The American Nation A History of the United States, Combined Volume (14th Edition)

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
Women’s Contributions to the War Effort 721

soon doing “men’s work” in the shipyards. The Seattle
taxicab union objected to women drivers on the
ground that “drivers are forced to do things and go
places that would be embarrassing for a woman to do.”
These male attitudes lost force in the face of the
escalating demand for labor. That employers usually
did not have to pay women as much as men made
them attractive, as did the fact that they were not sub-
ject to the draft. A breakthrough occurred when the
big Detroit automobile manufacturers agreed to
employ women on their wartime production lines.
Soon women were working not only as riveters and
cab drivers but also as welders, as machine tool opera-
tors, and in dozens of other occupations formerly the
exclusive domain of men.
Women took wartime jobs for many reasons other
than the obvious economic ones. Patriotism, of course,
was important, but so were the excitement of entering
an entirely new world, the desire for independence,
even loneliness. “It’s thrilling work, and exciting, and
something women have never done before,” one
woman reported. She was talking about driving a taxi.
Black women workers had a particularly difficult
time: employers often hesitating to hire them because
they were black, and black men looking down on them


because they were women. But the need for willing
hands was infinite. Sybil Lewis of Sapula, Oklahoma,
went to Los Angeles and found a job as a waitress in a
black restaurant. Then she responded to a notice of a
training program at Lockheed Aircraft, took the
course, and became a riveter making airplane gas tanks.
When an unfriendly foreman gave her a less attractive
assignment, she moved on to Douglas Aircraft. By
1943 she was working as a welder in a shipyard.
Few wartime jobs were easy, and for women there
were special burdens, not the least of which was the
prejudice of many of the men they worked with. For
married women there was housework to do after a long
day. One War Manpower Commission bureaucrat fig-
ured out that Detroit defense plants were losing
100,000 woman-hours a month because of employees
taking a day off to do the family laundry. Although the
government made some effort to provide day-care facil-
ities, there were never nearly enough; this was one rea-
son why relatively few women with small children
entered the labor market during the war.
The war also affected the lives of women who did
not take jobs. Families by the tens and hundreds of
thousands pulled up stakes and moved to the centers
of war production, such as Detroit and southern

ARKANSAS

KANSAS

NEBRASKA

MISSOURI

IOWA

WISCONSIN

MINNESOTA

TEXAS

SOUTH
DAKOTA

NORTH
DAKOTA

NEW
MEXICO

OKLAHOMA

MONTANA

WYOMING

COLORADO

ARIZONA

UTAH

NEVADA

OREGON

WASHINGTON

CALIFORNIA

IDAHO

ILLINOIS

MISS.

LOUISIANA

CANADA

MEXICO

Gulf of
Mexico

Assembly Center

Military Area: West
Coast

Relocation Center
Justice Department
Internment Camp
Citizen Isolation Camp

Puyallup
Portland

Turlock

Poston

Pinedale

Manzanar

Crystal City

Merced

Tule Lake Minidoka

Topaz

Rohwer
Jerome

Moab
Leupp

Santa Fe

Granada
(Amanche)

Heart
Mountain

Missoula
Bismarck

Mayer

Gila

Marysville
Sacramento
Stockton
Tanforan
Salinas
Fresno
Tulare
Santa Anita
Pomona

Japanese Relocation from the West Coast, 1942–1945Japanese and Japanese Americans who lived in the West
Coast Military Area were ordered to report to various “assembly centers,” from which they were then deported to
inland internment or isolation camps.
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