World War I The War at Home

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World War I
The War at Home
Mobilizing for War
 Manpower
 The Economy
 Public Opinion
Manpower
Wilson chooses Conscription
Based in part on the experience of Great Britain
 At outset of war, GB was only nation to use an allvolunteer force
 Early casualties virtually destroyed professional Br.
Army
 Rush of volunteers created havoc in war industries
 As casualties mounted, volunteers were not enough
Manpopwer
Wilson chooses Conscription
Reluctance to use volunteers also based on US
history & political situation.
 Performance of volunteer units in both the War
Between the States and Spanish-American War was
uneven at best (especially with volunteer leaders)
 Roosevelt, an outspoken critic of Wilson: he wanted
to raise (and lead) a volunteer division
 At best, Roosevelt was an enthusiastic amateur who would
have been a disaster in command of a 28,000 man division
 Publicity and hoopla was sure to disrupt other
mobilization efforts
Manpower
Wilson chooses Conscription
Selective Service Act of 1917
 Was a deft political move
 Removed the Army (& all direct agents of the federal
government from the thankless task of selecting men
for service
 Placed responsibility in local, civilian boards
 Result was a system tuned to local
 Occupational needs
 Personal problems
 Community attitudes
Manpower
Selecting Draft Numbers
Mobilizing the Economy
Modern Warfare & the Economy
“Twentieth century warfare demands that the blood
of the soldier must be mingled with from three to
five parts of the sweat of the man in the factories,
mills, mines, and fields of the nation in arms.”
Howard Coffin
Economy
Economy
Mobilizing the Economy
A modern army required unprecedented quantities
of:
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Food
Clothes
Transportation
Weapons
Munitions
Economy
Peacetime Economic Tasks
 Serve domestic consumption
 Serve domestic investment needs
 Serve foreign consumers
Economy
Economic Tasks while neutral
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Serve domestic consumption & investment needs
Serve foreign consumers
Maintain English and French civilian economies
Supply Allied armies
Economy
Wartime Economic Tasks
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Serve domestic consumption & investment needs
Serve foreign consumers
Maintain English and French civilian economies
Supply Allied armies
Supply U.S. army
Economy
The Supply Problem
Troops in combat use supplies at an incredible rate
 A division could, in one minute, fire
 120,000 rounds of rifle ammo
 14,000 machinegun rounds
 1,000 cannon shells
 In 1916 at the Battle of the Somme, the British fired
3,000,000 artillery shells in just over a week
Economy
Mobilizing the Economy
Planning for Shortfalls
 Outputs:
Rifles
Planes
Tanks
Blankets
Shoes
Tents
 Inputs:
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Raw Materials
Skilled Labor
Production Technology
Production Capacity
Economy
US Railroad Administration (1917)
 Took direct government control of key functions and
facilities
 Did what the railroads could not do separately
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Consolidated terminal facilities
Coordinated traffic and routing
Used federal money to improve equipment
Satisfied Unions w/ generous wage settlements
Mobilizing Public Opinion
Two quite different, but complimentary tasks:
 Win public support for the war effort
 Legally muzzle anti-war dissent
Public Opinion
CPI Themes
 America as a unified moral community
 The war as an idealistic crusade for peace and
freedom
 The image of a despicable enemy
Public Opinion
Public Opinion
Public Opinion
FILM AS PROPAGANDA
“The Rape of Belgium”
Public Opinion
Muzzling Dissent
Espionage Act of 1917
 Severe penalties for any found guilty of
 aiding the enemy
 obstructing recruitment
 causing insubordination in Armed Forces
 Empowered postmaster to deny delivery of
newspapers and magazines he judged to be treasonous
 To enforce act, government had to increase overall
police and surveillance machinery
Public Opinion
Muzzling Dissent
Sedition Act of 1918
 A modification and extension of the Espionage Act of
1917
 Outlawed any “disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or
abusive language intended to cause contempt, scorn,
contumely, or disrepute” to the Constitution, Flag or
government
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