Traveling
Tuesday: The Sunshine State Does its Bit
Like all other U.S. states, Florida sent its sons and
daughters into war zones. More than a quarter of a million Floridians served in
uniform, approximately 3,000 of whom gave their lives. The state also participated
on the home front in many ways.
Because of Florida’s warm climate and an extensive
amount of vacant land, it was an excellent choice for housing and training
soldiers, sailors, and airmen. In 1940, there were eight military installations.
Just three years later, there were over 170, ranging from extremely large to
relatively small camps. Two of the larger complexes were Camp Blanding, near
Starke, and the Jacksonville Naval Air Station.
Blanding became Florida’s fourth largest city during
the war, growing to 180,000 acres and housing 55,000 soldiers and several
thousand POWs. Construction entailed the use of over 22,000 civilians.
Unfortunately the pace of construction created severe housing problems, forcing
some workers to sleep in their cars or pitch tents for lack of lodging
facilities.
Flat lands and beaches offered training opportunities
for myriad campaigns including the landing at Normandy. Military facilities
became so overcrowded that the government turned to the hotel industry. Some
billeted troops while others were converted to makeshift hospitals for
personnel returning from overseas.
The shipbuilding industry exploded, and many began to
refer to Florida as the Steel State.
Wainwright in Panama City built 108 vessels with 15,000 workers. Another
9,000 employees worked in Tampa, and even landlocked Orlando produced 9,000
assault boats using in amphibious landing operations.
One of Florida’s largest contributions to the war
effort was their agricultural industry. For the first time, the state surpassed
California’s production of citrus. In 1942, Florida growers patented a process
to make frozen concentrated orange juice. Much of this such was a result of
importing more than 75,000 Bahamians and Jamaicans to work in the fields,
taking the place of citizens who had left for the armed forces.
War arrived in Florida in the shape of German U-boats
who managed to sink over twenty-four ships off both coasts. One of the most
famous of these incidents occurred near the Jacksonville Pier. The Gulfamerica,
an 8,000 ton steam tanker, was on its maiden voyage. One scholar commented about
the “chivalrous” actions of the German commander: rather than finishing off the
tanker by shooting toward the pier crowded with civilians, he surfaced the sub
between the pier and the ailing ship and shot toward the open ocean.
As a result of these attacks, patrols were formed to
defend the coastlines. Mr. Guy Allen of Tampa is credited with establishing an
unofficial motorcycle corps which later became part of the State Defense
Council and escorted military convoys.
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