When Covid-19 came on the scene - there was a sudden rush for products. Toilet paper was gone from the shelves. Bottled water was nowhere to be found. Antibacterial wipes, hand sanitizer, masks, gloves ... and later on basic staples like yeast, flour and sugar. All either impossible or very hard to find. Similar shortages have happened in certain areas before big storms. This perhaps can give us a small glimpse into why rationing was important in 1942.
Here are a couple great websites explaining rationing ...
During the Second World War, you couldn't just walk into a shop and buy as much sugar or butter or meat as you wanted, nor could you fill up your car with gasoline whenever you liked. All these items were in short supply. The US government’s Office of Price Administration established a system of rationing that would more fairly distribute these limited products. Every American was issued a series of ration books during the war. The ration books contained removable stamps good for certain rationed items, like sugar, meat, cooking oil, and canned goods. A person could not buy a rationed item without also giving the grocer the right ration stamp. Once a person’s ration stamps were used up for a month, no more of that type of food could be purchased.
Going through boxes of memorabilia from Granma Lucille's estate,
some of these old ration books were discovered and scanned in to share here.
First page of a book, and several examples of different ration stamps.
Information (name/address/age/height/weight/sex/occupation) had to be filled out.
This gives us a unique look at this information for our family!
... as mentioned, gasoline was rationed as well as food,
so there were separate stamps and books issued for necessary transportation.
This was Dad/Lamar and his family ... Dad was six years old. On Mom/Margie's side of the family, Grandpa Rex had been drafted and Grandma Zada was on her own with three small children. She doesn't mention the war much, but did make this statement " I will never forget the day President Roosevelt died, or the rationing that went on during the war." (In The Army Now).
What was rationed and when? Check out the chart below.
... at least toilet paper is back in stock now, right?
Interesting! It makes me want to go to the store and stock up a little more than we currently are!
ReplyDelete