Memory Aids: WW2 and Post-War America
Part of WW2 and Post-War Boom — GCSE History
This memory aid covers Memory Aids: WW2 and Post-War America within WW2 and Post-War Boom for GCSE History. Revise WW2 and Post-War Boom in America 1920-1973 for GCSE History with 10 exam-style questions and 8 flashcards. This topic appears regularly enough that it should still be part of a steady revision cycle. It is section 11 of 14 in this topic. Use it for quick recall, then test yourself straight afterwards so the memory aid becomes usable in an answer.
Topic position
Section 11 of 14
Practice
10 questions
Recall
8 flashcards
🧠 Memory Aids: WW2 and Post-War America
The "3 Ws" of WW2's impact on America:
- W — Women in the workforce (6 million "Rosie the Riveters")
- W — Wealth explosion (unemployment 14% → 1.2%, GDP doubled)
- W — War's racial contradiction (1 million Black soldiers fighting racism abroad, facing it at home)
The "Double V" = Double reminder: The Double V campaign is a memory device itself — V for victory ABROAD (against fascism) and V for victory AT HOME (against racism). If an exam question asks about what WW2 meant for Black Americans, the Double V is your anchor.
Japanese internment key number: 120,000 — 120 thousand people imprisoned. Two-thirds were US citizens. Remember: the 442nd Regiment of Japanese American soldiers became the MOST DECORATED unit in US military history — the same group being imprisoned at home was dying for America abroad.
McCarthyism dates: 1950-1954 — McCarthy gave his infamous "205 communists" speech in February 1950. He was censured by the Senate in December 1954. Exactly four years of the "Red Scare." Connect this to the Cold War timeline: Korean War began 1950, ended 1953 — McCarthyism fed on Korea-era fear.
Key statistics to recall:
- Unemployment: 14% (1941) → 1.2% (1944) — WW2 ended the Depression
- 17 million new jobs created by war production
- 6 million women entered the workforce
- 120,000 Japanese Americans interned (2/3 were US citizens)
- NAACP: 50,000 → 500,000 members during the war — the movement was growing
- GI Bill: 8 million veterans used education and housing benefits