On April 6, 1917, the United States formally declared war against Germany
and entered the conflict in Europe. Fighting since the summer of 1914,
Britain, France, and Russia welcomed news that American troops and
supplies would be directed toward the Allied war effort. Under the
command of Major General John J. Pershing, over two million U.S. troops served in France during the war.
For three years, President Woodrow Wilson strove to maintain American neutrality. Anti-war sentiment ran across the political spectrum. Middle-class reformers such as Jane Addams as well as radicals such as Emma Goldman opposed U.S. involvement in the war.
I’m hitting the trail to Normandy so kiss me goodbye. Chas. A. Snyder & Oscar Doctor, words & music; New York: Snyder Music Pub. Co., 1917. World War I Sheet Music. Music Division
Although he later supported the war effort, Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan,
resigned over the Administration’s failure to remain neutral. However, a
series of incidents, including the loss of 128 American lives when
German submarines sank the Lusitania on May 7, 1915, changed public opinion. On April 2, 1917, Wilson asked Congress for a declaration of war, warning that “the world must be made safe for democracy.”
The war mobilization effort placed tremendous demands on both
American military and civilian populations. In a wartime speech, Samuel
Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, noted that the
U.S. work force was fully committed to victory:
The World War in which we are engaged in is on such a
tremendous scale that we must readjust practically the whole nation’s
social and economic structure from a peace to a war basis. It devolves
upon liberty-loving citizens, and particularly the workers of this
country, to see to it that the spirit and the methods of democracy are
maintained within our own country while we are engaged in a war to
establish them in international relations…
The workers have a part in this war equal with the soldiers and
sailors on the ships and in the trenches…They are demonstrating their
appreciation and loyalty by war work, by loaning their savings, and by
the supreme sacrifice. Labor will do its part in every demand the war
makes. Our republic, the freedom of the world, progress, and
civilization hang in the balance. We dare not fail. We will win.
American participation in World War I
permanently transformed the nation. In order to meet increased demands
for goods, the federal government expanded dramatically, taking an
unprecedented role in guiding the economy.
Active supporters of the war to preserve democracy, women made a step towards political equality when the Nineteenth Amendment enfranchised them shortly after the war. Meanwhile, military service and wartime jobs beckoned African Americans northward. In what is known as the Great Migration, thousands of African Americans left the South and its systems of oppression to face new challenges in Northern cities.
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