The World War II Bond Campaign
English
By (author): Lawrence R. Samuel
How Americas greatest marketing triumph in World War II shaped race, ethnicity, and class in modern America
The World War II Bond Campaign is a history of the World War II bond drive led by the federal government, an effort called the most successful marketing operation in history. By the wars end, some 85 million Americans had spent $186 billion in an unprecedented outpouring of patriotism that contributed to the military victory and the prosperity of the following decades. The FDR administration used bonds to raise capital to support the war and promote national unity within the context of the nations increasingly pluralistic society as the melting pot theory was retired. African Americans, Euro-Americans, and labor union members enthusiastically bought bonds to express national loyalty but also to demonstrate racial, ethnic, or class pride, a reflection of their dualistic or hyphenated identities.
Drawing on various primary sources, The World War II Bond Campaign illustrates how the Treasury Departments multicultural marketing strategies tapped into Americans aspirations alongside their patriotic impulses. Citizens of all social and economic backgrounds eagerly responded to what can be seen as the selling of America, making the subject an ideal lens to view national identity at a critical moment in the countrys history. The author contends that the drives success helped pave the way for the emergence of both the civil rights movement and the vigorous consumer culture of the postwar years.
Will deliver when available. Publication date 04 Feb 2025