WWI effects #1
WWI Effects #2
WWI Effects #3
100

This group:


joined workforce en masse

advocates against war - politically active led to suffrage


Women

100


  • Food Administration (Herbert Hoover)

  • Food prices drop because of massive increase in food production

  • “Food will win the war” - increased production of grain to sent to war-torn Europe

  • Many struggle economically because of this

Farmers

100


  • influx of A/A workers - changing demographics

Northern cities

200

vocally opposed to war - seen as the master class fighting a war by using lower classes

  • jailed

  • became even more radical/committed

Socialists

200
  • Jobs in factories opening up - leaving field work for southwestern cities

  • segregated neighborhoods

  • US encouraged immigration from Mexico at least 100,000 new immigrants during war

  • Mexican-Americans

300
  • taxes


    • War Revenue Bills - taxed wealthier and businesses more

    • ⅓ of the war cost came from taxes

  • Liberty loans


    • popular support of war

    • increased federal debt from 1 billion in 1915 to 20 billion in 1920

  • War Industries Board


    • allocate resources, deals with business

  • Committee on Public Information


    • propaganda

  • modern bureaucratic state

Federal Government

300

African Americans

  • Great Migration - jobs opening up

  • higher pay

  • less racism than in south for them

400
  • slack on antitrust laws 

  • ¼ of production went to war effort 

  • guaranteed work from the government 

Big Business

400

Immigrants

  • ⅕ of AEF were foreign born (American Foreign Legion)


    • 47 languages in letters

  • promote/forced the Americanization of these immigrants


    • not much room to be different in the army

500

Unions

  • National War Labor Board - 1918 


    • 8 hour workday for war workers - time a half for overtime - equal pay for women workers

    • no-strike pledge


      • took over an arms plant that discriminated against union employees

  • AFL membership grew by 1 million members


    • however, after the war there was an antiunion movement

500
  • Espionage Act 1917

  • Sedition Act 1918

  • Schenk v United States


    • “a clear and present danger to the safety of the country”

Free Speech