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With the attack on Pearl Harbor by the Empire of Japan on December 7, 1941, and the United States' entry into World War II, our nation turned to Connecticut--as it did during World War I--for munitions, clothing, and other goods. And Connecticut answered the call: Manchester Mills increased silk production, Waterbury brass producers altered their manufacturing lines, and Bridgeport's Remington Arms--which had produced 50 percent of the US Army's small arms cartridges in World War I--increased its mass production capabilities. By the time Electric Boat, Hamilton Propellers, Pratt & Whitney, and…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
With the attack on Pearl Harbor by the Empire of Japan on December 7, 1941, and the United States' entry into World War II, our nation turned to Connecticut--as it did during World War I--for munitions, clothing, and other goods. And Connecticut answered the call: Manchester Mills increased silk production, Waterbury brass producers altered their manufacturing lines, and Bridgeport's Remington Arms--which had produced 50 percent of the US Army's small arms cartridges in World War I--increased its mass production capabilities. By the time Electric Boat, Hamilton Propellers, Pratt & Whitney, and many other Connecticut companies tallied up their production back in 1945, it amounted to over $8 billion in war contracts.

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Autorenporträt
In Images of America: Connecticut in World War II, award-winning author, biographer, and historian Mark Allen Baker takes the reader on a personal tour of Connecticut during World War II. Visit the people, places, and things that made the Connecticut home front as dynamic and accomplished as those on the front lines. From Ansonia, Bantam, and Bolton to Wallingford, Waterbury, and Westport, witness firsthand the incredible dedication of a generation that had, in the words of Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt, ¿a rendezvous with destiny.¿