

Novel Ties. A Study Guide. Written By Gary Reeves Edited by Joyce Friedland and Rikki Kessler LEARNING LINKS. P.O. Box 326 Cranbury New Jersey 08512

INTERFAITH REFUGEE MINSTRY

2.1 SOCIETAL ISSUES & IMMIGRATION UNIT 2 PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT SECTION 1 - INTRODUCTION. 1890s 1920s

MIGRANT MINISTRY, UNION CITY, INDIANA SLIDES, 1970

4: TELESCOPING THE TIMES

Section 1: The New Immigrants

The Importance of Being Latino in Minnesota

Transcription:

Women and Minorities during World War II On Dec. 7, 1941, Japan bombed Pearl Harbor, pulling the United States into WWII. The war was fought on many fronts in Europe and the Pacific. One of the most critical fronts during the war was the home-front. With so many men away at war, women and minorities that had not been given opportunities were suddenly in great demand in war industry jobs. Millions of American women answered the government's call to enter the work force and fill traditionally male jobs left vacant by those who had gone off to fight. Above all, women's labor was urgently needed to help fill shortages created by the expanded wartime economy, especially in the production of military hardware. These women who wore hard-hats and overalls and operated heavy machinery represented a radical departure from the traditional American feminine ideal of housewife and mother. Many African Americans migrated to the North and West where there were industrial jobs available. Pres. Roosevelt even signed the Fair Employment Practice Act prohibiting pay discrimination based on national origin in order to protect the African Americans who were entering the workforce. During World War II, Congress responded to growers worries about a shortage of agricultural workers by approving the temporary entry of migrants from impoverished rural areas in Mexico. The Bracero Program became the largest guest worker program in US history, employing more than four million Mexican workers over its 22-year history. The program was controversial; some argued that the low wages at which migrants were willing to work threatened the jobs of domestic farmworkers. Though rules were in place to protect both migrants and domestic workers (such as guaranteed minimum wage and humane treatment ) many employers ignored them, using braceros simply as a source of low-paid labor. The Bracero program became notorious for abuse and exploitation as well as the indignities of racism and discrimination New employment opportunities were not the only way minorities were affected. After Japan bombed Pearl Harbor, fear of a Japanese invasion and of subversive acts by Japanese Americans prompted the government to move more than 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry to 10 relocation camps. Those forcibly removed from their homes, businesses, and possessions included Japanese immigrants legally forbidden to become citizens, their American-born children, and children of the American-born Japanese. After studying the following documents, answer the question: were women and minorities better off after WW II?

Document 1 Black workers could find decent-paying jobs in shipyards and aircraft factories all along the Pacific coast. However, they also encountered their share of problems, including unwarranted job transfers, anti-black remarks by supervisors and co-workers, and residential segregation. Fanny Christina Hill recalled: "They did everything they could to keep you separated.... They just did not like for a Negro and a white person to get together to talk. But black workers in the West Coast plants joined integrated unions, worked in the same buildings as whites, and lunched in the same cafeterias. For thousands of black women and men in skilled jobs, the defense industry work changed the quality of their lives. Fanny Christina Hill put it bluntly: "The War made me live better. Hitler was the one that got us out of the white folks' kitchen." African Americans shared their nation's joy on V-J Day, 1945. But for many the celebration soon turned bittersweet. By 1947, thousands of African Americans who had been "essential workers" during the war were unemployed and roamed the streets of Los Angeles, Oakland, and Portland. In that year, black Oaklanders, although only 10 percent of the city's population, made up half of the applicants for welfare. The postwar job outlook in Portland was so dismal that the black population declined by half between 1944 and 1947. How did WWII benefit the African Americans? Were they better off before or after the war? Why? How did the war contribute to civil unrest?

Document 2 What region had the largest loss of Black population during WWII? What region had the highest gain? Why did African Americans migrate during WWII?

Document 3 Jesús Campoya Calderón from San Diego, Chihuahua was one of the thousands of "braceros" who worked in the fields of New Mexico and Texas. To apply, the candidates had to travel to Chihuahua City, to the "trocadero," next to the railroad station. The "trocadero" was run by American officers. The main area in the "trocadero" was a line of windows. The first step for the applicant was to be approved at the initial interview in the first window. The applicant would then pass to the second officer for a more extensive interrogation regarding his work experience and show the palms of his hands to the officer. Once approved, he would be sent to the third window to sign his contract and to have his picture taken. A few days later, the workers were transported from Chihuahua City to the border. The "braceros" waited several days in Ciudad Juárez until their permits were stamped by immigration officers. From El Paso, they were transported to the processing center in Fabens, situated in the El Paso Lower Valley. At the center, they were sprayed with a white powder in order, "To kill the Mexican fleas," or so they were told by a gringo. That evening they ate bread and baloney. "After several days without food, the sandwich tasted like glory...," Campoya said. Afterwards, the farmers arrived to select "their" workers, which were needed in their farms. "In the farms we would do anything, although our permit was to pick cotton only." They would pick cotton during the day, but in the evenings and on Sundays they would repair fences or paint the farmer's house. However, they were only paid for the cotton picked from 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. The picker received $2.10 for 100 lbs. of cotton. The best cotton picker (usually from Coahuila) made about 300 pounds each day. A good picker made $31.40 on a good week. "Sounds low, but then a pair of authentic Levi's pants cost $1.98..." Once a week, they were taken to the "big town" to buy groceries and cigarettes. Some also used this opportunity to send their money back home. "Because I did not trust the bank, I saved all my money myself. I worked four months, seven days a week, at least 12 hours every day and I took home almost $300 dollars." "Those were very good days..." Why do you think the Mexican Braceros chose to come and work in the US? Why did the Braceros work in the evenings and on Sundays for no pay? Why do you think the bracero said, Those were very good days?

Document 4 During the "Bracero" Program the short handle hoe was widely used. The "braceros" still remember the all day long bending, thinning sugar beet fields with this tool. The use of the short-handle hoe is now illegal in most of the states, According to these images, how were the Braceros treated in the United States? Who would be in favor of extending the Bracero program after WW II, and who would be against it? Why? Why do you think the number of Braceros increased after WWII?

Document 5 What did you do in the war, Grandma? Kathy O'Grady : What Did You Do in the War, Grandma? After my husband went into the Seabee's I quit my job at Gibson's and went to work in a woolen mill, Lister's, which before the war was just a normal routine job. When the war started they need wool very badly so this was considered a service job. In other words, it was important. At the mill the government used to send out all the Purple Heart soldiers to talk to us and tell us that we couldn't take time off, and pushed all this patriotism on us. One particular day I had the day off and they went to my house. I wasn't home. It would have been embarrassing to have soldier with a Purple Heart on asking why I wasn't at work. Who took care of your baby while you were at work? I had a young baby and I had a place to leave him in a nursery. At the mill I worked every day and I had all my evenings off, and Saturdays and Sundays, so that I was home alone with my son. I was lucky in that there was a Salvation Army day nursery on the street I lived on. They only charged $3 a week. If he was sick I either had to stay home with him or take him up to my sister's; maybe his grandmother would take care of him. One time he had scarlet fever, and the doctor put him in the hospital. The doctor figured where I was all by myself and my husband was in the service, it would have been too much to be at home with him. This way I could come and go to work. Do you think the war changed you? After the war things changed because women found out they could go out and they could survive. They could really do it on their own. That's where I think women's lib really started. So the whole world has changed. Everybody's more aware of everything. We were very sheltered up until 1941. I think it made us more aware. It made me mature. When my husband went in the service, I often used to think if anything happened to him, our baby was my complete responsibility. At 21 that was quite an awesome thing to think that you had a small human life that you were responsible for. Why would it be embarrassing for a Purple Heart recipient to ask why she wasn t at work? Why did the Dr. put her baby in the hospital, instead of letting her care for it at home? Why does the grandma believe that women s lib started after the war?

Document 6 Poster recruitng women to work during the War Women seeking equal pay after the War at a protest According to the poster, why is the woman taking a job? What does the poster infer about who holds the position of power in the family? Do you think that changed after the war? Why? According to the photo, what happened to wages paid to women after the war?

Document 7 Transcript: "To All Persons of Japanese Ancestry". Western Defense Command and Fourth Army Wartime Civil Control Administration, Presidio of San Francisco, California May 3, 1942 Instructions to All Persons of Japanese Ancestry Living in the Following Area: All of that portion of the County of Alameda, State of California, within the boundary beginning at the point where the southerly limits of the City of Oakland meet San Francisco Bay. Pursuant to the provisions of Civilian Exclusion Order No. 34, this Headquarters, dated May 3, 1942, all persons of Japanese ancestry, both alien and non-alien, will be evacuated from the above area by 12 o'clock noon, Sunday, May 9, 1942. The Following Instructions Must Be Observed: 1. A responsible member of each family, preferably the head of the family, or the person in whose name most of the property is held, and each individual living alone, will report to the Civil Control Station to receive further instructions. This must be done between 8:00 A. M. and 5:00 P. M. on Monday, May 4, 1942, or between 9:00 A. M. and 5:00 P. M. on Tuesday, May 5, 1942. 2. Evacuees must carry with them on departure for the Assembly Center, the following property: (a) Bedding and linens (no mattress) for each member of the family; (b) Toilet articles for each member of the family; (c) Extra clothing for each member of the family; (d) Sufficient knives, forks, spoons, plates, bowls and cups for each member of the family; (e) Essential personal effects for each member of the family. All items carried will be securely packaged, tied and plainly marked with the name of the owner and numbered in accordance with instructions obtained at the Civil Control Station. The size and number of packages is limited to that which can be carried by the individual or family group. 3. No pets of any kind will be permitted. 4. No personal items and no household goods will be shipped to the Assembly Center. 5. The United States Government through its agencies will provide for the storage, at the sole risk of the owner, of the more substantial household items, such as iceboxes, washing machines, pianos and other heavy furniture. Cooking utensils and other small items will be accepted for storage if crated, packed and plainly marked with the name and address of the owner. Only one name and address will be used by a given family. What is this order directing the Japanese Americans to do? Do you believe it was justified? How do you think it affected the Japanese Americans?

Document 8 Why did the Japanese store owner put the sign in his window? Why does the cartoon indicate the Japanese have to move to the internment camps? What nationality are the ball players in the photo? Why did they use baseball as the analogy?