United States government agency
War Industries Board Formed July 8, 1917 (1917-07-08 ) Dissolved January 1, 1919 Headquarters Washington 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]
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]
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]
Members of the War Industries Board [ edit ]
The original seven members of the War Industries Board were:[ 5]
Other later members included:[ 7] [ 8] [ 9]
Major General James B. Aleshire , Army member of the priorities committee
Chandler P. Anderson , special counsel on international affairs
George Newell Armsby , member of the priorities committee
Lewis R. Atwood , chief of the paint and pigment section[ 10]
Captain Clarence Bamberger , assistant chief of forgings, guns, etc., section[ 11]
Ollie Josephine Prescott Baird Bennett [ 12]
Robert J. Bulkley , chief of legal section
Samuel P. Bush , chief of ordnance (small arms, ammunition)
Anthony Caminetti , member of war prison labor and national waste reclamation section
March F. Chase (1876–1935), director of explosives division
William L. Clayton , member of cotton distribution committee
John Lee Coulter , staff expert, division of planning and statistics
William Byron Colver , member of the price fixing committee[ 13]
Charles H. Conner, chief of platinum section, wood chemical section and gold and silver section
John M. Curran , member of conservation division[ 14]
Clarence Dillon , partner in Dillon, Read & Co.
Charles Edgar (1862–1922), director of lumber
Colonel George Henson Estes , Army representative, requirements division
Felix Frankfurter , Labor Department representative on priorities board
Harry Augustus Garfield , member of the price fixing committee
Edwin Francis Gay , chairman, planning and statistics division[ 15]
Army General George Washington Goethals (became a member in 1918)
Joseph F. Guffey , chief of petroleum section
Commander John Milton Hancock , Navy member of the price fixing committee
Charles P. Howland , member of the priorities committee
Brigadier General Hugh S. Johnson [ 16]
Colonel Charles Keller , joint national power administrator
Victor L. King , chairman of the dye section[ 17]
Henry Krumb , member of the priorities committee
Alexander Legge , selected by President Woodrow Wilson as vice chairman after the reorganization in March 1918
Charles Kenneth Leith , chief of mica section and mineral import-export advisor[ 18]
Isador Lubin , staff expert, division of planning and statistics
Charles H. MacDowell (1867–1954), director of chemical division
Rear Admiral Newton E. Mason , Navy member of the priorities committee[ 19]
Joseph A. McDonald , staff expert, steel division
Rear Admiral Samuel McGowan , Navy representative, conservation division
Eugene Meyer , Special Advisor to the War Industries Board on Non-Ferrous Metals
Wesley Clair Mitchell , chief of price statistics
Lieutenant Colonel Robert Hiester Montgomery , Army member of the price fixing committee
Herbert R. Moody (1868–1947), chief of the technical branch of the chemistry division[ 20]
R. V. Norris (1864–1928), representative of U.S. Fuel Administration on the price-fixing commission[ 21]
P. B. Noyes , Fuel Administration representative on requirements division and priorities board
Edwin B. Parker , head of priorities division[ 22]
Herbert E. Peabody (died 1930), head of woolen goods section, textile and rubber division[ 23]
George N. Peek , commissioner of finished products
Thomas Nelson Perkins (1870–1937), member of priorities commission and chief council[ 24]
Charles Piez , Emergency Fleet Corporation representative on priorities board
Thomas C. Powell , manager of inland traffic and member of the priorities committee[ 25] [ 26]
J. Leonard Replogle , director of steel supply
Albert C. Ritchie , general counsel
Adolph G. Rosengarten (1870–1946), chief of miscellaneous chemical section
Hugh W. Sanford (1879–1961), chief of the ferro-alloys section[ 27]
Jacob F. Schoellkopf Jr. (1858–1942), member of chemical division[ 28]
Arch Wilkinson Shaw , head of conservation division
Edward Stettinius Sr. , partner in J.P. Morgan & Co.
Walter W. Stewart , staff member, division of planning and statistics
George Cameron Stone , head of Non-Ferrous Metal section
Henry Carter Stuart , member of the price fixing committee
Leland L. Summers , technical advisor and chair of Foreign Mission
Herbert Bayard Swope , assistant to Bernard Baruch[ 29]
Frank William Taussig , member of the price fixing committee
Samuel M. Vauclain , chairman, special advisory subcommittee on plants and munitions
Edward R. Weidlein , technical advisor, chemical division
Louis S. Weiss , member of legal section
Theodore Whitmarsh
Daniel Willard (1861–1942), chairman of the War Industries Board[ 6]
Harrison Williams , member of facilities division
Major Seth Williams , Marine Corps Representative to the Board (Requirements Division); Future Quartermaster of the Marine Corps in 1937-1944.[ 30] [ 31]
Leo Wolman , staff member, division of planning and statistics
Pope Yeatman , head, non-ferrous metals division[ 32]
^ "War Purchase Board of Three proposed" . The New York Times . July 11, 1917.
^ 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.
^ 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 .
^ war industries board . 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War, Freie Universität Berlin
^ Baruch, B. (1941). American Industry in the War: A Report of the War Industries Board . New York: Prentice-Hall, p.22.
^ a b c Rose, W. R. (1918-03-07). "All in the Day's Work" . Cleveland Plain Dealer . p. 10. Retrieved 2025-04-18 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Baruch, B. (1941). American Industry in the War: A Report of the War Industries Board . New York: Prentice-Hall, p.27.
^ Members of the War Industries Board Organization . Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. 1919.
^ Haynes, Williams (1945). "Appendix X: The War Industries Board" . American Chemical Industry: The World War I Period: 1912–1922 . Vol. II. New York, New York: D. Van Nostrand Company, Inc. pp. 352– 354.
^ "Lewis R. Atwood" . Oil, Paint and Drug Reporter : 20. 1926-01-11. Retrieved 2025-03-29 – via Archive.org .
^ "Clarence Bamberger, Utah Financier, Dies" . The Salt Lake Tribune . 1984-02-19. p. 23. Retrieved 2024-01-28 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Bellafaire, Judith (2009). Women Doctors in War . College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press. p. 55. ISBN 978-1-60344-146-9 .
^ "William B. Colver, 56, Dies in Washington" . The Evening Press . 1926-05-29. p. 18. Retrieved 2024-01-12 – via Newspapers.com .
^ The National Cyclopedia of American Biography . Vol. 28. Clifton, NJ White. 1967. p. 438. Retrieved 2025-03-30 – via Archive.org .
^ "Dr. Edwin F. Gay, Economist and War Aide, Dies" . Los Angeles Times . 1946-02-09. p. 1. Retrieved 2024-01-16 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Appoint Committee on Steel Situation." New York Times. May 18, 1918 ; Johnson, Paul. Modern Times: The World From the Twenties to the Nineties. Rev. ed. New York: HarperCollins, 2001. ISBN 0-06-093550-2 p. 16.
^ Haynes, Williams (1945). American Chemical Industry – The World War I Period: 1912–1922 . Vol. 3. D. Van Nostrand Company Inc. p. 241. Retrieved 2025-04-01 – via Archive.org .
^ "Dr. Leith, Retired UW Prof, Dies" . Kenosha Evening News . September 14, 1956. p. 22. Retrieved January 29, 2024 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Navy Ordnance Activities, World War I, 1917–1918 , p. 29.
^ "Herbert R. Moody" . The Chemist . 24 : 473. November 1947. Retrieved 2025-04-06 – via Archive.org .
^ "R. V. Norris is Signally Honored" . Times Leader . 1918-09-13. p. 20. Retrieved 2025-04-08 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Cuff, Robert D. (1973). The War Industries Board: Business–Government Relations During World War I . The Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 120. ISBN 978-0-8018-1360-3 . Retrieved 2024-01-13 – via Newspapers.com .
^ U.S. War Department. Handbook of Economic Agencies of the War of 1917 . pp. 514– 515. Retrieved 2025-04-11 – via Archive.org .
^ "T. N. Perkins, 67, Widely Known Lawyer, Dead" . Springfield Daily News . 1937-10-07. p. 1. Retrieved 2025-04-12 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Thomas C. Powell, Retired Railway President Dies" . Courier-News . 1945-02-10. p. 6. Retrieved 2024-01-28 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Death Comes to Railway Official" . The Cincinnati Enquirer . 1945-02-11. p. 16. Retrieved 2024-01-28 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Davis, Lee (1961-11-15). "Hugh W. Sanford, Industrialist and Financier, Dies" . The Knoxville News-Sentinel . p. 1. Retrieved 2025-04-16 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Jacob F. Schoellkopf Jr., Financier, is Dead at 69" . Buffalo Evening News . 1952-12-17. p. 9. Retrieved 2025-04-17 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Private Rites Set Tomorrow for Herbert Bayard Swope" . The Evening Star . 1958-06-21. p. 12. Retrieved 2025-04-19 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "#110 Major General Seth Williams, Class of 1903, Helped Shape the Modern Marine Corps" . Norwich University. Archived from the original on August 15, 2018. Retrieved August 31, 2018 .
^ Baruch, B. (1941). American Industry in the War: A Report of the War Industries Board . New York: Prentice-Hall, p.292.
^ "Pope Yeatman, Engineer, Dies" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . 1953-12-06. p. B21. Retrieved 2024-01-16 – via Newspapers.com .
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