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They Called It The War Effort Oral Histories From World War Ii Orange Texas 1st Edition Louis Fairchild Thomas L Charlton

  • SKU: BELL-51239450
They Called It The War Effort Oral Histories From World War Ii Orange Texas 1st Edition Louis Fairchild Thomas L Charlton
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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They Called It The War Effort Oral Histories From World War Ii Orange Texas 1st Edition Louis Fairchild Thomas L Charlton instant download after payment.

Publisher: Texas State Historical Assn
File Extension: PDF
File size: 39.91 MB
Pages: 559
Author: Louis Fairchild; Thomas L. Charlton
ISBN: 9780876112595, 0876112599
Language: English
Year: 2012
Edition: 1

Product desciption

They Called It The War Effort Oral Histories From World War Ii Orange Texas 1st Edition Louis Fairchild Thomas L Charlton by Louis Fairchild; Thomas L. Charlton 9780876112595, 0876112599 instant download after payment.

Over the course of World War II, Orange, Texas’s easternmost city, went from a sleepy southern town of 7,500 inhabitants to a bustling industrial city of 60,000. The bayou community on the Sabine became one of the nation’s preeminent shipbuilding centers. In They Called It the War Effort, Louis Fairchild details the explosive transformation of his native city in the words of the people who lived through it. Some residents who lived in the town before the war speak of nostalgia for the time when Orange was a small, close-knit community and regret for the loss of social cohesiveness of former days, while others speak of the exciting new opportunities and interesting new people that came. Interviewees tell how newcomers from rural areas in Louisiana and East Texas tried to adjust to a new life in close living quarters and to new amenities–like indoor toilets. People from all walks of life talk of the economic shift from the cash and job shortages of Depression era to a war era when these things were in abundance, but they also tell of how wartime rationing made items like Coca-Cola treasured luxuries. Fairchild deftly draws on a wide array of secondary sources in psychology and history to tie together and broaden the perspectives offered by World War II Orangeites. The second edition of this justly praised book features more interviews with non-white residents of Orange, as Japanese Americans and especially African Americans speak not only of the challenges of wartime economic dislocations, but also of living in a southern town where Jim Crow still reigned. Publication of this book was supported by a generous grant from the Nelda C. and H. J. Lutcher Stark Foundation

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