Chapter One

America on Edge

Saturday December 6, 1941

America, at the beginning of the 1940s, had been grappling with efforts to climb out of the Depression. Pumping money into the economy in New Deal relief and social programs afforded uneven gains that had the middle class and well to do comfortable, visiting the World’s Fair (held in New York in 1939-40), and dining out. In 1941 home construction exceeded all years dating back to 1929. Oil production was up. Steel production was up.

But that still left 10,000,000 unemployed.1 The bank, business, and farm failures, along with the devastating dust bowl storms had driven millions into hunger and poverty but now some relief was on the horizon in the terrible form of the war in Europe. America had its eye on the war and, against its own will, recognized the need to prepare for war’s eventuality. Through a succession of confusing agencies, the first programs of economic management and defense spending were initiated. But the biggest boost to US economic growth became Europe’s need for arms.

While Americans felt the distant fire burning in Europe, it was not their fire. They were deeply divided in their views about the war in Europe, now more than three years old. Most Americans believed that the US would be drawn into the war including a substantial minority that wanted no part of a “war on foreign soil.” WWI was still a sore memory just twenty years past. Americans had endured enough anguish from that conflict and from the suffering borne during the Depression. They felt they deserved the peace and prosperity they were enjoying, but they went about their lives under the gray cloud of war’s inevitability.

With the outbreak of hostilities abroad, the United States worked to repatriate approximately 100,000 Americans who were caught up in Europe. The Special Division was created within the US State Department to handle matters involving the war and giving assistance to Americans who were abroad and being repatriated. Breckinridge Long was given responsibility of the Special Division. The US government chartered six ships from United States Lines to bring Americans home. By early November, 75,000 Americans had been repatriated from Europe.2

Isolationists held that the war in Europe was a dispute among foreign nations and that the United States should not become involved. One US Senator, Key Pittman of Nevada, went as far as to suggest that Britain should surrender at once. Isolationists advocated a two-part policy of building up the US defenses and pursuing neutrality. They believed that neutrality combined with the power of the US military plus the protection afforded by the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans would keep Americans safe. Congress passed a series of Neutrality Acts in the late 1930s. The acts banned American citizens from trading with nations at war, loaning them money, or traveling on their ships, all to prevent involvement in foreign wars.3

Organizations like the America First Committee worked to influence public opinion. Their efforts included mass rallies and propaganda campaigns through print and radio. The flyer Charles Lindbergh, an American hero, was a powerful spokesman. Speaking in 1941 of an “independent American destiny,” Lindbergh asserted that the United States ought to fight any nation that attempted to meddle in the affairs of the Western Hemisphere but, he argued, American soldiers ought not to have to “fight everybody in the world who prefers some other system of life to ours.”

Father Charles Coughlin, a Catholic priest based in Detroit, commanded a following of millions of Americans with his radio broadcasts, The Hour of Power. He used his broadcasts to inspire and publicize the creation of a political association called the Christian Front, a militia-like organization which promised to defend the country from communists and Jews. He founded a journal, Social Justice, to advocate his isolationist, ant-Semitic positions.

Five American women also earned prominence engaging in isolationist activities. In September 1939 Laura Ingalls (the famous aviator, not the author), shocked Americans and the Washington DC police as she flew over the White House dropping what appeared to be bombs. They were pro-Nazi, anti-war pamphlets. Ingalls, a regular America First Committee speaker, who was in the secret employ of the German government, was later arrested.

The leaflets she dropped were written by Catherine Curtis who was both an anti-communist and a strong anti-Semite. A former actress, Ms Curtis was a leader in a large, loosely affiliated organization called the Mothers’ Movement (MOM). One Chicago branch of the organization, originated by Lyral Clark Van Hyning, stood out: We, the Mothers Mobilize for America. She claimed 150,000 members and edited a publication called Women’s Voice with a circulation of 20,000. Her anti-Semitic histrionics were so extreme as to be almost laughable. (Harry S. Truman’s middle initial stood for Solomon and he was a Jew.)

She said this about her followers:

My women are not intelligent. In fact, they are rather stupid. But they are a group of women who will work hard for me, and that’s what’s important. Later, perhaps, we will be able to attract a higher type of women.

Elizabeth Dilling organized anti-war mothers’ sit ins and other demonstrations against intervention, Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) and his “Jew Deal”; her name for the New Deal. She especially attacked the efforts to provide Britain with ships and arms. Her third book, The Octopus, was so anti-Semitic she published it under a pseudonym. Ms Dilling’s public views and her on again/off again divorce from her lawyer husband gained Americans’ attention in the tabloids.

The most strident among the Mothers’ Movements stood Agnes Waters who testified before Congress several times. Her hate-filled speech added Black people and the British to Jews, communists, and the Roosevelts to be pilloried. She was a failed presidential candidate in 1942.

Dilling and another woman were put on trial in 1944 for sedition. The trial went on for months, the stress from which probably led to the death of the judge. Many months later, the proceedings, like the war, burned away to nothing and these women faded from public view.4 Their performances might have been thought of as just a side show had not their message been so hate-filled and contrary to America’s best interest: to prepare the home front for war.

Those favoring intervention included The Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies (CDAAA), founded in May 1940 by William Allen White, a prominent Republican publisher in Kansas, and was directed by Clark Eichelberger, the head of the League of Nations Association. The CDAAA, with an estimated membership of 750,000, staged rallies and performances, took out full-page newspaper ads, and handed out flyers in an effort to gain support for aiding Great Britain. After Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, the committee dropped “by Aiding the Allies” from its name (becoming CDA) since many members opposed communism.5

Another interventionist organization, Fight for Freedom (FFF), was founded in April 1941 and headed by journalist Ulric Bell, who aggressively advocated entering World War II to defend both Great Britain and democratic values. Fight for Freedom claimed journalists, writers, movie stars, and politicians as supporters. Walt Disney Studios produced a program cover for a FFF rally featuring Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and Goofy.6

The two organizations often worked together and coordinated with President Franklin Roosevelt’s aides or British propagandists to rally public support. The democracies of Western Europe, they argued, were a critical line of defense against Hitler’s fast-growing strength. These organizations also informed Americans that Germany was murdering civilians in the countries it occupied. In November 1941, the CDA sponsored rallies throughout the country, protesting the Nazi regime’s mass murder campaign.

The fray was joined by an extraordinary organization called the German American Bund formed, their leaders said, to represent Americans of German descent. They worked to align themselves with the America First groups against any intervention against Germany. In the late 1930s the truth became clear that they were, in fact, pressing the policies of Nazi Germany.

With a membership estimated to be 25,000, they rallied and paraded in paramilitary uniforms and opened youth-oriented camps in several states. Their most visible rally was held in Madison Square Garden in 1939. (Marshall Curry produced a chilling short documentary about the rally, “A Night at the Garden.”) By the end of the decade, with several of its leaders arrested and American sentiment tilting against Germany, the Bund fell apart. Its leader, Fritz Julius Kuhn, was imprisoned and later deported to Germany.7

Americans were aware that western Europe was not the only part of the world engulfed in war. Japan had invaded Manchuria and was engaged in all out attacks on China and other southeast Asian neighbors in an order to establish a Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. Italy, under fascist leader Benito Mussolini, had attacked Ethiopia, essentially with impunity.

Spain was embroiled in a vicious civil war brought by the fascist, Generalissimo Francisco Franco, against the Republican government. Franco’s efforts benefitted from strong support from Germany under Adolf Hitler, while the Republicans were aided by the USSR under Josef Stalin.

America was (re)discovering Latin America. Stories were circulating that Hitler was making plans to sneak into the hemisphere via sending troops on freighters or by using commercial airlines to ferry civilian-dressed Gestapo. Axis partner Italy’s Alitalia Airlines also had plenty of routes into Latin America.

Americans saw the Panama Canal as very vulnerable. Rumors had the canal bombed and ammunition for canal defenses blown up. Reports of a landslide at Culebra Cut brought fears that with the Pacific Fleet cut off from the Atlantic, the East Coast was vulnerable to attack. There was indeed a landslide at Culebra Cut but it was in 1913.

The interest in South America grew to the point that FDR appointed Nelson Rockefeller, whose family had long had dealings south of the border, to head cultural and commercial relations with the region.

Individual Americans also took greater notice of South America. Spanish lessons became popular. Radio networks beamed to and from Latin America. Nightlife took on a Latin flavor, with rumba and samba bands playing in such venues as the Copacabana and the Latin Quarter. Even Broadway joined in with Cole Porter’s Panama Hattie starring Ethel Merman.8 A genuine Latin star also arrived on the scene – Carmen Miranda – known for her fruit castle headdress and deliciously thick accent.

All this frivolity occurred under the gathering clouds of war. The Saturday Evening Post declared, “the situation is abnormal. The country is neither at war nor at peace. Not being at war, it is reluctant to embrace a war economy; and yet on the other hand, an emergency defense program in which time is the crucial factor, a program moreover that entails imperative expenditures comparable in magnitude to wartime expenditures cannot be carried through successfully under a peace economy.”9

It was as though no one wanted to take the final step. Americans seemed to want to be pushed pulled or kicked into the war. In Washington men jostled and nudged, daring and egging one another on.10

Commentator and analyst Raymond Clapper said this:

“We say goodbye now to the land we have known. Like lovers about to be separated by a long journey, we sit in this hour of mellow twilight, thinking fondly of the past wondering…It’s been a grand life in America. We have had to work hard. But usually there was a good reward. Man has gained steadily in security and dignity in hours of leisure, in those things that made his family comfortable and gave lift to his spirit. Under his feet, no matter how rough the road, he felt the firm security of a nation fundamentally strong, safe from any enemy, able to live at peace by wishing to. In every one of us lived the promise of America. Now we see the distant fire rolling toward us…It is still some distance away, but the evil wind blows it towards us.”11

As vigorous as the isolationists made their arguments, by 1940, the worsening global situation was impossible to ignore. Nazi Germany had annexed Austria and Czechoslovakia. They had conquered Poland, Belgium, the Netherlands, and overwhelmed France. Great Britain was the only major European power left standing against Hitler’s war machine. The urgency of the situation intensified the debate in the United States over whether American interests were better served by staying out or getting involved. Even so, the CDA and the Red Cross raised $14,000,000 in one week in June 1940.

Americans were startled in September of 1940, more than a year before the attack on Pearl Harbor, when FDR, deeply concerned by the situation in Europe and by Japan’s aggression in the Pacific, declared a state of national emergency. With only 175,000 men in uniform, the US had an army smaller than even Switzerland. To increase the size of the Army and National Guard, FDR alarmed the nation by instituting the Selective Training and Service Act, which required all men between the ages of 21 and 35 to register for the draft. This was the first peacetime draft in United States’ history. The draft was approved by Congress with the condition that the first 800,000 men called up could serve only in the Western hemisphere. (The announcement of the draft prompted a surge in marriages.)

Impatient, some Americans were not waiting for the draft. Dozens of home-grown militias and defense groups sprang up. Home guard units ranged in size from Carson City Nevada’s 25-man unit to Miami’s 400-man McAllister Volunteers. One of the largest guard units was an all-female militia in Chapel Hill, North Carolina formed by Mrs Virginia Nowell and commanding nearly 1000 members. Another all-female guard named themselves The Molly Pitcher Rifle Brigade in honor of the Revolutionary female gunner. Their purpose was to pick off descending parachutists. Though not encouraged by the federal government, cities and towns funded, armed and drilled guard units. The Military Training Camp Association operated ten camps where participants paid $43.50 to be awakened at dawn, fed military rations, and be drilled all day as though they were in a military boot camp.12

FDR’s announcement and the institution of the draft jogged Americans out of any lingering hope for peace. War was on the horizon. People began wearing patriotic pins and flags. In fact, flag makers enjoyed record breaking sales. Anything red, white and blue made cash registers ring. A real nationalistic unity settled in. A patriotic song “God Bless America” sung by Kate Smith became a best seller as did the wistful ballad “The Last Time I Saw Paris.”

From this point until late 1945, Americans never put the war out of mind. It perhaps was this mood that pulled the president up from low poll numbers in his bid for a third term. Americans chose to go with FDR, the man who seemed most ready to re-arm America.

Other important actions were taken before Pearl Harbor:

The Naval Expansion Act of 1938 demanded a 20% increase in naval strength.

The 45th Infantry Division was activated from reserve to active status.

Construction begins on the Pentagon.

The government began issuing Defense Bonds which later became known as War Bonds.

In June 1940, the Alien Registration Act, known as the Smith Act was passed. The act required that each alien living within the US go to their local post office and register their alien status with the government.

On May 20, 1941, more than six months before the attack, FDR set up the Office of Civilian Defense (OCD) to coordinate state and federal measures to protect civilians in a war-related emergency. The OCD organized the United States Citizens Defense Corps to recruit and train volunteers to perform essential tasks. (More on Civil Defense in Chapter Three.)

In October 1941, the US rejected offers by the Japanese government that would have ended the economic embargo. In a message dated November 26, 1941, the US further called for the unconditional pullback of Japanese forces in Indochina and the Far East, and the renunciation by Japan of the use of force in the region.

The Tuskegee Airmen, the first African American soldiers, successfully complete their training and enter the Army Air Corps. Almost 1000 aviators will be produced as America’s first African American military pilots.

The Fifth Column is Here, by George Britt, a book declaring that more than a million people in the US were actively sympathetic to its enemies becomes a best seller. Espionage hysteria breaks out. In response the Dies Committee and the House Un-American Activities Committee are born. The FBI, under J. Edgar Hoover, becomes a spy-chasing apparatus. (More on this in Chapter Eight.)

In November 1941, the 87th Mountain Division is formed with 3500 volunteers from the National Ski Patrol.

As the Germans began their thrust west and rolled over one city after another, a re-elected President Roosevelt delivered a fireside chat about events in Europe and about his plan for an extraordinary mobilization for war production. He prepared the American people for sacrifice. The chat became known as “the arsenal of democracy” speech.

The president felt that the only way for the US to stay out of the war was to arm and equip those fighting fascism. As a last-ditch effort to stay within the neutrality acts of the 1930s, the president announced what became termed Lend-Lease. Under this program the US would provide arms – war ships, planes, and munitions – in exchange for “repayment in kind”; often leases on the debtor county’s land which could be used for US military bases. The material could not be transported on US flag ships. Through some very savvy political maneuvering, his program was passed by Congress early the following year.

Everyday Americans supported Lend-Lease. When the first of fifty destroyers left Boston Harbor, Bostonians lined bridges, blew car horns, and cheered. Americans were now all in for support of Britain. All over the country cities and towns held fund raisers for relief. Women made socks and sweaters for refugees and bandages for soldiers. Dozens of organizations, such as Allied Relief Fund and Bundles for Britain, collected money or other relief items. Bundles for Britain had more than a thousand chapters raising needed supplies.

In support of our allies and as an act of national defense, all German and Italian assets in the United States were frozen, their consulates were ordered to close, and their staff directed to leave the country. The actions hit Americans of Italian and German descent hard. They saw it as a sign of what was to come.

Some accounts of the era wrongly describe America as totally unprepared for war. Those accounts missed the already robust, though fitful, buildup of government conversion of civilian production to arms production. (Events will show that only six months after Pearl Harbor the US was outproducing all other nations in war material.) In 1940, Franklin Roosevelt, alarmed by Japan’s expansionism into the rubber producing countries of Southeast Asia, called rubber a “strategic and critical material,” and created the Rubber Reserve Company (RRC), to stockpile natural rubber and regulate synthetic rubber production. Firestone, B.P. Goodrich, Goodyear, and U.S. Rubber agreed to work together to solve the nation’s wartime rubber needs.13

Japan’s aggression further caused the president to abrogate the US trade agreement with Japan, imposing an embargo on scrap iron and oil, and freezing all Japanese assets in the US, essentially breaking relations with Japan.

For some American sailors, World War II began before December 7, 1941. During the latter part of 1941, US Navy ships provided escorts for convoys bound for Great Britain carrying war materials from our “Arsenal of Democracy.” Because German U-boats considered all ships in the convoys fair game, it was only a matter of time before the US Navy became involved in a shooting war.

One such escort, the USS Kearny (DD-432) was escorting a convoy in the North Atlantic. On 16 October, three convoy merchant ships were torpedoed. The Kearny immediately began dropping depth charges and continued to barrage throughout the night. At the beginning of the midwatch, October 17, a torpedo struck Kearny on her starboard side. Regaining power in the forward fire room, Kearny steamed to Iceland at 10 knots, arriving October 19. The USS Kearny lost eleven sailors; Twenty-two others were injured in the attack.14

Disaster struck again in the early morning hours of October 31. While escorting convoy HX-156, the American destroyer USS Reuben James was torpedoed and sunk with the loss of 115 out of 160 crewmen, including all officers. Although not the first US Navy ship torpedoed before the war, the Reuben James was the first one lost. After the news of the sinking reached America, many concerned people wrote letters to the Navy to find out the fate of friends or loved ones. Sadly, most of the country ignored the sinking. One who did not was folk singer Woody Guthrie, who wrote his now famous song immediately after the incident:

Tell me, what were their names?

Tell me, what were their names?

Did you have a friend on the good Reuben James?15

President Roosevelt declared in his Navy Day address, “We have wished to avoid shooting. But the shooting has started. And history has recorded who fired the first shot. In the long run, however, all that will matter is who fired the last shot.”

Inside Washington’s corridors, fierce political battles waged. On one side were those who foresaw war as imminent and the country’s present capabilities, even for defense, as weak, and on the other stood those who championed the status quo and worried about corporate opportunism. Often the battle was between New Deal liberals and the business community.

Production capacity emerged as a political issue. Americans bought a record 3.6 million automobiles in 1941 as part of the post-Depression surge in market demand. But as the US economy was rebounding, demands for military production for our allies and our own defense also rose sharply. In May 1940, President Roosevelt called for Americans to produce 185,000 airplanes, 120,000 tanks, 55,000 anti-aircraft guns and 18 million tons of merchant shipping in two years.16 To the country’s benefit, the tough work of learning how to set priorities and allocate production capacities began well before December 7. Defense orders traditionally were placed with a heavy influence of politics. The new efforts got off to a slow and rocky start in 1940 with commissions, departments, bureaus, boards, and individuals jockeying for power as will be seen in Chapter Two.

The first round of spending to hit Americans, beginning in mid-1940, was the construction of military bases and defense plants. In addition to the facilities themselves were the infrastructure elements of support, businesses, and housing. Small towns became cities almost overnight with the expected disruptions, petty graft, and cultural upheaval. However, no one could deny the benefits of economic resurgence. By mid-1941 most Americans were better off than at any time including the 1920s. They had money and were looking for ways to spend it.

The ballooning demand triggered inflation, creating another issue for President Roosevelt and Washington to deal with. They chose to establish the Office of Price Administration (OPA) as the vehicle. It would come to be one of the two most far-reaching agencies of the war, regulating the rationing program and setting ceiling prices on goods, rents, and services as will be seen in Chapter Four.

SNAPSHOTS OF LIFE IN AMERICA IN 1941

January

The year began with the inauguration of President Roosevelt for a third term. Later that month, Lindbergh testified before Congress, pressing his views on a neutrality pact with Hitler.

US Ambassador to Japan, Joseph Grew, reported on a rumor overheard at a diplomatic reception about a planned surprise attack upon Pearl Harbor.

The White House in early 1941 was quite a tourist attraction. None of the four gates had guard houses. There were no guards, other than to direct traffic and urge that cameras be left in the check room. Thousands of visitors wandered through the formal rooms every day. Reporters filing into the president’s office did not have to show ID unless they were unknown.17

February

Washington creates the United Services Organization (USO) to entertain American troops.

Winston Churchill, in a worldwide broadcast, asks the United States to show its support by sending arms to the British: “Give us the tools, and we will finish the job.”

Admiral Kichisaburō Nomura begins his duties as Japanese ambassador to the United States.

Americans tune in to the 13th Academy Awards, hosted by Bob Hope, presenting at Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles, with Alfred Hitchcock’s Rebecca winning Outstanding Production. The film also received the most nominations with eleven, while The Thief of Baghdad wins the most awards with three. John Ford wins his second Best Director award for The Grapes of Wrath.

March

Captain America Comics #1 issues the first Captain America & Bucky comic.

Washington state’s Grand Coulee Dam begins to generate electricity.

Japanese spy, Takeo Yoshikawa, arrives in Honolulu, Hawaii and begins to study the United States fleet at Pearl Harbor.

All German, Italian and Danish ships anchored in United States waters are taken into “protective custody.”

April

The US acquires full military defense rights in Greenland.

The US destroyer Niblack, while picking up survivors from a sunken Dutch freighter, drops depth charges on a German U-boat (the first “shot in anger” fired by America against Germany).

The US begins shipping Lend-Lease military equipment to China.

The America First Committee holds its first mass rally in New York City, with Charles Lindbergh as keynote speaker.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt, at his regular press conference, criticizes Charles Lindbergh by comparing him to the Copperheads of the Civil War period. In response, Lindbergh resigns his commission in the US Army Air Corps Reserve on April 28.

May

President Roosevelt buys the first War Bond.

Orson Welles’ film Citizen Kane premieres in New York City.

The first Series E “War Bonds” and Defense Savings Stamps go on sale in the United States, to help fund the greatly increased production of military equipment.

At California’s March Field, entertainer Bob Hope performs his first USO Show.

Americans become baseball crazy as Joe DiMaggio’s 56-game hitting streak begins. The New York Yankee center fielder goes 1 for 4 against the Chicago White Sox.

Meanwhile, Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox starts slamming his way toward a record. 406 batting average.

950 miles off the coast of Brazil, the freighter SS Robin Moor becomes the first United States (neutral) ship sunk by a German U-boat, after its crew have been allowed to disembark. Americans are reminded of the submarine sinking of the Lusitania and the US entry into WWI.

President Roosevelt proclaims an “unlimited national emergency.”

June

All German and Italian assets in the United States are frozen.

All German and Italian consulates in the United States are ordered to close and their staff to leave the country by July 10.

The United States Army Air Forces comes into being, taking over the former United States Army Air Corps.

July

Commercial television is authorized by the Federal Communications Commission.

NBC Television begins commercial operation on WNBT, on Channel 1. The world’s first legal TV commercial, for Bulova watches, occurs at 2:29 p.m. over WNBT, before a baseball game between the Brooklyn Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies. The ten-second spot displays a picture of a clock superimposed on a map of the United States, accompanied by the voiceover “America runs on Bulova time.” As a one-off special, the first quiz show called “Uncle Bee” is telecast on WNBT’s inaugural broadcast day, followed later the same day by Ralph Edwards hosting the second game show broadcast on US television, Truth or Consequences, as simulcast on radio and TV and sponsored by Ivory Soap. Weekly broadcasts of the show commence in 1956, with Bob Barker.

CBS Television begins commercial operation on New York station WCBW (modern-day WCBS-TV), on Channel 2.

American forces take over the defense of Iceland from the British.

In response to the Japanese occupation of French Indochina, US President Franklin D. Roosevelt orders the seizure of all Japanese assets in the United States.

General Douglas MacArthur is named commander of all US forces in the Philippines; the Philippines Army is ordered to become nationalized by President Roosevelt.

The US gunboat Tutuila is attacked by Japanese aircraft while anchored in the Yangtze River at Chungking. Japan apologizes for the incident the following day.

The Lockheed P-38 Lightning fighter aircraft is introduced.

August

Between August 9 and 12, under the code name Riviera, President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill meet at the Naval Station in Argentia, Newfoundland, for what became known as the Atlantic Conference.

The product of the meeting is the Atlantic Charter.

The Atlantic Charter sets out American and British goals for the world after the end of World War II. The joint statement outlined the aims of the United States and the United Kingdom for the post-war world as follows: no territorial aggrandizement; no territorial changes made against the wishes of the people (self-determination); restoration of self-government to those deprived of it; reduction of trade restrictions; global co-operation to secure better economic and social conditions for all; freedom from fear and want; freedom of the seas; abandonment of the use of force; and disarmament of aggressor nations. (The charter’s adherents will later, in January 1942, sign the Declaration by United Nations which became the basis for the modern United Nations.)

US President Roosevelt bans the export of US aviation fuel from the western hemisphere, except to Britain and Allies.

By one vote (203–202), the US House of Representatives passes legislation extending the draft period for selectees and the National Guard from one year to thirty months.

The Great Gildersleeve debuts on NBC Radio.

September

The USS Greer becomes the first United States Navy ship fired upon by a German submarine in the war, even though the United States is a neutral power. Tension heightens between the nations as a result.

Charles Lindbergh, at an America First Committee rally in Des Moines, Iowa, accuses “the British, the Jewish, and the Roosevelt administration” of leading the United States toward war. Widespread condemnation of Lindbergh follows.

The first liberty ship, the SS Patrick Henry, is launched at Baltimore.

The first Moscow Conference begins; US representative, Averell Harriman, and British representative, Lord Beaverbrook, meet with Soviet foreign minister, Molotov, to arrange urgent assistance for Russia.

The draft uncovers a disastrously low level of literacy among the incoming draftees. A shortage of teachers due to pitiful teachers’ salaries in many parts of the country is held up as a cause.

October

The New York Yankees defeat the Brooklyn Dodgers, 4 games to 1, to win their 9th World Series Title.

The destroyer USS Kearny is torpedoed and damaged by German submarine U-568 off Iceland, killing eleven sailors (the first American military casualties of the war).

Walt Disney’s fourth animated film, Dumbo, is released to recoup the initial financial losses of both Pinocchio and Fantasia the previous year.

President Roosevelt approves US$1 billion in Lend-Lease aid to the Soviet Union.

After fourteen years, work ceases on sculpting Mount Rushmore National Memorial.

The destroyer USS Reuben James is torpedoed and sunk by German submarine U-552 off Iceland, killing more than 100 US Navy sailors.

November

In a speech at the Mansion House, London, Winston Churchill promises, “should the United States become involved in war with Japan, the British declaration will follow within the hour.”

Japanese diplomat, Saburō Kurusu, arrives in the United States to assist Ambassador Kichisaburō Nomura in peace negotiations.

Joseph Grew, the United States ambassador to Japan, cables a warning to Washington DC that Japan may strike suddenly and unexpectedly at any time.

The United States grants Lend-Lease to the Free French.

US President Roosevelt signs a bill establishing the fourth Thursday in November as Thanksgiving Day in the United States (this partly reverses a 1939 action by Roosevelt that changed the celebration of Thanksgiving to the third Thursday of November).

The Hull Note ultimatum is delivered to Japan by the United States. The Hull Note, consisting of nineteen very specific steps to be undertaken by the US and Japan, is a final effort to avert conflict. The Japanese never respond to the communiqué.

The Mayor of Port Orford, Oregon, declares that three Oregon counties should join with three California counties to form a new state, to be named Jefferson. He claims that these heavily rural areas are underrepresented in state government, which tend to cater to more populous areas. On November 27 a group of young men gain national media attention when, brandishing rifles and pistols, they stop traffic on US Route 99 and handed out copies of a Proclamation of Independence, stating that the State of Jefferson was in “patriotic rebellion against the States of California and Oregon” and would continue to “secede every Thursday until further notice.” The effort simply fades.

All US military forces in Asia and the Pacific are placed on war alert. America had broken the Japanese code. There is little doubt that Japan is on the attack but where? Unfortunately, US military officials believe Japan will attack Manilla or Hong Kong.

Fiorello La Guardia, Mayor of New York City and Director of the Office of Civilian Defense, signs Administrative Order 9, creating the Civil Air Patrol under the authority of the United States Army Air Forces.

December

FDR moves the lighting of the national tree inside the white house gates to give it a more “homey” feel. He is joined by Prime Minister, Winston Churchill.

On Saturday, December 6, with only fifteen shopping days left until Christmas, business was booming. Retail stores were selling out of some goods, especially war toys and maps. Early model 1942 cars were snatched up as soon as they could be found. Nightclubs and theaters were full. Americans were enjoying Hildegarde at The Savoy, dancing to Chattanooga Shoe Shine Boy, and Elmer’s Tune while some were watching Bob Hope or Abbot and Costello at the movies. The nylon stocking had debuted, replacing hard to get silk and baggy cotton. Americans were reaching out to one another by phone and by record breaking mail.

On that same December 6, President Roosevelt wrote what became his final personal appeal to Emperor Hirohito to avoid war between the United States and Japan: “Developments are occurring in the Pacific area which threaten to deprive each of our Nations and all humanity of the beneficial influence of the long peace between our two countries,” the president wrote. “Those developments contain tragic possibilities…I address myself to Your Majesty at this moment in the fervent hope that Your Majesty may, as I am doing, give thought in this definite emergency to ways of dispelling the dark clouds. I am confident that both of us, for the sake of the peoples not only of our own great countries but for the sake of humanity in neighboring territories, have a sacred duty to restore traditional amity and prevent further death and destruction in the world.”

The response to the president’s plea came the following day, Sunday, December 7 (07:48 Hawaiian Time; 12:48 EST; December 8 03:18 Japan Standard Time) when the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service stages a military strike on the United States Navy fleet at Pearl Harbor in the Territory of Hawaii, thus drawing the US into World War II.