4.1 • 696 Ratings
🗓️ 11 May 2019
⏱️ 72 minutes
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0:00.0 | This week, a lecture about World War II amphibious vehicles. |
0:07.0 | Weber State University professor Brandon Little teaches a class about military vehicle innovations |
0:14.0 | and the role of American factories during World War II. |
0:18.0 | The FMC had always built its factories close to a rail line, so it could simply |
0:23.5 | offload equipment that it had manufactured, put them on rail cars, and ship them away. But in this |
0:28.1 | case, when it got its war contracts from the Navy, it built new factories just on the opposite side. |
0:33.5 | So it expanded its operations and was able to actually do both. |
0:37.8 | Professor Little also focuses on types of amphibious vehicles used in the Pacific |
0:42.1 | and describes the process of testing production and battle application. |
0:50.6 | Well, good morning, class, and welcome back to History 329, modern American military history. |
0:56.7 | And today we are going to continue our conversation about the Second World War. |
1:02.0 | And specifically, we're going to look at an aspect of the war through what we could call the lens of industrial mobilization. |
1:08.7 | And industrial mobilization is often understood as a key to allied victory in this war. |
1:16.7 | It's often said that the allies win because they outproduce the axis powers. And I'm sure many of us |
1:22.2 | have heard this before and perhaps encountered it. You've read it. But one of the problems with that line of reasoning is that if it's simply a amount of |
1:31.7 | stuff that produces victory, well, at the beginning of this war, the Axis powers possess |
1:38.4 | more. |
1:40.2 | And so that argument about stuff cannot absolutely establish ultimately the trajectory of Allied victory. |
1:48.2 | Because the Allies for a long time are deficient in that quantity of stuff. |
1:52.9 | The other aspect of the material argument, if you will, that the Allies outproduce, |
1:58.9 | that's understated and oversimplified, |
2:01.6 | in almost all literature that you could consider related to the war, |
... |
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