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Should We Continue Rationing Gasoline After the War?
From gas rationing to gas crisis!
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Should Civilian Conservation Corps Camps Train for War?
The Civilian Conservation Corps camps: From tree soldiers to real soldiers.
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History Through the Viewfinder
A tribute to the leadership of President Franklin D. Roosevelt at The National WWII Museum.
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History Through the Viewfinder
The concluding "room" of FDR’s Washington, DC, memorial underscores a poignant connection to Thomas Jefferson.
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World War II and Popular Culture
World War II touched virtually every part of American life, even things so simple as the food people ate, the films they watched, and the music they listened to.
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Becoming the Arsenal of Democracy
Early on in World War II, Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring, one of Adolf Hitler’s top lieutenants, said that Americans could only make refrigerators and razor blades—they would never be able to produce the military equipment and supplies necessary to defeat Nazi Germany. Hitler took the same view in his public speeches, but privately he knew the clock was ticking. Germany would have to achieve victory fast, before American production had time to ramp up.
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Bea Arthur, US Marine
Bernice Frankel's Official Military Personnel File reveals a Golden Girl's WWII service history.
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Mail Call: Letters from the Archives
Personal correspondence offers an intimate glimpse of a world at war.
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The Academy Awards in Wartime: Bob Hope and "Mrs. Miniver"
The Oscars host for the ages presided over the 1943 ceremony.