The Great War to the Roaring Twenties
The United States Prepares for War
Wilson knew that the key to America's success in war lay largely in its preparation. With both the Allied and enemy forces entrenched in battles of attrition, and supplies running low on both sides, the United States needed, first and foremost, to secure enough men, money, food, and supplies to be successful. The country needed to first supply the basic requirements to fight a war, and then work to ensure military leadership, public support, and strategic planning.
The Ingredients of War
The
First World War was, in many ways, a war of attrition, and the United
States needed a large army to help the Allies. In 1917, when the United
States declared war on Germany, the U.S. Army ranked seventh in the
world in terms of size, with an estimated 200,000 enlisted men. In
contrast, at the outset of the war in 1914, the German force included
4.5 million men, and the country ultimately mobilized over eleven
million soldiers over the course of the entire war.
To compose a
fighting force, Congress passed the Selective Service Act in 1917, which
initially required all men aged twenty-one through thirty to register
for the draft. In 1918, the act was expanded to include all men between
eighteen and forty-five. Through a campaign of patriotic appeals, as
well as an administrative system that allowed men to register at their
local draft boards rather than directly with the federal government,
over ten million men registered for the draft on the very first day. By
the war's end, twenty-two million men had registered for the U.S. Army
draft. Five million of these men were actually drafted, another 1.5
million volunteered, and over 500,000 additional men signed up for the
navy or marines. In all, two million men participated in combat
operations overseas. Among the volunteers were also twenty thousand
women, a quarter of whom went to France to serve as nurses or in
clerical positions.
But the draft also provoked opposition, and
almost 350,000 eligible Americans refused to register for military
service. About 65,000 of these defied the conscription law as
conscientious objectors, mostly on the grounds of their deeply held
religious beliefs. Such opposition was not without risks, and whereas
most objectors were never prosecuted, those who were found guilty at
military hearings received stiff punishments: Courts handed down over
two hundred prison sentences of twenty years or more, and seventeen
death sentences.
With the size of the army growing, the U.S.
government next needed to ensure that there were adequate supplies - in
particular food and fuel - for both the soldiers and the home front.
Concerns over shortages led to the passage of the Lever Food and Fuel
Control Act, which empowered the president to control the production,
distribution, and price of all food products during the war effort.
Using this law, Wilson created both a Fuel Administration and a Food
Administration. The Fuel Administration, run by Harry Garfield, created
the concept of "fuel holidays," encouraging civilian Americans to do
their part for the war effort by rationing fuel on certain days.
Garfield also implemented "daylight saving time" for the first time in
American history, shifting the clocks to allow more productive daylight
hours. Herbert Hoover coordinated the Food Administration, and he too
encouraged volunteer rationing by invoking patriotism. With the slogan
"food will win the war," Hoover encouraged "Meatless Mondays,"
"Wheatless Wednesdays," and other similar reductions, with the hope of
rationing food for military use.
Wilson also created the War
Industries Board, run by Bernard Baruch, to ensure adequate military
supplies. The War Industries Board had the power to direct shipments of
raw materials, as well as to control government contracts with private
producers. Baruch used lucrative contracts with guaranteed profits to
encourage several private firms to shift their production over to
wartime materials. For those firms that refused to cooperate, Baruch's
government control over raw materials provided him with the necessary
leverage to convince them to join the war effort, willingly or not.
As
a way to move all the personnel and supplies around the country
efficiently, Congress created the U.S. Railroad Administration.
Logistical problems had led trains bound for the East Coast to get
stranded as far away as Chicago. To prevent these problems, Wilson
appointed William McAdoo, the Secretary of the Treasury, to lead this
agency, which had extraordinary war powers to control the entire
railroad industry, including traffic, terminals, rates, and wages.
Almost
all the practical steps were in place for the United States to fight a
successful war. The only step remaining was to figure out how to pay for
it. The war effort was costly - with an eventual price tag in excess of
$32 billion by 1920 - and the government needed to finance it.
The
Liberty Loan Act allowed the federal government to sell liberty bonds
to the American public, extolling citizens to "do their part" to help
the war effort and bring the troops home. The government ultimately
raised $23 billion through liberty bonds. Additional monies came from
the government's use of federal income tax revenue, which was made
possible by the passage of the Sixteenth Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution in 1913. With the financing, transportation, equipment,
food, and men in place, the United States was ready to enter the war.
The next piece the country needed was public support.
Controlling Dissent
Although
all the physical pieces required to fight a war fell quickly into
place, the question of national unity was another concern. The American
public was strongly divided on the subject of entering the war. While
many felt it was the only choice, others protested strongly, feeling it
was not America's war to fight. Wilson needed to ensure that a nation of
diverse immigrants, with ties to both sides of the conflict, thought of
themselves as American first, and their home country's nationality
second. To do this, he initiated a propaganda campaign, pushing the
"America First" message, which sought to convince Americans that they
should do everything in their power to ensure an American victory, even
if that meant silencing their own criticisms.
American First, American Above All
At
the outset of the war, one of the greatest challenges for Wilson was
the lack of national unity. The country, after all, was made up of
immigrants, some recently arrived and some well-established, but all
with ties to their home countries. These home countries included Germany
and Russia, as well as Great Britain and France. In an effort to ensure
that Americans eventually supported the war, the government pro-war
propaganda campaign focused on driving home that message.
Regardless
of how patriotic immigrants might feel and act, however, an anti-German
xenophobia overtook the country. German Americans were persecuted, and
their businesses shunned, whether or not they voiced any objection to
the war. Some cities changed the names of the streets and buildings if
they were German. Libraries withdrew German-language books from the
shelves, and German Americans began to avoid speaking German for fear of
reprisal. For some immigrants, the war was fought on two fronts: on the
battlefields of France and again at home.
The Wilson
administration created the Committee of Public Information under
director George Creel, a former journalist, just days after the United
States declared war on Germany. Creel employed artists, speakers,
writers, and filmmakers to develop a propaganda machine. The goal was to
encourage all Americans to make sacrifices during the war and, equally
importantly, to hate all things German. Through efforts such as the
establishment of "loyalty leagues" in ethnic immigrant communities,
Creel largely succeeded in molding an anti-German sentiment around the
country. The result? Some schools banned the teaching of the German
language and some restaurants refused to serve frankfurters, sauerkraut,
or hamburgers, instead serving "liberty dogs with liberty cabbage" and
"liberty sandwiches". Symphonies refused to perform music written by
German composers. The hatred of Germans grew so widespread that, at one
point, at a circus, audience members cheered when, in an act gone
horribly wrong, a Russian bear mauled a German animal trainer (whose
ethnicity was more a part of the act than reality).
In addition
to its propaganda campaign, the U.S. government also tried to secure
broad support for the war effort with repressive legislation. The
Trading with the Enemy Act of 1917 prohibited individual trade with an
enemy nation and banned the use of the postal service for disseminating
any literature deemed treasonous by the postmaster general. That same
year, the Espionage Act prohibited giving aid to the enemy by spying, or
espionage, as well as any public comments that opposed the American war
effort. Under this act, the government could impose fines and
imprisonment of up to twenty years. The Sedition Act, passed in 1918,
prohibited any criticism or disloyal language against the federal
government and its policies, the U.S. Constitution, the military
uniform, or the American flag. More than two thousand persons were
charged with violating these laws, and many received prison sentences of
up to twenty years. Immigrants faced deportation as punishment for
their dissent. Not since the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798 had the
federal government so infringed on the freedom of speech of loyal
American citizens.
In the months and years after these laws came
into being, over one thousand people were convicted for their violation,
primarily under the Espionage and Sedition Acts. More importantly, many
more war critics were frightened into silence. One notable prosecution
was that of Socialist Party leader Eugene Debs, who received a ten-year
prison sentence for encouraging draft resistance, which, under the
Espionage Act, was considered "giving aid to the enemy". Prominent
Socialist Victor Berger was also prosecuted under the Espionage Act and
subsequently twice denied his seat in Congress, to which he had been
properly elected by the citizens of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. One of the
more outrageous prosecutions was that of a film producer who released a
film about the American Revolution: Prosecutors found the film
seditious, and a court convicted the producer to ten years in prison for
portraying the British, who were now American allies, as the obedient
soldiers of a monarchical empire.
State and local officials, as
well as private citizens, aided the government's efforts to investigate,
identify, and crush subversion. Over 180,000 communities created local
"councils of defense," which encouraged members to report any antiwar
comments to local authorities. This mandate encouraged spying on
neighbors, teachers, local newspapers, and other individuals. In
addition, a larger national organization - the American Protective
League - received support from the Department of Justice to spy on
prominent dissenters, as well as open their mail and physically assault
draft evaders.
Understandably, opposition to such repression
began mounting. In 1917, Roger Baldwin formed the National Civil
Liberties Bureau - a forerunner to the American Civil Liberties Union,
which was founded in 1920 - to challenge the government's policies
against wartime dissent and conscientious objection. In 1919, the case
of Schenck v. United States went to the U.S. Supreme Court to challenge
the constitutionality of the Espionage and Sedition Acts. The case
concerned Charles Schenck, a leader in the Socialist Party of
Philadelphia, who had distributed fifteen thousand leaflets, encouraging
young men to avoid conscription. The court ruled that during a time of
war, the federal government was justified in passing such laws to quiet
dissenters. The decision was unanimous, and in the court's opinion,
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote that such dissent presented a "clear
and present danger" to the safety of the United States and the
military, and was therefore justified. He further explained how the
First Amendment right of free speech did not protect such dissent, in
the same manner that a citizen could not be freely permitted to yell
"fire!" in a crowded theater, due to the danger it presented. Congress
ultimately repealed most of the Espionage and Sedition Acts in 1921, and
several who were imprisoned for violation of those acts were then
quickly released. But the Supreme Court's deference to the federal
government's restrictions on civil liberties remained a volatile topic
in future wars.