“I am sending your Sugar War Ration Book
which I suppose you are to give to Mrs. Sellars until school is out and we must
be sure to get it to bring home then so be sure and take good care of it.
“To-morrow is the All School Picnic at
Augusta and then the band is giving their Victory Program at night. We are going in if nothing happens. The admission is a 25¢ War stamp or more and
you get to keep the stamps. The band is
divided into two groups to see who can sell the most stamps & bonds. So Barbara asked Aunt Stella to buy stamps
and Uncle Frank bought a $1000 bond so she almost fell over she was so tickled but
this morning she found out that Dick Alley had seen Ed Varner and he (Ed) got a
$1200 bond from Dick and of course Dick is on the other side from Barbara so
don't know which side will win.”
--
Letter from my grandmother, Bloomington, Kans., to my father, Southwestern
College, Winfield, Kans., Thursday, May 7, 1942. Throughout his college years, my father lived
at Mrs. Sellars’s boarding house. Since
she cooked his meals, he apparently gave his ration book to her. His uncle Frank was wealthy from oil revenue.
Civilians in the United States
suffered nothing like the civilians in other combatant countries in World War
II. Yet they were called upon to make
sacrifices, by buying war bonds and by restricting consumption. And, of course, many made the enormous
sacrifice of losing a loved one in combat.
Unlike the current Afghanistan War and Iraq War, all Americans were
continually made aware through their daily lives that the country was at
war. The Office of Price Administration
and Civilian Supply had been created in April 1941, before the war, and would
be replaced by the more powerful Office of Price Administration (OPA) in August
1942. After Pearl Harbor, the agency
implemented a series of rationing programs on items such as gasoline, tires, canned
food, meat, butter, sugar, coffee, and shoes.
Consumers had to master the use of complex ration books containing
coupons with expiration dates, in order to buy their allotted share of
restricted products. Tires were the
first products to be rationed, in January 1942, since Japan controlled Southeast
Asian sources of rubber. The government also
put in gasoline rationing and a ban on pleasure driving, again to conserve tire
rubber, in December 1942. The OPA took
coupons away from some drivers, found to be driving for pleasure, and not for
an acceptable reason, such as work, health, religious services, buying
necessities, or handling emergencies. The difficult-to-police ban on pleasure
driving was lifted in September 1943, although tire and gas rationing
continued.
Food rationing affected farmers, such as my
grandparents, less than it did many others.
Their farm was self-sufficient in most food items, except sugar and
tea. Rationing likely affected their son
away at college more. Sugar was the
first food item to be rationed, starting in April 1942. It was scarce, in part, because German
submarines made shipping from sugar plantations in Cuba and Central America
difficult, and, in part, because the U.S. was shipping food to allies in
Europe. The sugar allowance was
initially 8 ounces per person per week. In
March 1943, butter and meat rationing began.
Meat consumption (excluding chicken and fish) was limited to 4 ounces per
person per day. People in the military,
however, received ample supplies of meat, over half a pound a day in the army,
and about a pound a day in the navy. Victory
gardens became a popular way to compensate for food shortages. By one account, they provided 40% of vegetable
production during the war years. Rationing
restrictions began to ease by the summer of 1944, but did not fully end until
1946. (Sources: "Rationing."
World War II and the Postwar Years in America: A Historical and Cultural
Encyclopedia. William H. Young and Nancy K. Young. Vol. 2. Santa Barbara, CA:
ABC-CLIO, 2010. 574-581. Web. 13 Apr. 2012; Harvey A. Levenstein, Paradox of
Plenty: A Social History of Eating in Modern America (University of California
Press, 2003), p. 85; Susan B. Carter, et al., eds., Historical Statistics of the
United States: Earliest Times to Present (Cambridge: Cambridge U Press, 2006)