The Impact of the Second World War on Civil Rights.

African American Soldiers in the Second World War
Sources
Source: Lyrics to ‘Uncle Sam Says’ by Josh White
Well, airplanes flying close to land and sea,
Everybody flying but a Negro like me.
Uncle Sam says, ‘Your place is on the ground;
When I fly my airplanes, don’t want no Negro ’round.’
The same thing for the Navy when ships goes to sea,
All they got is a mess boy’s job for me.
Source: VAhistorical.org
The war years were tumultuous, but blacks sensed that out of this ferment change might come. After the bleak racism of the 1920s and the economic disaster of the 1930s, there was hope. African American newspapers conceived the “Double V” campaign—victory over both America’s enemies abroad and over Jim Crow segregation at home. In this hopeful atmosphere the NAACP increased the percentage of registered black voters in the South from 2 to 12 percent. Membership in the NAACP itself increased from 18,000 before the war to nearly 500,000 at its close. Quotation from text on this page.
Links
BBC. Better Day Coming. Part of an excellent article tracing the development of the Civil Rights Movement in the USA.
Living History. Very good article about the way that the war changed views about Civil Rights.
VA History. Provides background information about the impact of war.
Providence. Civil Rights in World War Two.
America in the 1920s and 1930s
USA at the start of the 20th Century – Causes of the Economic Boom – Impact of Economic Growth in the 1920’s – Agriculture in the 1920’s – The “Roaring” Twenties – Prohibition – Ku Klux Klan in the 20’s – Causes of the Wall Street Crash – Consequences of the Wall Street Crash – The Great Depression – The New Deal – Opposition to the New Deal – Evaluation of the New Deal
The United States c1945-1971
The Red Scare – Impact of the Second World War on Civil Rights – Civil Rights in 1950 – Brown v Topeka Board of Education – Little Rock High School – Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Protest – Martin Luther King Jnr – Nation of Islam and Malcolm X – The Black Panthers – Ku Klux Klan in the 1960’s – March on Washington – USA: Civil Rights Acts in the 1960s – Immigration Act of 1965 – Chicano movement and Civil Rights for Hispanic Americans – College Sit In’s and Student Protests – Women’s Rights – Native Americans and Civil Rights