Traveling
Tuesday: Nevada and WWII
Nevada gets short shrift in comparison to its famous
city, Las Vegas. The state offers much more than gambling and chorus girls, and
during WWII stepped up to “do its bit” like the other U.S. states and territories.
Mining was a major industry in Nevada well before the
war began. However, as demand for copper, silver, and other important raw
materials rose, mining companies expanded operations, hiring thousands of
personnel who worked around the clock. In just two years production almost
doubled when it rose to $43,864,107. One of Nevada’s most important
contributions was magnesium. At its peak, the state mined five million pounds
per day for a total or more than one hundred sixty six million ingots by war’s
end, one-quarter of all magnesium used by the War Department for munitions
casings and aircraft parts.
As with other states in the West, Nevada’s weather,
wide open spaces, railroad connections, and proximity to California made it an
excellent location for training pilots. Four airfields (Reno, Tonopah, Indian
Springs, and Las Vegas) became the major installations, but there were others
throughout the state. Targets were set in the deserts so that B-17 and B-24 crews
could prepare for missions. Six hundred gunnery and 215 co-pilots graduated every
five weeks, and by the end of the war 45,000 gunners had completed training in
Nevada, including those who were tasked with dropping the atomic bombs on
Japan.
Despite its remoteness from either coast, Nevada was
not used as a site for the internment of Japanese or prisoners of war. Governor
Edward Carville refused on the grounds that he didn’t not want his state used “as
a dumping ground for enemy aliens.” The few enemy aliens who did reside in
Nevada were faced with mixed response. Not all Japanese were forced to move to
relocation camps, but many who stated were required to adhere to new
restrictions and laws such as registering themselves and turning in all weapons
and short-wave radios.
Hoover Dam Bunker |
Built between 1931 and 1936, Hoover Dam (formerly
Boulder Dam) is located over the Colorado River on the border of Nevada and
Arizona. A major provider of hydroelectricity for the defense factories in
California, the facility was considered a vulnerable target. Government
agencies monitored possible German and Japanese threats and precautions were
taken to ensure its safety. In addition to being protected by over eight
hundred men from Camp Williston, access to the dam by visitors was restricted,
and navigation on Lake Mead around the dam was prohibited.
Men and women from around the state served in uniform
with distinction, and nearly 600 soldier, sailors, and airmen lost their lives.
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