A Crowded Hour: Milwaukee During the Great War, 1917-1918
Milwaukee during World War I faced intense scrutiny, ethnic tensions, and social upheavals while exceeding wartime demands.
A Crowded Hour: Milwaukee During the Great War examines the social, political, and economic challenges that scarred and dramatically changed the city during and after World War I.
Prowar patriots considered Milwaukee's loyalties doubly suspect because of its large GermanAmerican population and strong Socialist Party. Consequently, Milwaukeeans endured intense efforts, some bordering on the paranoid or absurd, to enforce 100 percent Americanism and redeem the city's reputation. But the handwringing was unnecessary, as city residents exceeded every government wartime demand.
Other developments heightened the intensity of this "crowded hour." Simmering ethnic tensions, skyrocketing inflation, as well as loftier questions regarding the meaning of American citizenship or the impact of a growing government bureaucracy affected every aspect of people's lives.
Patriotic women stepped into maledominated occupations to meet labor demands; at war's end, many reluctantly returned to traditional gender roles.
Furthermore, the war advanced three longdebated social crusades: women's suffrage, prohibition, and antiprostitution/venereal disease efforts. Capping things off, the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic killed more than 1,100 Milwaukeeans and 50 million people worldwide.
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A Crowded Hour: Milwaukee During the Great War examines the social, political, and economic challenges that scarred and dramatically changed the city during and after World War I.
Prowar patriots considered Milwaukee's loyalties doubly suspect because of its large GermanAmerican population and strong Socialist Party. Consequently, Milwaukeeans endured intense efforts, some bordering on the paranoid or absurd, to enforce 100 percent Americanism and redeem the city's reputation. But the handwringing was unnecessary, as city residents exceeded every government wartime demand.
Other developments heightened the intensity of this "crowded hour." Simmering ethnic tensions, skyrocketing inflation, as well as loftier questions regarding the meaning of American citizenship or the impact of a growing government bureaucracy affected every aspect of people's lives.
Patriotic women stepped into maledominated occupations to meet labor demands; at war's end, many reluctantly returned to traditional gender roles.
Furthermore, the war advanced three longdebated social crusades: women's suffrage, prohibition, and antiprostitution/venereal disease efforts. Capping things off, the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic killed more than 1,100 Milwaukeeans and 50 million people worldwide.
A Crowded Hour: Milwaukee During the Great War, 1917-1918
Milwaukee during World War I faced intense scrutiny, ethnic tensions, and social upheavals while exceeding wartime demands.
A Crowded Hour: Milwaukee During the Great War examines the social, political, and economic challenges that scarred and dramatically changed the city during and after World War I.
Prowar patriots considered Milwaukee's loyalties doubly suspect because of its large GermanAmerican population and strong Socialist Party. Consequently, Milwaukeeans endured intense efforts, some bordering on the paranoid or absurd, to enforce 100 percent Americanism and redeem the city's reputation. But the handwringing was unnecessary, as city residents exceeded every government wartime demand.
Other developments heightened the intensity of this "crowded hour." Simmering ethnic tensions, skyrocketing inflation, as well as loftier questions regarding the meaning of American citizenship or the impact of a growing government bureaucracy affected every aspect of people's lives.
Patriotic women stepped into maledominated occupations to meet labor demands; at war's end, many reluctantly returned to traditional gender roles.
Furthermore, the war advanced three longdebated social crusades: women's suffrage, prohibition, and antiprostitution/venereal disease efforts. Capping things off, the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic killed more than 1,100 Milwaukeeans and 50 million people worldwide.
A Crowded Hour: Milwaukee During the Great War examines the social, political, and economic challenges that scarred and dramatically changed the city during and after World War I.
Prowar patriots considered Milwaukee's loyalties doubly suspect because of its large GermanAmerican population and strong Socialist Party. Consequently, Milwaukeeans endured intense efforts, some bordering on the paranoid or absurd, to enforce 100 percent Americanism and redeem the city's reputation. But the handwringing was unnecessary, as city residents exceeded every government wartime demand.
Other developments heightened the intensity of this "crowded hour." Simmering ethnic tensions, skyrocketing inflation, as well as loftier questions regarding the meaning of American citizenship or the impact of a growing government bureaucracy affected every aspect of people's lives.
Patriotic women stepped into maledominated occupations to meet labor demands; at war's end, many reluctantly returned to traditional gender roles.
Furthermore, the war advanced three longdebated social crusades: women's suffrage, prohibition, and antiprostitution/venereal disease efforts. Capping things off, the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic killed more than 1,100 Milwaukeeans and 50 million people worldwide.
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A Crowded Hour: Milwaukee During the Great War, 1917-1918
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A Crowded Hour: Milwaukee During the Great War, 1917-1918
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Product Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781634990226 |
|---|---|
| Publisher: | Sutton Publishing |
| Publication date: | 05/15/2017 |
| Pages: | 240 |
| Product dimensions: | 4.10(w) x 6.50(h) x 0.70(d) |
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