Posted on Nov 28, 2014
MSG Signal Support Systems Specialist
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1942 – The first production Ford bomber, the B-24 Liberator, rolled off the assembly line at Ford’s massive Willow Run plant in Ypsilanti, Michigan.

Two years before, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt had urged an isolationist America to prepare for its inevitable involvement in the war, declaring that U.S. industry must become “the great arsenal of democracy.” Roosevelt established the Office of Production Management (OPM) to organize the war effort, and named a former automotive executive co-director of the OPM. Most Detroit automobile executives opposed the OPM during its first year, and were dubious of the advantages of devoting their entire production to war material.
However, on December 7, 1941, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, and American citizens mobilized behind the U.S. declaration of war against the Axis powers. Since profit ruled Detroit, the government made Ford and America’s other automakers an economic offer they could not refuse. For their participation in the war effort, automakers would be guaranteed profits regardless of production costs, and $11 billion would be allocated to the building of war plants–factories that would be sold to private industry at a substantial discount after the war.
In February of 1942, the last Ford automobile rolled off the assembly line for the duration of the war, and soon afterward the Willow Run plant was completed in Michigan. Built specifically for Ford’s war production, Willow Run was the largest factory in the world. Using the type of assembly line production that had made Ford an industrial giant, Ford hoped to produce 500 B-24 Liberator bombers a month. After a gradual start, that figure was reached in time for the Allied invasion of Western Europe, and by July of 1944, the Willow Plant was producing one B-24 every hour. By the end of the war, the 43,000 men and women who had worked at Ford’s Willow Run plant had produced over 8,500 bombers, which unquestionably had a significant impact on the course of the war.

http://thisdayinusmilhist.wordpress.com/2014/11/28/november-28/
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CW5 Desk Officer
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Seems like President Roosevelt saw the storm clouds on the horizon and began to prepare our country for what he probably assumed was to come. Even if he intended us (the U.S.) to be "only" the arsenal of democracy, that strategic planning was a very smart move as things turned out.
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MSG Signal Support Systems Specialist
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FDR is far from my favorite President. I remain opposed to most of the tactics he used, such as the corporatism and the implied kneecapping that would follow from non-compliance with the arrangements described in this article. But it is very hard to argue with the final result of the conflict and the pursuit of victory that I find has been far more the exception in our leaders since.
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