scrap for the war 1942

36
PowerPoint Show by Andrew Turn on Speakers

Upload: andrew

Post on 21-Apr-2017

489 views

Category:

Entertainment & Humor


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Scrap for the War 1942

PowerPoint Show by Andrew

♫ Turn on Speakers

Page 2: Scrap for the War 1942

When the United States joined World War II after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the global trade of raw materials was in a state of uncertainty and disruption. Basic commodities such as rubber and cloth immediately became precious and valuable to the war effort.

Scrap drives were organized across the country, encouraging citizens to contribute their rubber to make jeep tires, their clothing to make cleaning rags, their nylon and silk stockings to make parachutes, and their leftover cooking fat to make explosives.

One of the most vital materials to collect was scrap metal. A single medium tank required 18 tons of it, and a single Navy ship hundreds more.

Page 3: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 4: Scrap for the War 1942

Oct. 5, 1942Governor Leverett Saltonstall applies a blowtorch to the iron fence in front of the Massachusetts State House.

Page 5: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 6: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 7: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 8: Scrap for the War 1942

Steel cannot be made without scrap. It is as impossible to make steel without scrap iron as it is to make biscuits without flour, or to make an ice cream soda without ice cream.

Page 9: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 10: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 11: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 12: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 13: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 14: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 15: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 16: Scrap for the War 1942

"Our soldiers are men of valor and fortitude but this is a war in which raw courage is no match for cold steel. Modern warfare is highly mechanized.

Thousands of our finest youth will be slaughtered if we send them into battle without tanks and planes and guns that our superiors to the arms of our foe. We must have 17 million tons of scrap iron in order to keep the steel mills running at full capacity through the winter." Kentucky Governor Keen Johnson, Oct. 2, 1942

Page 17: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 18: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 19: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 20: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 21: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 22: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 23: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 24: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 25: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 26: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 27: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 28: Scrap for the War 1942

Oct. 7, 1942Virginia Bohlin of the Boston Herald-Traveler holds an old tilting helmet bound for the scrap heap.

Page 29: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 30: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 31: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 32: Scrap for the War 1942

Drive organizers pose with donated license plates.

Page 33: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 34: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 35: Scrap for the War 1942
Page 36: Scrap for the War 1942