Global Information Lookup Global Information

War Industries Board information


War Industries Board
Agency overview
FormedJuly 8, 1917 (1917-07-08)
DissolvedJanuary 1, 1919
HeadquartersWashington D.C.

The War Industries Board (WIB) was a United States government agency established on July 28, 1917, during World War I, to coordinate the purchase of war supplies between the War Department (Department of the Army) and the Navy Department.[1] Because the United States Department of Defense (The Pentagon) would only come into existence in 1947, this was an ad hoc construction to promote cooperation between the Army and the Navy (with regard to procurement), it was founded by the Council of National Defense (which on its turn came into existence by the appropriation bill of August 1916). The War Industries Board was preceded by the General Munitions Board —which didn't have the authority it needed and was later strengthened and transformed into the WIB.[2]

The board was led initially by Frank A. Scott, who had previously been head of the General Munitions Board. He was replaced in November by Baltimore and Ohio Railroad president Daniel Willard. Finally, in January 1918, the board was reorganized under the leadership of financier Bernard M. Baruch.

The organization encouraged companies to use mass-production techniques to increase efficiency and urged them to eliminate waste by standardizing products. The board set production quotas and allocated raw materials. It also conducted psychological testing to help people find the right jobs.

The WIB dealt with labor-management disputes resulting from increased product demand during World War I. The government could not negotiate prices or handle worker strikes, so the War Industries Board regulated the two to decrease tensions by stopping strikes with wage increases to prevent a shortage of supplies going to the war in Europe.

Under the War Industries Board, industrial production in the U.S. increased 20 percent. However, the vast majority of the war material was produced too late to do any good.[3] The War Industries Board was decommissioned by an executive order on January 1, 1919.

With the war mobilization conducted under the supervision of the War Industries Board, unprecedented fortunes fell upon war producers and certain holders of raw materials and patents. Hearings in 1934 by the Nye Committee led by U.S. Senator Gerald Nye were intended to hold war profiteers to account.

Despite its relatively brief existence, the WIB was a major step in the development of national planning and government-business cooperation in the United States, and its precedents —like the National Recovery Administration— were influential during the New Deal and World War II.[4]

  1. ^ "War Purchase Board of Three proposed". The New York Times. July 11, 1917.
  2. ^ Risch, Erna (1989). Quartermaster Support of the Army: a history of the Corps, 1775-1939. Washington, DC. Center of Military History, United States Army. p.604.
  3. ^ Herman, Arthur. Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II, pp. 12-16, 77, Random House, New York, NY, 2012. ISBN 978-1-4000-6964-4.
  4. ^ war industries board. 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War, Freie Universität Berlin

and 20 Related for: War Industries Board information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8968 seconds.)

War Industries Board

Last Update:

War Industries Board (WIB) was a United States government agency established on July 28, 1917, during World War I, to coordinate the purchase of war supplies...

Word Count : 1533

Bernard Baruch

Last Update:

managing the nation's economic mobilization in World War I as chairman of the War Industries Board. He advised Wilson during the Paris Peace Conference...

Word Count : 3763

Lucius Pond Ordway

Last Update:

architect Maurice Fatio. During World War I Ordway served on the Priorities Commission of the War Industries Board. Ordway married Jesse Cornwell Gilman...

Word Count : 889

War Labor Policies Board

Last Update:

principles and policies of the National War Labor Board. Frankfurter also had a seat on the War Industries Board. The board formulated unified policies regarding...

Word Count : 1548

War Production Board

Last Update:

The War Production Board (WPB) was an agency of the United States government that supervised war production during World War II. President Franklin D....

Word Count : 1575

Departmental Reorganization Act

Last Update:

Stat. 556) With its authority, Wilson created the War Industries Board, the National War Labor Board, and the Committee on Public Information. Established...

Word Count : 789

War economy

Last Update:

expanded its governmental powers by creating institutions such as the War Industries Board (WIB) to help with military production. Others, such as the Fuel...

Word Count : 2081

John Foster Dulles

Last Update:

Intelligence from 1953 to 1961. John Foster Dulles served on the War Industries Board during World War I and he was a U.S. legal counsel at the 1919 Paris Peace...

Word Count : 5305

Allen Harvey Woodward

Last Update:

Pig Iron, Iron Ore, and Lake Transportation subcommittee of the War Industries Board. Following his college baseball career at the University of the South...

Word Count : 1043

Clarence Bamberger

Last Update:

House of Representatives in 1913. He was a member of the War Industries Board during World War I. Clarence G. Bamberger was born on July 16, 1886, in Salt...

Word Count : 696

National Coal Board

Last Update:

Board (NCB) was the statutory corporation created to run the nationalised coal mining industry in the United Kingdom. Set up under the Coal Industry Nationalisation...

Word Count : 1608

Felix Frankfurter

Last Update:

He also represented the Labor Department on the priorities board of the War Industries Board. Overall, Frankfurter's work gave him an opportunity to learn...

Word Count : 6552

Alexander Legge

Last Update:

World War I on the War Industries Board and at the Versailles Peace Conference, and again during the Great Depression on the Federal Farm Board. Legge...

Word Count : 816

Price controls

Last Update:

[page needed] In World War I the War Industries Board was established to set priorities, fix prices, and standardize products to support the war efforts of the...

Word Count : 2586

Pierrepont Noyes

Last Update:

Haynes, Williams (1945). "Appendix X: The War Industries Board". American Chemical Industry: The World War I Period: 1912–1922. Vol. II. New York, New...

Word Count : 1043

Hugh Frayne

Last Update:

division of the War Industries Board during World War I. He received the Distinguished Service Medal in 1922 for his service to the board. Hugh Frayne was...

Word Count : 652

Clarence Dillon

Last Update:

of Defense. During World War I, Bernard Baruch, chairman of the War Industries Board, (known as the Czar of American Industry) asked Dillon to be Assistant...

Word Count : 1365

Presidency of Woodrow Wilson

Last Update:

1918. On the home front, Wilson raised income taxes, set up the War Industries Board, promoted labor union cooperation, regulated agriculture and food...

Word Count : 19886

Pope Yeatman

Last Update:

South Africa, Chile and Alaska. He was a member of the War Industries Board during World War I. Pope Yeatman was born on August 3, 1861, in St. Louis...

Word Count : 742

William Henry Merrill

Last Update:

1918 he was drafted for war service at $1 per year, serving as chairman of the fire prevention section of the war industries board. "In Memoriam: William...

Word Count : 316

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net