photo: roberthuffstutter/flickr
note: This is a true account of how life changed for college-age students and college teachers in the immediate aftermath of President Roosevelt’s Infamy Speech of December 8, 1941, as told by Letty Owings, age 87. It is a continuation of this essay.
Everything changed on a Sunday. I had come home briefly from college where I was enrolled in a nature class. I wanted to collect some puffballs from the woods for my class. My father knew where to find these things so we went to the woods where they were, collected some samples, and returned home. I sat in a room with the sample collection, and my father went to the other room to listen to the wind charger radio.
He returned a few moments later and he said to me, word-for-word, “Honey, we’re in a war.”
How Life Changed After the Infamy Speech of 1941
After my father had listened to the wind charger radio and learned that we were in a war, he drove me back to college at Missouri Central University. Since the announcement did not affect our classes, I took the puffballs that I had collected from the woods for my nature class.
The Announcement at the Assembly
On Monday, December 8, 1941, the university called all of the students into Hendricks Hall. The school chose the large hall as a meeting place because it was the only building on campus large enough to accommodate 1000 students for an assembly. A man named H Roe Bartle delivered the speech. He was a large and imposing man and his physical presence at the podium added to his powerful delivery. H Roe Bartle read from President Roosevelt’s declaration of war on both fronts. He ended the speech by quoting from the English patriotic song written and distributed in 1939 called There’ll Always be an England, by saying the words, “There’ll always be an England and England will be free, if England means to you what England means to me.”
The atmosphere in Hendricks Hall at that moment was eerie. It was like electricity and so emotional that while some students cried, others just stared. Many jumped up to enlist. Boys just shy of graduating were anxious to abandon their schooling and had to be convinced to stay in school and graduate. Since there were no speech writers to temper tone in those days, what Roosevelt said, Roosevelt said. Both Roosevelt’s announcement and H Roe Bartle’s subsequent speech conveyed the same gravity and raw heartfelt shock that we all shared. We had no concept of war, no frame of reference. We had entered the assembly as one person and came out another, with the final understanding that yes, our lives have changed forever. America became mesmerized.
Conscription and Rationing
Following the announcement almost immediately, members of regular university faculty were conscripted according to the following formula: the Army, Navy and Marines came in took whoever they wanted and told them what to teach and where to teach it.
Even before the concepts of totally non-negotiable unconditional surrender and the declaration of war on both fronts sank in academically, the government instituted a rationing system in early 1942. Everything had to go to the military, and we were issued ration cards. Rubber was the first thing to be limited: no more tires, rubber boots or yard goods were sold for civilian use. Books, gasoline and sugar were rationed, and it was against the law to trade these things. Farmers could get a little more gasoline for their tractors, but they had to provide documented proof of how much they needed and what it was for. note: Here is a bit more on the rationing from wiki:
Of concern for all parts of the country was a shortage of rubber for tires since the Japanese quickly conquered the rubber-producing regions of Southeast Asia.[5]
and
Tires were the first item to be rationed by the OPA, which ordered the temporary end of sales on 11 December 1941 while it created 7,500 unpaid, volunteer three-person tire ration boards around the country. By 5 January 1942 the boards were ready. Each received a monthly allotment of tires based on the number of local vehicle registrations, and allocated them to applicants based on OPA rules.[4]:133
The War Production Board (WPB) ordered the temporary end of all civilian automobile sales on 1 January 1942, leaving dealers with one half million unsold cars. Ration boards grew in size as they began evaluating automobile sales in February (only certain professions, such as doctors and clergymen, qualified to purchase the remaining inventory of new automobiles), typewriters in March, and bicycles in May.[4]:124,133-135 Automobile factories stopped manufacturing civilian models by early February 1942 and converted to producing tanks, aircraft, weapons, and other military products, with the United States government as the only customer.[6] By June 1942 companies also stopped manufacturing for civilians metal office furniture, radios, phonographs, refrigerators, vacuum cleaners, washing machines, and sewing machines.[4]:118,124,126-127
There was no unauthorized use of the rationing system that I can remember. People adjusted to it in stride as something they were required and obliged to do. Abuse and treachery of the rationing system were not done because people had a feeling they might be hurting an officer if they cheated the system.
The Uniform as the Great Leveler
Within a short period of time, hardly any adult man was out of uniform. The men were in uniform whether they were walking on the street, attending church, shopping at the store or going about their daily business. Bellbottoms, khakis, lapel bars and hats were worn everywhere. In a way, the military uniform was a great leveler because men going about their daily lives were now part of something that they had not been part of before. There was some occasional fakery that went on when it came to dating, when, for example, a man would represent himself as rich and accomplished to a prospective date, only to have his wife eventually show up.
The uniform was important to the point where being a “civvy” required an excellent excuse or else drew extreme criticism. A boy I dated had graduated and was teaching math. He went to Scott Air Force Base to teach troops, but the troops ridiculed him because he was dressed in civilian clothing. Because of this, he enlisted and returned to the same job for less pay, where he was not the subject of criticism.
end note: H Roe Bartle went on to serve as mayor of Kansas City, Missouri for two terms. He was also an executive and an organizer for the Boy Scouts of America.
“After Bartle helped lure the Dallas Texans American Football League team to Kansas City in 1962, owner Lamar Hunt renamed the franchise the Kansas City Chiefs after Bartle’s nickname, “The Chief.”"




34 Comments

Very nice, CS. I remember all of that – seems impossible that it was so many years ago.
Thank you for reading and commenting, much appreciated and yes, it is hard to imagine that it was so long ago, and also that it was so life-altering for so many.
There are few exhaustively documented events which not only changed history, but irrevocably altered man’s perception of what it means to be human and live in the company and society of his fellow man.
December 7, 1941 and its aftermath was one of those unique events.
And the world will never be quite the same.
Thanks C-S, and recommended (oh, and thanks mom).
Very true, and the Infamy Speech, where Roosevelt described the previous day as “a day which will live in infamy” is regarded as one of the most famous political speeches of the 20th Century (wiki). The speech was only seven minutes long.
There is little doubt that everyone remembers where they were, and even what they were wearing, when they heard it.
The equivalent in my lifetime is JFK, but since I was only three in 1963, I do not remember it; rather, I have a vivid memory of Bobby’s assassination in 1968.
Thank you for the read and for the rec!
I don’t think there are many people who realize or can comprehend how totally the country and every business was geared entirely toward the war effort at that time.
There was not a business large or small that did not produce exclusively for the government. And the only reason I am so aware of it is because of my interest in radio and electronics. Where I have researched the origins of many military radio equipment.
WWII military contracts took many a small corporate concern and made it large or kept it from failing. Willies motors was near bankruptcy and would have failed if not for their Jeep. Aircraft Radio Corporation and National Radio received orders for 100s of thousands of sets.
Aircraft Radio Corporation’s ARC5 receives and transmitters were standard equipment in B29s. The National Radio HRO sets were the main receiving units in Bletchley Park MI6 monitoring and cryptographic station. As well as elsewhere.
Though most of these contracts were cancelled at the end of the war, new ones were issued for the cold war and the Korean war as well. Nearly all of the major contractors during WWII were kept busy after the war with cold war contracts.
WWII save capitalism for the next 40 years.
But now it’s over.
I remember listening to the “day of infamy” speech with my parents and grandparents.
WW2 changed the world for women. Rosie the Riveter never quite went back to the kitchen – thank goodness.
Absolutely fascinating history, thank you so much for sharing this (as you did with that fantastic history of radio on the Titanic).
Your statement about every facet of life being affected corresponds with what Letty tells me about the time. “Full mobilization” meant that every person was in or they had an excuse, and every part of daily living was involved in the war effort. Letty addresses the overnight and complete change with a bit of a different approach from the history texts, in sharing some of the lesser known (but meaningful in the broad sense)personal experiences.
Difficult for us today to wrap our minds around it.
Thank you again for commenting.
No doubt that the role for women changed, excellent point and worthy of more discussion. Thank you for bringing this to light. For one thing, the reorganizing of women’s roles may have been part of the difficulty that marriages faced when the husband came home. Both the man and the woman in the marriage had changed, and that led to some couples not knowing each other any more or having unrealistic post-service expectations, according to Letty.
You are welcome CS. Amateur Radio itself was likely save by WWII surplus radio equipment that found it’s way on to the surplus market for pennies on the dollar.
Many an new Ham Radio operator – especially the young ones – of modest means was able to put together their Ham Radio station out of WWII surplus radio equipment. Quite often having the performance of new commercial equipment that was becoming available for a fraction of the cost of new. Sometimes exceeding the performance.
WWII Jeeps and trucks and buses were re-purposed for churches and schools and towns that would otherwise not have been able to afford them.
Jeeps were advertised for sale as “Kits” in Popular Mechanics and Popular Science and Mechanics Illustrated magazines for around 100 dollars. You had to assemble them but 100 bucks in the 1950s and 1960s for transpo was cheap.
Really interesting. Makes me wish I had learned more about radios.
Out of sheer curiosity I have disassembled some vintage radios from dumpsters because I always thought the vacuum tubes were pretty, let’s see Raytheon comes to mind but there were others. One starts with a G, I think. Some were in black metal casing. I think I still have a sack of them somewhere, although maybe not, because I didn’t know what to do with them!
It’s wonderful that WWII jeeps and trucks were re-purposed. It would be wonderful if we thought of doing things like that today.
The following is a list – though incomplete – of tube manufacturers.
General Electric
RCA
Sylvania
Zenith
Philco
Raytheon
RCA
TungSol
Westinghouse
Western Electric
KenRad
Amperex
Hytron
National Electric
National Union
Taylor
These were the major players from before WWII through the 1960s. People collect old tubes and antique radios and the collectors quite often want tubes of the original manufacture for their sets.
So look around on ebay and such you might have something worth selling.
Oh and WWII tubes would likely have JAN on them (Joint Army Navy) and the tube designation IE number – would be all numeric or the letters VT followed by a number. Such as 1625 or 6220 of VT101 or VT125 etc.
You can see I’m kind of an old radio nut though I have none of my own. Just an antenna matching unit I build on to an old ARC5 chassis.
One other thing. With few exceptions the stuff made for WWII was for the time the best that American companies could produce and often these companies would bend over backwards to come up with what was needed.
This attitude changed sometime in the late 1950s onward where government contracts were looked on as just another way to get money for little or nothing.
If a corporation intentionally make something sub par for the government during WWII they not only lost their contract but their reputation as well and would be hard put to sell anything after the war. This was simply not done and word got out.
I really ought to see if I still have that sack full and check eBay, but if I do, I know for sure I have: General Electric (the “G” one!), Raytheon, KenRad, RCA, Sylvania and pretty sure Zenith. All from dumpsters, and all in excellent condition.
Thanks for the suggestion!
Another good point that probably not that many people today realize.
Oh here a little story. When I was around 12 or so and had my Ham license, I was visiting with some family friends. The father was a Ham as well and while they were talking in his radio room, I went out and up the hill behind the place where there was a government facility. A Loran station or some such.
There was a car in the driveway there and the engineer came out and we talked. He gave me a tour of the station. All the transmitters etc.
After the tour he handed me one of the transmitting tubes he had just replaced. They replaced them every few months or so whether they need to or not. Just to make sure they were all good to go.
I walked back with the tube – it was very large – and showed it to my father and his Ham friend. Their eyes popped out and their jaws dropped. I told them that engineer gave it to me.
I did not know it at the time, but the price of a new one would have payed for a nice used car.
True story. Friends name was Art First W8CUM
He gave me the test for my Ham Radio license.
Whoa (jaw on ground), beautiful.
Just looked up and read about Ham Radio- far out!
Integrity I think is the term people are looking for on these kind of post CS. and for some reason it’s missing today.
Considered quaint and old fashioned and no longer applicable to life and business.
Interesting discussion, thanks. There are only a few tube manufacturers left, Russian, Chinese, maybe one or two others.
In my youth, (sixties) every local drug store had a tube tester.
Many guitar amps still use tubes, for players that prefer the sound made by tubes.
The phrase “day that will live in infamy” is up there. along with “one small step” , “icy bein ein berliner” and a few others, such as, those from the leaders of today
“eat your peas” , and “now go out and shop”
Thank you for the read and the comment, mafr, good stuff on the guitar amps and tube testers.
The notable difference between then and now is that back then there were no speech writers and now there are.
Having speech writers as we do today leaves a whole lot of wiggle room for verbal sleight of hand and parsing of words. The infamy speech was short, gut-wrenching, and it came from Roosevelt’s pen.
Your comment about (assumedly) Presidential sppechwriters got me wondering a bit, and I found mention of an Artur Schlesinger book on the subject. Commenting on his ‘tome’, Eric Duvall reports that FRD *did* use speechwriters, as did JFK…and forward, I’d imagine.
Good post, Rachel.
@ mafr: yes on the amp tubes, and funny on the ‘eat your
genetically modifiedpeas and go shopping’. ;o)Why most people in this country can’t look beyond their next trip to Macys.
Interesting, and I did not know that FDR used speechwriters. The whole subject is fascinating and I would like to read the Eric Duvall reports.
This article includes photographs of the Infamy Speech draft, showing changes to the typed text in Roosevelt’s handwriting, and it has the caption,
He also was noted for saying, “”Sit down, Grace,” he said. “I’m going before Congress tomorrow, and I’d like to dictate my message. It will be short.”2″ which makes me conclude that FDR was responsible for at least a good deal of the wording in the seven-minute Infamy Speech. However, only a historian familiar with the archives would be able to answer, I would assume. Anyway, the link is interesting:
http://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2001/winter/crafting-day-of-infamy-speech.html
Thank you so much for the read and comment and for the reference to more information on this interesting topic and “eat your (monstrous)
genetically modifiedpeas,” LOL!BTW Monsanto Company is on the docket for today’s SCOTUS conference; the company is represented by Seth Waxman, and it is a patent issue:
http://www.supremecourt.gov/Search.aspx?FileName=/docketfiles/11-796.htm
Bowman v Monsanto
“Issue: Whether the Federal Circuit erred by (1) refusing to find patent exhaustion – a doctrine which eliminates the right to control or prohibit the use of an invention after an authorized sale – in patented seeds that were sold for planting; and (2) creating an exception to the doctrine of patent exhaustion for self-replicating technologies.”
SCOTUSblog link.
Thanks again for stopping by, very much appreciated.
Can’t say for sure, but mafr may have referencing Bush’s advice for people as an aid to help ‘repair the economy’ post-meltdown. Had to laugh at Bloomberg’s reporting that consumer confidence is up; I never knew until lately that those reports are polling results, not actual buying. Bumfuzzling.
So yeah, to Bush shopping was Patriotic, big ‘P’. OBomba wants ya to re-fi your house, but…not really.
I really do think, though, that shopping’s become a national pastime for all the reasons that advertising works on people without enough self-regard and personal power.
Oh, plus the fact that so few people know how to repair things any more. ;o) I confess that our more austere budget causes me to repair even more things now, but there are days when patching the bed quilt for the umpteenth time, dragging miles of it through the sewing machine, yada, yada…gets tiresome.
*And* it’s getting harder to find fabrics, replacement parts of all kinds, and when ya do find some to order, they often send the wrong parts 50% of the time. (It’s a wendydavis law.) Mr. wd, on the other hand, found a site that still sells parts for our ’53 Ford 8N tractor, which he’s still crowin’ about.
“Consumption. This is the new national pastime. Fuck baseball, it’s consumption, the only true, lasting American value that’s left . . . buying things . . . People spending money they don’t have on things they don’t need . . . So they can max out their credit cards and spend the rest of their lives paying 18 percent interest on something that cost $12.50. And they didn’t like it when they got it home anyway. Not too bright, folks, not too fuckin’ bright.” – George Carlin
HA…Tell me about it. I actually have to make some of my radio and electronic parts. Or modify ones I already have. Thought I kind of enjoy it.
Though a lot of stuff I can still get over ebay. Usually from the Ukraine or Russia. Ex-soviet military stuff. Built very well.
Dunno, that particular speech may have totally been his; I’d imagine Schlesinger’s book would be more definitive than the short Duval piece.
The big thinking in legal circles use to be that privacy would be THE issue of the early 21st Century; turns out it’s a huge one, but so are IP issues increasingly. Funny after reading the commentary on that case at Scotusblog, that they’ll hear it. My totally uneducated guess is that it will stand in for a zillion like it. Pretty bold move by the seed-seller (forgot his name after twenty minutes, sorry).
Gonna be fun to see how Justice Kagan, former attorney to Monsanto, votes, eh? Oh, I forgot, she might recuse herself… ;o)
Well, I cannot in any way shape or form pretend to read the tea leaves of the Supreme Court well enough to say one way or another, but Justice Kagan has recused herself in the past, likely due to her involvement in the cases while she served as US Solicitor General. Here is an example of an active case where certiorari has been granted and Justice Kagan has recused. It is an affirmative action admissions policy case:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fisher_v._University_of_Texas
That said, combined with my up-front admission that I do not know the workings of patent law, but adding an uneducated guess anyway, I think the Supreme Court will hear the case before it where Monsanto is being challenged, if the case has that A-Zillion-Like-It potential.
So, I agree with you and I would not be surprised to see Justice Kagan sit this one out, although I do not believe a Supreme Court Justice has any obligation to recuse. In other words, even though the Supreme Court Justices can do anything they wish, a Justice Kagan recusal would be consistent with her history of subscribing to the school of thought that Justices should disqualify to prevent the appearance of unfairness.
Someone more familiar with SCOTUS practice would be able to answer this, perhaps.
At any rate, we should know by looking at the “Orders List,” which will be published at 9:30 AM October 1, 2012 on SupremeCourt.gov.
hi
Bush said that after the twin towers attack. That’s what patriotic Americans should do. shop.
And now even baseball has been severely financializedn not quite as fun now. ;o)
Good tip on ebay, but PayPal? Eek.
Good-o, then, mafr. I thought that’s what you’s meant. ;o)
Thanks, C-S; we’ll be watching. In India, Monsanto has claimed boatloads of patents on wild plants, seriously, and somehow US judges have declared them valid. I have no idea how that could work, but Vandana Shiva has made several videos about it.
They’re just winning on too many fronts, so kicking back in as many ways as possible is crucial. Globally, of course, and the leaked TPP negotiations have a lot of IP provisions for…GMOs. Christ, plus corporate immunity from lawsuits in many directions. Leaked; we’ll see.