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Nebraska Studies
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8 results for ‘s’

  • ›› World War II

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      • World War II (8)
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  • 1945CE - 1908CE (1)

Web Page

Nebraska Helps Win the War

Activities: 1925-1949: Nebraska Helps Win The War - Grade Level [4-12]

The Enola Gay certainly became World War II’s most famous airplane when it dropped the world’s first atomic bomb on Hiroshima August 6, 1945. It was built in Omaha. The B-29 Superfortress bomber was the single most complicated and expensive airplane produced by the United States during World War II.

The Enola Gay was specially modified for its mission and was handpicked from the assembly line in Omaha by the ... Read more

Web Page

John Falter Painting for Victory

John Falter was a Nebraska artist who applied his talents to the war effort, producing numerous recruiting and incentive posters while on active duty with the U.S. Naval Reserve.

Born in Plattsmouth and raised in Falls City, Falter gained fame for his cover illustrations for the Saturday Evening Post. Throughout the war, he continued to work as a free-lance commercial artist, though most of his commercial works also addressed patriotic themes.

Between 1942 and 1946, Falter produced a body of work impressive ... Read more

Web Page

Combat: Over There

"The most important thing on your mind was trying to stay alive."
—Bill Gilgren, Dalton, NE
Third Infantry Division in Europe

"It’s just kind of hard to describe really. You are scared, jumpy, and you prayed. You knew when there was a [kamikaze] raid and the planes were coming in, that somebody was going to get hit because it was just a one-way trip for the pilot."
—John Zimola, Wahoo, NE
Fire Controlman First Class,USS Louisville

What is it like to be under enemy fire or ... Read more

Web Page

The 134th in Alaska & Europe

Not all of the original Nebraska National Guard served with the 134th in Europe. Companies E, F, G, and H were transferred to the 197th Infantry and served in the Aleutian Islands in Alaska.

Few Nebraskans realized that an American possession and future state was invaded by Japan during World War II. Fewer still realized that a former Nebraska National Guard battalion was deployed to help stop Japanese expansion the area.

In 1942 the 134th Infantry Regiment’s Second Battalion was selected for ... Read more

Web Page

Life on the Road

The rationed item that produced the greatest inconvenience was probably gasoline. Each motorist was assigned a windshield sticker with the appropriate letter of priority ranging from "A" to "C". Trucks received a special "T" sticker. Most of the population received low priority "A" stickers, allowing only three to five gallons of gasoline a week.

Gasoline was rationed in an effort to save gas and tires, because supplies of vital rubber from the Far East had been cut off. Along with gasoline ... Read more

Web Page

Women Join the Military

The idea of women in uniform was new during World War II. Approximately 1,800 Nebraska women joined the special military organizations created for women.

A multitude of female military units were created, each with acronyms that were remarkably similar:

  • WASPs, the Women’s Airforce Service Pilots.
  • WAFS, the Army Air Corps’ Women’s Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron.
  • WAACs, the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps.
  • WACs, the Women’s Army Corps.
  • WAVES, the women’s branch of the Navy.
  • SPARS, the U.S. Coast Guard Reserve for Women.

The American Women’s Voluntary Services (AWVS) was also ... Read more

Web Page

Mexican Americans

"Ironically, at home, the soldier’s mothers, wives, and daughters were being told, ‘Go home to Mexico, where you came from.’"One mother is reported to have said, ‘Send my son home from Germany first.’ "
—From Our Treasures, A Celebration of Nebraska’s Mexican Heritage by Dr. Emilia González-Clements

In the early 1900s, Mexicans migrated to Nebraska in large numbers for many reasons. Some left Mexico to escape the Mexican Revolution. Some came here to better their economic condition. Nebraska offered work in the ... Read more

Web Page

Revenge, Justice, Forgiveness

"I remember once in a difficult part of the war that these MPs made the patients (German prisoners of war) think that they were not going to give them food from the carts. . . . I cried and said, ‘Oh, you can’t deprive them.’ This (guard) said, ‘Oh, we’re just kidding.’ But I know they weren’t. They were angry with the Germans."
—Barbara Gier, Seward, NE
Nurse, 203 General Hospital in Paris

World War II lasted over three and a half years ... Read more

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