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Some
9,000 prisoners were incarcerated at twenty-two camps throughout the state, from
Eglin Army Air Field, Camp Gordon Johnston, and logging camps in the panhandle
to citrus
and sugar fields in the southern peninsula. Some Floridians grew
accustomed to seeing truckloads of POWs travelling to and from work along
Florida roads.
By 1944, it was evident to most Floridians that the war had turned
in favor of the allies. In November of that year an election was held, with
Democrat Millard Caldwell winning the governorship. In his address to the
legislature in April 1945, Governor Caldwell emphasized postwar development and
economic issues, indicating that at least some Floridians were already looking
forward to the end of the war and to Florida's role in the postwar era.
In the spring of 1945 peace came to Europe, and Floridians joined
the country in celebrating V-E Day on May 8, 1945. Only Japan remained to be
defeated. Fears of a costly Allied invasion of the Japanese home islands proved
unfounded as, shortly after the explosion of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and
Nagasaki in August, Japan agreed to surrender terms.
"Peace Comes to World" announced the Florida Times Union on
V-J Day, August 15, 1945. Another round of celebrations hit the state after the
formal Japanese surrender on September 2, 1945. Floridians could be proud of
their efforts and sacrifices during the war, while looking anxiously to the
challenges facing the state, nation and world in the years ahead.
1.Richard R. Lingeman. "Don't You Know
There's a War On?" The American Home Front. New York: G. P. Putnam's
Sons, 1970,
p.240-241.
2.Lingeman, "Don't You Know There's a
War On?, 235.
This is an
article reprinted by permission of the author, Dr. David J. Coles. The
article was published in The Florida Handbook, 28th Biennial
Edition, 2001-2002, compiled by Allen Morris and Joan Perry Morris
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