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(H)our History Lesson: Defense Manufacturing in Wichita, Kansas, World War II Heritage City

Black and white photo of white men with head bent over small cannisters on a conveyor belt
Photo 1: Coleman Lamp and Stove Company assembly line, 1942. “A group of men manufacture the G.I. Pocket Stove (No. 520) at the Coleman Lamp and Stove Company in Wichita. On the back of the photograph, the War Department lists restrictions on the photograph's publication."

(Courtesy of Wichita State University Libraries, Special Collections and University Archives; wsu_ms2013-03_38_41_001_01

About this Lesson

This lesson is part of a series teaching about the World War II home front, with Wichita, Kansas designated as an American World War II Heritage City. The lesson contains three primary reading sources and photos to contribute to learners’ understandings on defense manufacturing with examples from Wichita, Kansas: the Coleman Lamp and Stove Company and Langdon Tent and Awning Company. Women were also employed at both companies as defense workers.

To see more lessons about World War II, visit Teaching with Historic Places.

Objectives:

  1. Identify examples of defense manufacturing in Wichita, Kansas.

  1. Describe the benefits of the products made by companies to the war efforts.

  1. Evaluate the importance of the contributions of home front workers to defense manufacturing.

Materials for Students:

  1. Photos (can be displayed digitally)

  1. Readings 1, 2, 3

  1. Recommended: map of Wichita, Kansas

Getting Started: Essential Question

How did defense manufacturing on the home front in Wichita, Kansas contribute to the war efforts?

Advertisement with a large red arrow on the left pointing right with text "popular Coleman Products Serving on the War Front and the Homefront" On the right is two rows of applainces including camping laterns, table lamps, portable stoves, etc.
Photo 2: "Popular Coleman Products Serving on the War Front and the Home Front,” p. 17.  Full booklet, “How Soldiers Cook at the Fighting Fronts,” (1944) by the Coleman Company of Wichita, Kansas, has other home front connections, such as planning for civilian use of the products after the war.

Courtesy of Wichita State University Libraries, Special Collections and University Archives; wsu_ms2013-03_38_41_001_01

Quotation to consider:

“The men and women of Coleman who are fighting the ‘Battle of Production,’ are as truly serving the war effort as this kid from Kansas who is playing ‘Leap Frog’ among the Japanese Islands of the Pacific! Coleman needs additional men and women to help keep the even flow of vital materials going to all the world’s fighting fronts. Won’t you enlist in the Coleman Production Army?”

-From an ad by the Coleman Lamp and Stove Company in The Wichita Eagle, November 7, 1943, p.11

Read to Connect

Black and white photo of a white woman at a sewing machine with a big piece of fabric. Other sewing stations visible in the right top corner.
Photo 3: “Langdon Tent and Awning Company, Wichita, Kansas. With the grade and dexterity of master dressmaker this attractive young woman fabricates "pup" tents for the expanding defense Army. A two-needle felling machine joins two widths of cloth to form the main body of the tent.” June 1941

Library of Congress

Student Activities

Questions for Reading 1, Photos 1-2, and Quotation

1. In Photo 2, why would Coleman highlight products being used on the “war front” and the “home front” in their booklet? (You may also choose to explore other pages in “How Soldiers Cook at the Fighting Fronts.")

2. What is the significance of the one-burner stove produced by the Coleman Lamp and Stove company according to Colonel Holmes?

3. How did the employees of Coleman Lamp and Stove company contribute to the war effort, and what specific recognition did they receive for their efforts?

4. What was the symbolism of awarding defense manufacturers the army-navy “E” award during wartime?

Questions for Reading 2 and Photos 3-4

  1. What contracts were awarded to the Langdon Tent and Awning company?

  1. In photos 3 & 4 (above and below), who is working at the company? How do the pictures help you visualize the production process?

  1. What are pup tents?

  2. Why was this production in Wichita important to the army?

By the numbers:

Carefully consider the numbers shared in Reading 2.

Calculate: In part A, how many pup tents would need to be made per day? In part B, How much was the army paying per pair of canvas leggings produced? How many canvas leggings would need to be made each day for the contract? Repeat the same process for the pup tent order in part B.

Black and white photo of a white woman with her back to the camera at a sewing machine. A spool of thread in the foreground.
Photo 4: “Langdon Tent and Awning Company, Wichita, Kansas. Reinforcing 3/16th guy ropes for "pup" tents to shelter the expanding defense Army in the field. This plant is turning out 1500 of these tents a day to rigid Army Quartermaster Corps specifications” June 1941.

Library of Congress

Questions for Reading 3

  1. What is the usefulness of decalcomania, developed by H.W. Morton?

  1. What does Coleman supply to local defense and aircraft factories? And, to the Royal Canadian Air Force and U.S. air force?

  1. How did innovation by the Coleman company improve efficiency in home front efforts?

Lesson Closing

  • Consider the types of products described in readings 1-3. Why was it important that the U.S. and its Allies were producing diverse products during wartime?

  • Reflect on the essential question: How did defense manufacturing on the home front in Wichita, Kansas contribute to the war efforts?

This lesson was written by Sarah Nestor Lane, an educator and consultant with the Cultural Resources Office of Interpretation and Education, funded by the National Council on Public History's cooperative agreement with the National Park Service.

Part of a series of articles titled Wichita, KS, WWII Heritage City Lesson.

Last updated: April 9, 2024