Book Creator

World War II

by 4B

Pages 6 and 7 of 69

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Women During World War II
By: Audrey Taylor
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INTRODUCTION
Can you imagine everything changing suddenly? That a lot of the people you love were gone or going away? That’s what a lot of women had to deal with after the U.S entered World War II. After most of the fathers, husbands and sons were gone, a lot of jobs needed to be filled in for, and bosses were paying WAY more than usual because of the needed jobs that the war left.

Causes of the War
 Adolf Hitler wanted to take over countries and make them fit his ideal race ideas. He started by taking over Czechoslovakia while the Allied leaders just stood there and watched. But when he invaded Poland, Britain and France declared war.
Then, Hitler formed an alliance with Italy and Japan; they called themselves the Axis Powers. At this point, the U.S had still remained techianally neutral ( even though they supplied the British with guns ) and didn’t want to fight again because of the 40 million people worldwide who had died in World War II.
But when Japan bombed Pearl Harbor trying to make the U.S stay out of the war, their plan backfired, and the next day the U.S declared war. 
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Women Start Getting Jobs 
 Even though women got the right to vote in 1919, they were still seen as delicate and not as good as men. But with most of the eligible men away fighting the U.S needed artillery, and we needed a lot of it. Now that they can vote everywhere, those same women that were seen as inanimate objects 20 years ago, they realize that they can do so much more than just sit at home and cook and clean! Of course not all women’s husbands wanted them to work, but the U.S needed workers for their jobs. When we first entered the war, ( partially because we gave Britain all our guns) the U.S did not have enough weapons.

We needed artillery and with a lot of the people who made it at war, companies started offering a higher wage. ( Some companies still didn’t want to hire women, but they didn't really have a choice) As Penny Colman put it in her book Rosie the Riveter, “As school teacher a woman earned $0.75 an hour, but as a shipyard worker she earned $1.25!” Of course the conditions weren’t perfect, but they were still getting more money than they did previously!
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Fun fact: More than 10 million women joined the war effort in WWII!
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