Events In History, Fads and Innovations
during WWII
Prepared by:
Kim Cox
1939: On September 1st, Germany invaded Poland, and by the 3rd of September, Great Britain and France declared war on Germany. The British
passenger ship, Athenia, was sunk by the Germans, killing thirty Americans on
board on September 3rd.
Due to the war in Europe, the economy surged forward.
Twenty -five cents per pound was paid for coffee. Admission at movie theaters in America ranged from twenty-two cents to fifty-five cents,
where Americans averaged seeing one movie per week. "Wizard of Oz" and "Gone With
The Wind" played at the theaters.
The helicopter was
invented. The first regularly scheduled
transatlantic flight began by Pan Am with its airliner, the "Dixie
Clipper."
Thirty-two million
people attended the New York World’s Fair, held in Flushing, Long Island from April through October. The New York Yankees won the World Series,
victorious over the Cinncinati Reds.
A national fad became
popular among college students. One
student swallowed forty-three live goldfish.
1940: War continued as Germany occupied Norway and Denmark on April 19th.
Then on May 10th, a little over a month later, Luxembourg, Belgium and the Netherlands was invaded by Germany. Italy declared war on France and Britain on June 10th and on June 21st, France was defeated and surrendered. In August "The Battle of Britain"
started. Germany attacked Great Britain by air, but aided by airborne radar, British RAF
defeated the German planes two to one.
Due to increasing
factory orders induced by the war, unemployment dropped as the forty hour work
week was adopted nationwide.
Axis powers, a form of
economic and military alliance between Germany, Italy and Japan was formed.
And the first peacetime draft was conducted by the United States. The belief that
marriage would defer men from service caused a speed up of engagements.
Because of the war in Europe, the Olympic games were cancelled.
The chain known today
as McDonals was opened and by Richard and Maurice McDonald in Pasadena, Californina.
This was the first drive-in restaurant.
M&M candy bars were also developed.
In the World Series,
the Cinncinati Reds beat the Detroit Tigers.
The movie star, Tom Mix died in a car crash.
1941: Germany invaded the Soviet Union on June 22nd.
The U.S. destroyer, Ruben James was sunk by a German sumarine. Pearl Harbor, Hawaii was attacked, sinking the California, Utah, Oklahome and Arizona and heavily damaging others. Three thousand Americans were killed. Japan also attacked Guam, Wakes Island and the Philippines. On December
8th, the United States declared war on Japan. Then Italy and Germany delcared war on the United States on December 11th.
Cities throughout the United States, blackout and air raid tests were staged.
On December 27th, the rationing
of rubber went into effect.
The New York Yankee’s
first basement, Lou Gehrig, died at thirty-seven on June 22nd. In the World Series, the New York Yankees
beat the Brooklyn Dodgers.
1942: In the Pacific, the United States suffered numerous defeats, especially in the Philippines and Manila Bay. But in May, the defeat of the
Japanese in the "Battle of the Coral Sea" and again in the "Battle of Midway"
in June, therby turning the tables. Japan lost 17 ships, 275 planes and 4,800 men in Midway. Major General James Doolittle and his
squadron of sixteen B-25s infiltrated Japan, bombing Tokyo and other cities on April 18th. The US morale was boosted by the attack.
The American and
Japanese forces started a battle for supremacy when the Marines landed on Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands on August 7th.
More rations began in
the US; sugar on May 5th and gas on May 15th.
National gas rationing didn’t begin until December 1st.
In Boston, on November 28th the Coconut Grove nightclub fire
killed 492 people.
The most decorated
soldier in WWII, Audie Murphy, joined the army at the age of sixteen.
The St. Louis
Cardinals won the World Series, beating the New York Yankees.
1943: Twenty-two Japanese ships were sunk and fifty
Japanese planes were downed by the Americans in the "Battle of the Bismark Sea" on May 24th. British forces
captured Tunis, and the U.S. captured Tunsia on May 7th.
John F. Kennedy and
ten crew members swam to safety and were marooned on an island for days after
their PT boat was rammed and cut in two by a Japanese destroyer in the Solomon Islands.
In May, in the
surrender of North Africa 250,000 Axis troops were taken prisoner. On July 10th, allied froces invaded Sicily and allied planes bombed Rome on July 19th.
In the giht for Sicily, Axis forces lost 167,000 men. On
August 17th, the allied forces were triumphant.
Italy surrendered to allies on September 8th.
On December 24th, Dwight
Eisenhower was appointed Supreme Commander of the Allied forces for the
invasion of Europe.
Americans were limited
to 3 pairs of shoes per year as of Feruary 7th, when shoe rationing went into
affect. March 17th, canned goods were
rationed and on March 29th meat and cheese were rationed.
St. Louis Cardinals
lost to the New York Yankees in the World Series.
1944: On January 22nd, Allied forces landed at Anzio, Italy. On March
6th, eight hundred U.S. flying fortresses bombed Berlin.
In Operation Overlord,
the most massive military operation in history, Allied forces invaded Normandy, France on June 6h, D-Day, involving over five thousand
ships, three thousand planes and close to four million troops.
On June 13th, Germany began to use V-1 rocket bomb and in the fall, the
larger V-2s.
In the battle of Saipan, the U.S. forces were victorious and twenty-five thousand Japanese soldiers were
killed. On September 24th, Lieutenant George Bush’s plane is shot down by the
Japanese over Chi Chi Jima, during a bombing run on the island, but he was
quickly rescued by an Allied submarine. U.S. takes Guam and seventeen
thousand soldier were killed on August 9th.
On August 25th, Paris was liberated.
And on September 12th, U.S. forces infiltrate Germany for the first time.
The Japanese adopted suicide bomber tradegy out of desperation. At the massive naval battle of Lete,
Philippine Islands on October 23-26, Kamikaze pilots and their suicide dives
were seen for the first time.
December 16th, Battle of the Bulge began.
Assasaination attempt
on Hitler failed on July 20th.
Ringlin Brothers and
Barnum and Bailey circus tent in Hartlford, Conneticut caught fire during a
performance on July 6th and one hundred, sixty-seven people were killed and
nearly five hundred injured.
In the U.S., twenty thousand cases of polio were reported. Franklin D. Roosevelt was reelected for a
record fourth term as president, Harry Truman elected his vice-president.
In World Series, St.
Louis Cardinals were victorious over the St. Louis Browns.
1945: From February 13th to the 14th, allied planes
bomb Dresden. In the
resulting firestorm, an estimated seventy thousand refugees died.
In the battle of Iwo Jima, the Japanese lost over twenty thousand men. Over one thousand were killed when two
hundred seventy-nine U.S. B-29s naplam-bomb Tokyo on March 9th through 10th. On April 1st, the United States invaded Okinawa.
On April 28th,
Mussolini and his mistress were killed by a firing squad and Aldolph Hitler and
his wife, Eva Braun committed suicide in Berlin on April 30th.
By May 3rd, British
forces occupied Hamburg. On May 8th, V-E, Victory in Europe day begins. The war in Europe ended.
Before the Japanese
surrendered on June 21st, one hundred thousand Japanese soldiers died at Okinawa. On July 5th, the Philippine
Islands were liberated.
On July 16th, the
first atomic bomb was test-detonated naer Alamogordo, New Mexico. Colonel Paul Tibbets dropped the
atomic bom on Hiroshima, Japan, in the Enola Gay on August 6th. Eighty thousand perished. On August 8th, the Soviet Union delclared war on Japan. Forty
thousand perished when the atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki, Japan on August 9th.
V-J, Victory in Japan, day, was established on August 15th and the War in
the Pacific ended. The Japanese
officially signed the surrender document on U.S.S. Missouri in Tokyo Bay pm September 2nd.
A B-25 bomber crashed
into the 78th and 79th floor of the Empire State Building, killing thirteen people during a blinding fog on
July 28th.
Twenty-one war
criminals were put on trial for various atrocities during Nuremberg war crime trials.
At the age of
sixty-three, Franklin D. Roosevelt died of a cerebral hemorrhage on April 12,
and Harry Truman assumed the presidency.
October 30th, the shoe
rationing ended. Meat and butter
rationing ended on November 23rd. Tire
rationing ended on December 20th.
In Atlantic City, Bess Myerson won Miss America title. And
the Detroit Tigers were victorious over the Chicago Cubs in the World Series.
The End
Information gathered
from "The Writer’s Guide to Everyday Life from Prohibition through World
War II" by Marc McCutcheon, copyright 1995 by Marc McCutcheon.