Traveling
Tuesday: North Carolina During WWII
Last week we traveled to South Carolina to learn about
its contribution to the WWII effort. Today, we’re going to head north and visit
its neighbor, North Carolina, a state that ranges from its sandy coast line to rugged
mountains in the west.
Established as a royal colony in 1729, North Carolina
was named for King Charles I, and is one of the original thirteen colonies. The
state is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean, South Carolina, Georgia, Virginia, and
Tennessee. A rich history includes nearly a dozen people groups of Native
Americans, exploration by Spain, pirates, a coup d’état, and sit-ins.
North Carolina was mostly rural at the beginning of the
war and had been hit hard by the Great Depression. Only one out of four farms
has electricity, and almost none had indoor plumbing.
Then war descends on the U.S.
Fort Bragg, an old field-artillery training grounded
headed for decommissioning instead becomes home to more than 100,000 soldiers
(including all five Army airborne divisions). Camp Lejeune opens along the
coastal land outside Jacksonville and trains more than 40,000 Marines. At
Montford Point, the Marines enlist the first of 20,000 African-Americans and by
1942 North Carolina is the location of over one hundred military installations.
Of the 362,500 men and women who served in the armed forces, 9,000 never come
home.
Manufacturing plants pop up all over the state. South
of Wilmington at North Carolina Shipping, Liberty ships slide down the slipways
into the Cape Fear River at the rate of one per week. Dayton Rubber Company,
Chatham Manufacturing, Alcoa, Fairchild Aircraft, Carolina Aluminum, Ecusta
Paper, and Consolidated Vultee Aircraft all join the war effort to provide
essential materiel.
To power the growing defense industry, the Tennessee
Valley Authority constructs Fontana Dam on the Tennessee River. The dam is 480
feet high, the tallest east of the Rockies, and generates 304 megawatts of
electricity per day (the equivalent to the energy produced by ten automobile
engines).
Between April and July, 1942, the war got up close and
personal when German submarines were sunk in the coastal waters off Cape
Hatteras and Cape Lookout.
With the rest of the country, North Carolina purchase
war bonds, donated their scrap, and fed their family with Victory gardens and
rationed food items. They “made do and mended,” adhered to blackout
regulations, spotted planes, and volunteered for one of the many organizations
that supported the war. In the end, North Carolinians could be proud of their
efforts.
________________________
It’s been six months since Ruth Brown followed clues
to England and discovered the identity of her sister’s killer. War continues to
rage as Ruth reports on food shortages, the black market, evacuation of
London’s children, and the bravery of the British people.
When a bombing raid destroys her home and unearths a
twenty-year-old skeleton in the cellar, her reporter’s senses tingle in
anticipation of solving another mystery. Unfortunately, the by-the-book
detective inspector assigned to the case is not interested in her theories. As
Ruth investigates the case on her own, she butts heads with the handsome
policeman.
Will she get to the bottom of the story before the
killer strikes again?
Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/366EdN9
No comments:
Post a Comment