Traveling
Tuesday: Florida and WWII
I’m visiting my dad this week, so I thought it would
be fun to delve into Florida’s association with WWII.
Like many other U.S. states, Florida sprang into
action immediately after the attack at Pearl Harbor. Thousands of young men
rushed to enlist. As uniformed service became available to women, they signed
up too. Eventually, over 250,000 Floridians would serve.
It wasn’t long before the military showed up in force.
Because of Florida’s warm climate and vast amounts of vacant land, it was an
ideal location for military bases. The number of military installations increased
from eight to 175! At 180,000 acres, Camp Blanding became the state’s fourth
largest city and housed 55,000 soldiers. Naval stations were reactivated in Key
West, Tampa, Valparaiso, and Pensacola. In addition, there were forty airfields
that trained pilots and crews, including one in Pensacola where Jimmy Doolittle
and his crew trained for their dramatic raid on Japan.
Overcrowding on the bases became a problem, so the
military took over hotels and resorts for housing and in some cases, hospitals.
With the tourism industry at a crawl during the war, perhaps the facilities
were glad to have the business. Three years into the war, Florida became a
popular destination for soldiers on furlough.
Shipyards in Tampa, Panama City, Pensacoloa, and
Jacksonville produced Liberty ships, and in Dunnedin, amphibious vehicles were
designed and manufactured. Even landlocked Orlando built 9,000 assault boats.
At one point, Florida considered changing its nickname from The Sunshine State
to The Steel State. The citrus industry boomed and surpassed California in
production for the first time during the crop year of 1942-43. Shortly
thereafter, citrus growers patented the process to make concentrated orange
juice. The U.S. Department of Agriculture authorized the temporary importation
of 75,000 Bahamians and Jamaicans to work in south Florida fields.
In the early days of the war more than twenty-four ships
were sunk off Florida’s Atlantic and Gulf coasts, so the “Mosquito Fleet” (the
fast wooden PT boats used by the Navy) was created to patrol Florida’s
coastline to help eliminate the threat of submarines. Thousands of volunteers
were also trained to keep track of air activity.
Folks on the home front “did their bit” by collecting
scrap and holding “money drives” to help build ships and planes. Victory
gardens flourished (Tampa officials estimate 10,000 gardens in their city
alone), and people learned to do more with less.
_______________________________
Love's Allegiance
With most U.S. boys fighting for Uncle Sam in far off
countries, Rochelle Addams has given up hope for a wedding in her future. Then
she receives an intriguing offer from a distant relative to consider a marriage
of convenience.
Conscientious objector Irwin Terrell is looking
forward to his assignment at Shady Hills Mental hospital to minister to the
less fortunate in lieu of bearing arms. At the arrival of the potential bride
his father has selected for him, Irwin’s well-ordered life is turned upside
down. And after being left at the altar two years ago, he has no interest in
risking romance again.
Despite his best efforts to remain aloof to Rochelle,
Irwin is drawn to the enigmatic and beautiful young woman, but will time run
out before his wounded heart can find room for her?
Inspired by the biblical love story of Rebekkah and
Isaac, Love’s Allegiance explores the
struggles and sacrifices of those whose beliefs were at odds with a world at
war.
Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/2KCMyke
No comments:
Post a Comment