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Re: Rationing, lack of petrol, one egg a week...
Even in resource-rich USA there was rationing of basic commodities. Additionally, virtually no new automobiles for personal use were produced, all factories having been converted for war production. Being one of the few resources not directly available here, rubber was in very short supply and new tires could not be obtained. I imagne retreads were popular, if one could get fuel.
My grandmother related that shoe rationing was also a great hardship on families with young children. I don't know the exact figure, but young, growing children often had to wear too small shoes or hand-me-downs with holes in them (material to repair said holes bieing in short supply). She also related that sugar was strictly rationed. Nylon stockings were non-existent. Coffee was also rationed, and I recall my grandparents complaining about that. My father, who was in the US Army Air Corps from 1942-1946 said coffee was readily available for GI's, but that it was generally awful. ![]() Despite all this, people here in the US made out quite well compared to civilian populations in European and Asian comabatants and POW's, many if not most of whom were on subsistence rations or less by the end of the war.
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You must be the change you wish to see in the world. Mohandas K Gandhi |
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Re: Rationing, lack of petrol, one egg a week...
I hope we may revive this thread.
Two great "Memories of the 1940's" from Tom Holloway's archives. By Helen Seagraves (recorded in 1996): "My memories of rationing in the US during WWII are from the standpoint of a child a bit older than William Anderson, Jr. In our family we were conscious of rationing -- living in Idaho and Montana, where distances are great, gasoline was important. When my father began teaching in a nearby town, we were impressed by our B sticker for gasoline, but the ranchers and farmers who surrounded us had much more impressive allotments. And daddy refused to use gasoline for any but "essential" driving. However, mostly we felt that we had little to complain about, we were aware of the severe rationing in England, and life threatening hardships facing people in other parts of the world. This may have been because my parents were exceptionally concerned about world affairs -- some of my earliest memories are of hearing the radio late at night reporting on events in Manchuria, and my father's serious sounding voice commenting on the news. Of course, it might also have been partly because we'd survived depression years when the rationing at our house was done by a shortage of money. My mother was accustomed to making everything stretch. Shoe rationing was the real problem -- four children in our family ran through a lot of shoe coupons. We put a lot of rubber half-soles on shoes, and there was a gummy substance we could spread over holes in crepe soled shoes. I still have some of the ration books with coupons for canned goods and meats, and a few of the little tokens which were valued as point tokens. We always had a cow, and often a pig, and mom's big garden turned into an abundance of home canned vegetables. She didn't have any idea of canning fruit in water, so the sugar allotment went mostly to preserving fruits. Mom made soap from time to time, I think mostly because she enjoyed the challenge, but also because we had fat rendered from the hogs. I remember moving into a house owned by a man who had once had a candy business, and discovering a treasure trove of sugar he turned over to mom in exchange for home made soap. When we were living in the mountains north of Yellowstone, some of the high school students got dad to buy an elk tag and then took him "hunting" for an elk they'd stashed in a snowbank. It was cold enough so we could hang the elk in an outbuilding, our freezer, and had meat for the winter. That skirting of hunting law was common in a region where people hunted for food, not for sport. We had a lot of grub line riders stopping by the house about dinner time that winter. My parents would not have trifled with the rationing regulations. They were strongly patriotic, as well as feeling that they needed to model life as law abiding and caring citizens for their children. This is rambling, and perhaps not tightly on the topic or rationing, but hope it answers some questions for some of you." By William C, Anderson, Jr. "I was 7 years old when the war ended. We lived in rural South Carolina. My father was crippled from a childhood accident and could not serve in the military. He was an insurance agent and a spotter for the civil air patrol. I remember tires, sugar, and meat rationing most of all. We were lucky in that we lived on a farm, had a pig or two to butcher each year, preserving the meat with salt and smoke the old fashioned way. I remember many a person coming to our home to hopefully buy a piece of meat since it was so hard to come by. Gasoline was closely rationed, as was sugar and dairy products. Since a vehicle was necessary to my father's livelihood, he was allotted more gas coupons than most, but less than others in more critical occupations. Since sugar was rationed, we used saccharine as much as possible, and a piece of candy was a rare treat for me as a child. Looking back, I realize how my mother and grandmother stretched items to the limit, such as mixing bread and onions with hamburger meat, then frying it. It was done, of course to make the meat feed more people, but they made it delicious and I still enjoy it prepared that way today; We ate a lot of farm vegetables and cured meat. Although it is difficult to find properly cured Country Ham today, I still enjoy it more than steak. I'm sorry I can't be more specific as to exactly how rationing worked and the coupons dispensed, but I was too young to participate in the acquiring. I just remember the shortages and the trading and buying of coupons. What would probably seem strange to the children of today, was that no one seemed to really mind the hardships, since it was for the war effort and was necessary as a citizen of the US. Patriotism then was alive and well. Through newspaper, radio and newsreel, the people realized that it was all for a good cause, and anything that helped the war effort was tolerated with pride." I think two great accounts - for some youngsters today it may seem unbelievable that in USA could be impossible to buy a new tires or have a large steak or that soap was made at home... Perhaps it would be wise to preserve some old skills... Cheers, Lancer44 Source: Tom Holloway ----- +44 1926 888333 Home: 1926-420204 Fax: 1926-435534 Internet: t.holloway@warwick.ac.uk URL:http://www.tcns.co.uk/chatback/
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A Pole salutes with two fingers for Honor and Fatherland. Others include God and Manhood, thus using two more fingers. The French use four fingers and the thumb, which undoubtedly stands for their Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite, the Croissant and the Aperitiff. |
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Re: Rationing, lack of petrol, one egg a week...
Somewhere I have my mother's ration coupon book. I'll search through the attic and try to get a pic.
The other thing that was popular here in the US was the "Victory Garden" where even in big cities people grew their own vegetables on small patches of unpaved land.
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You must be the change you wish to see in the world. Mohandas K Gandhi |
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Re: Rationing, lack of petrol, one egg a week...
A couple of oddities from the British clothing rationing system.
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"They say hard work never hurt anybody, but I figured why take the chance"....Ronald Reagan |
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Re: Rationing, lack of petrol, one egg a week...
Quote:
World War II Database: Your WW2 History Reference Destination The coupon book was dated May 1945. |