
The arrival of movie stars to sell war bonds created some
exciting and entertaining moments for Vermonters during the war. Stars
who traveled the state included Bette Davis, Dorothy Lamour, Charles Laughton,
and Anne Rutherford. At one rally in Brattleboro a man bought $2,000 worth
of bonds for Dorothy Lamour’s handkerchief. These celebrity events
supplemented local bonds sales made by banks, post offices, payroll savings
plans, and schools. In the eight campaigns held during the war Vermonters
purchased $317,179,000 worth of bonds.
Vermonters were also generous in their support of relief aid to the Allies. Bundles
for Britain began its work in 1939. The Vermont War Chest, part of a national
organization to help refugees, prisoners of war, and other war victims, raised
$650,000 during 1943 and 1944.
The federal War Production Board (WPB) controlled all industrial production from 1941 to 1945 through contracts and distribution of raw materials. The Montpelier branch of the WPB assisted Vermont companies in getting their share of military contracts, necessary materials, and supplies. In order to survive some companies totally changed what they produced. Labor shortages proved to be the biggest problem faced by Vermont industry, as men went off to military service or to better-paying jobs in southern New England. To meet the need women were hired. Before the war only 17 women were employed in the Vermont machine-tool industry, compared with 528 working as machine operators during peak wartime production.
Farmers benefited from stable prices and an assured market,
but farm labor shortages were critical. A shortage of farm
machinery and gasoline rationing created further hardships.
Farms that depended on hired hands often stopped producing.
Even the efforts of organizations like the Volunteer Land
Corps, which brought 600 youths from east coast colleges
and cities to work during the summer of 1942, weren’t
enough to meet the year-round needs of Vermont dairy farmers.
Surprisingly, production on Vermont farms increased during
the war because of new technology and improved farming
practices. Fifty fewer farmers participated in the Bellows
Falls Cooperative Creamery in 1945 than in 1941, but they
brought in almost ten million more pounds of milk. Farmers
were proud of their efforts to support the war, but the
long-term legacy was increased involvement by the federal
government in agriculture through milk price supports and
its promotion of cooperative farming associations.
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