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Nancy K. Bristow - Making Men Moral: Social Engineering During the Great War

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Nancy K. Bristow Making Men Moral: Social Engineering During the Great War
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On May 29, 1917, Mrs. E. M. Craise, citizen of Denver, Colorado, penned a letter to President Woodrow Wilson, which concluded, We have surrendered to your absolute control our hearts dearest treasures--our sons. If their precious bodies that have cost us so dear should be torn to shreds by German shot and shells we will try to live on in the hope of meeting them again in the blessed Country of happy reunions. But, Mr. President, if the hell-holes that infest their training camps should trip up their unwary feet and they be returned to us besotted degenerate wrecks of their former selves cursed with that hell-born craving for alcohol, we can have no such hope.
Anxious about the United States pending entry into the Great War, fearful that their sons would be polluted by the scourges of prostitution, venereal disease, illicit sex, and drink that ran rampant in the training camps, countless Americans sent such missives to their government officials. In response to this deluge, President Wilson created the Commission on Training Camp Activities to ensure the purity of the camp environment. Training camps would henceforth mold not only soldiers, but model citizens who, after the war, would return to their communities, spreading white, urban, middle-class values throughout the country.
What began as a federal program designed to eliminate sexually transmitted diseases soon mushroomed into a powerful social force intent on replacing Americas many cultures with a single, homogenous one. Though committed to the positive methods of education and recreation, the reformers did not hesitate to employ repression when necessary. Those not conforming to the prescribed vision of masculinity often faced exclusion from the reformers idealized society, or sometimes even imprisonment. Social engineering ruled the day.
Combining social, cultural, and military history and illustrating the deep divisions among reformers themselves, Nancy K. Bristow, with the aid of dozens of evocative photographs, here brings to life a pivotal era in the history of the U.S., revealing the complex relationship between the nations competing cultures, progressive reform efforts, and the Great War.

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About NYU Press
A publisher of original scholarship since its founding in 1916, New York University Press Produces more than 100 new books each year, with a backlist of 3,000 titles in print. Working across the humanities and social sciences, NYU Press has award-winning lists in sociology, law, cultural and American studies, religion, American history, anthropology, politics, criminology, media and communication, literary studies, and psychology.
Making Men Moral
The American Social Experience
SERIES
James Kirby Martin
GENERAL EDITOR
Paula S. Fass, Steven H. Mintz,
Carl Prince, James W. Reed & Peter N. Steams

EDITORS
1. The March to the Sea and Beyond: Shermans Troops in the
Savannah and Carolinas Campaigns

JOSEPH T. GLATTHAAR
2. Childbearing in American Society: 16501850
CATHERINE M. SCHOLTEN
3. The Origins of Behaviorism: American Psychology, 18701920
JOHN M. ODONNELL
4. New York City Cartmen, 16671850
GRAHAM RUSSELL HODGES
5. From Equal Suffrage to Equal Rights: Alice Paul and the National Womans
Party, 19101928
CHRISTINE A. LUNARDINI
6. Mr. Jeffersons Army: Political and Social Reform of the Military
Establishment, 18011809

THEODORE J. CRACKEL
7. A Peculiar People: Slave Religion and Community-Culture
among the Gullahs
MARGARET WASHINGTON CREEL
8. A Mixed Multitude: The Struggle for Toleration in Colonial Pennsylvania
SALLY SCHWARTZ
9. Women, Work, and Fertility, 19001986
SUSAN HOUSEHOLDER VAN HORN
10. Liberty, Virtue, and Progress: Northerners and Their War for the Union
EARL J. HESS
11. Lewis M. Terman: Pioneer in Psychological Testing
HENRY L. MINTON
12. Schools as Sorters: Lewis M. Terman, Applied Psychology, and the
Intelligence Testing Movement, 18901930

PAUL DAVIS CHAPMAN
13. Free Love: Marriage and Middle-Class Radicalism in America, 18251860
JOHN C. SPURLOCK
14. Jealousy: The Evolution of an Emotion in American History
PETER N. STEARNS
15. The Nurturing Neighborhood: The Brownsville Boys Club and Jewish Community in Urban America, 19401990
GERALD SORIN
16. War in America to 1775: Before Yankee Doodle
JOHN MORGAN DEDERER
17. An American Vision: Far Western Landscape and
National Culture, 18201920

ANNE FARRAR HYDE
18. Frederick Law Olmsted: The Passion of a Public Artist
MELVIN KALFUS
19. Medical Malpractice in Nineteenth-Century America: Origins and Legacy
KENNETH ALLEN DE VILLE
20. Dancing in Chains: The Youth of William Dean Howells
RODNEY D. OLSEN
21. Breaking the Bonds: Marital Discord in Pennsylvania, 17301830
MERRIL D. SMITH
22. In the Web of Class: Delinquents and Reformers in Boston, 1810s-1930s
ERIC C. SCHNEIDER
23. Army of Manifest Destiny: The American Soldier in the Mexican War,
18461848
JAMES M. MCCAFFREY
24. The Dutch-American Farm
DAVID STEVEN COHEN
25. Independent Intellectuals in the United States, 19101943
STEVEN BIEL
26. The Modern Christmas in America: A Cultural History of Gift Giving
WILLIAM B. WAITS
27. The First Sexual Revolution: The Emergence of Male Heterosexuality in Modern America
KEVIN WHITE
28. Bad Habits: Drinking, Smoking, Taking Drugs, Gambling, Sexual Misbehavior, and Swearing in American History
JOHN C. BURNHAM
29. General Richard Montgomery and the American Revolution:
From Redcoat to Rebel
HAL T. SHELTON
30. From Congregation Town to Industrial City: Culture and
Social Change in a Southern Community

MICHAEL SHIRLEY
31. The Social Dynamics of Progressive Reform:
Atlantic City, 18541920

MARTIN PAULSSON
32. America Goes to War: A Social History of the Continental Army
CHARLES PATRICK NEIMEYER
33. American Women and the Repeal of Prohibition
KENNETH D. ROSE
34. Making Men Moral: Social Engineering during the Great War
NANCY K. BRISTOW
35. Tituba, Reluctant Witch of Salem:
Devilish Indians and Puritan Fantasies

ELAINE G. BRESLAW
Making Men Moral
Social Engineering during the Great War
Nancy K. Bristow
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS NEW YORK and London Copyright 1996 by New York - photo 1
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY PRESS
NEW YORK and London
Copyright 1996 by New York University
All rights reserved
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bristow, Nancy K.
Making men moral : social engineering during the great war / Nancy
K. Bristow.
p. cm.(The American social experience series ; 34)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents: An invisible armor : the progressive social vision and World War OneFull-orbed moral manhood : cultural nationalism and the creation of new men and womenReformers between two worlds : the battle against tradition and working-class modernismBuilding a national community : the complexities of genderRepression and resistance : African Americans and the progressives national communityThe end of the crusade : demobilization and the legacy of the CTCA.
ISBN 08147-12207 (acid-free paper)
1. SoldiersUnited StatesConduct of life. 2. United States. Commission on Training Camp Activities. 3. Social reformersUnited StatesHistory20th century. 4. Military basesSocial aspects--United States. 5. World War, 19141918Social aspectsUnited States. I. Title. II. Series.
UH630.B75 1996
355.133dc20 9532501
CIP
New York University Press books are printed on acid-free paper, and their binding materials are chosen for strength and durability.
Manufactured in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
To my parents, with love and appreciation.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations
All photographs appear as a group following page 112.
Preface
Just a few days after the United States entered the First World War in April 1917, President Woodrow Wilson created a new federal agency, the Commission on Training Camp Activities (CTCA), and charged it with responsibility for protecting the newly mobilized American soldiers from the ravages of venereal disease. Over the course of the war this commission acquired substantial support from the Wilson administration and employed its financial and human resources to intervene considerably in the daily lives of soldiers and civilians across the United States.
Though appointed to prevent unnecessary manpower losses, the personnel of the CTCA always anticipated a much larger role for themselves. True to the progressive tradition from which they emerged, these reformers combined their concern for military efficiency with broader social and cultural goals. Americans had long viewed soldiers as social pariahs and their encampments as unsavory influences. With progressives commanding the war effort, however, this traditional affront to standards of decency was no longer acceptable. Fears of soldier immorality conflated easily with reformers concerns about the cultural influence of others they viewed as marginal Americans. Eager to combat what they understood as looming social chaos, progressives in the commission envisioned the remaking of the soldiers training environment as the first step in a more complete transformation of American culture. Beginning with the troops and their civilian neighbors, the progressives planned to use education, recreation, and repression to create crusaders worthy of the American cause and capable of sustaining the campaign for national uplift after the war.
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