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The post-World War II era was a period of economic prosperity and growth in America. The automobile came to be a symbol for postwar wealth, and the dream of the open road was joined with the construction of new interstate highways and evolution of transportation vehicles featuring new technologies like using delivery valves and nozzles to power ...
Jul 18, 2015 · Even as World War II was ending 70 years ago, Americans already knew it had transformed their country. What they didn’t know was just how much or for how long.
- Rick Hampson
The entry of the United States into World War II caused vast changes in virtually every aspect of American life. Millions of men and women entered military service and saw parts of the world they would likely never have seen otherwise.
May 21, 2019 · During the war, Americans had to change the way they ate, dressed, and even traveled due to rationing efforts. Everyone knew what everyone else’s gasoline allotment was because stickers marked A, B, or C placed on windshields indicated how much each driver could get.
- admin@pdqamerica.com
Nov 16, 2023 · The United States’ involvement in World War II did not occur only on foreign soil and in foreign waters and foreign skies. It also affected the lives of Americans on the home front. Much of this impact was associated with mobilizing for the war.
This major exhibition examines how transportation—from 1876 to 1999—has shaped our American identity from a mostly rural nation into a major economic power, forged a sense of national unity, delivered consumer abundance, and encouraged a degree of social and economic mobility unlike that of any other nation of the world.
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Sep 4, 2019 · Here are some of the ways that the first transcontinental railroad—and the many other transcontinental lines that followed it—changed America. 1. It made the Western U.S. more important.