On April 30, 1941, President Franklin Roosevelt announced a new series of US Savings Bonds and bought the first one himself the following day.
The practice of the government selling securities to the public dates back to 1776. That year, private citizens bought more than $27 million in government bonds to help pay for the American Revolution. They put their trust in their new government that they would be repaid. And indeed, they were all repaid, and on time, proving the system worked and paving the way for a new American tradition.
In the years that followed, Americans bought bonds to aid in many other projects – the Louisiana Purchase, the completion of the transcontinental railroad, the Panama Canal, the purchase of Alaska, and most notably, to fund wars. During the Civil War, the government found that selling bonds person-to-person worked very well. And during the Spanish-American War, they found that small-denomination bonds were very popular with the public.
By the mid-1930s, the nation was shaken by the Great Depression, leaving many Americans with little confidence in financial institutions. US Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau Jr. had seen how some programs targeting ordinary citizens had worked well in Great Britain and France and believed a similar program could work in America. He felt that encouraging smaller savers would decrease the dependence on large private investors, while also giving those citizens a more vested interest in national policy. So Morgenthau developed a new type of government security for general financing that would more greatly appeal to the mass market and was specifically tailored to small savers.
By early 1935, legislation was introduced for a new type of security – the US Savings Bond. It passed the House and Senate on February 4, and the first US Savings Bond, Series A, was issued on March 1, 1935. Over the next six years, about 18 million Series A, B, C, and D bonds were sold for a total of about $4 billion.
By early 1941, much of the world was at war and America had begun modernizing its own defenses while providing equipment to our allies. Factories were filled with workers, the public debt was increasing, and price inflation seemed imminent. Secretary Morgenthau, among others, believed that the surplus funds needed to be saved rather than spent and saw it as an opportunity to unite the public.
So on the night of April 30, 1941, Roosevelt addressed the nation to announce a new Defense Savings Bond, the Series E. He invited all Americans to join him in “one great partnership” to help fund our defense effort. The next day, Roosevelt purchased the first bond as they went on sale to the public. After America entered the war, they became known as War Bonds.
The War Finance Committee supervised the sale of bonds with the help of the War Advertising Council. The posters produced were part of a huge publicity campaign to finance the war. Images of soldiers on the front encouraged citizens back home to sacrifice some their income like the servicemen were sacrificing the comfort of home and even their lives. In addition to the constant reminders from the posters, eight loan drives were held. Some movie theaters offered free admission to anyone who bought a bond that day. The War Bond program was a success as more than $185 billion was raised over the years. Savings Bonds continued to remain popular after the war, and are still offered today.
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I remember in the 1960’s while in the USAF there was a yearly bond drive and each
unit would strive for 100% participation. You did not want to be the one who kept the
unit from that goal. It was like high pressure sales.
Your daily output make for such good reading. Thank you for your deeds!
Can remember when was a young boy in the ’40s my parents helping me but “savings stamps” and then I would insert them in a small booklet. They were just like postage stamps in that they had hummed backing. I was born in ’39 so was a very young boy during the war. Do not remember what was done with the booklet/s of saving stamps. Believe they were 10 cents/stamp.
Thanks for posting.
My dad and mom bought two war bonds for me in 1943 and 1944. They cost $18.75 each and after 10 years, they were worth $25.00. The bonds were never cashed in and I still have them. I checked on their value in 2015, and they were worth a little over $100.00 each.
I wonder if Conrad’s bonds have more intrinsic value than $100?
I wonder if Conrad’s bonds have more intrinsic value than $100?
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Maybe Ukraine could raise some funds for their war efforts, I would definitely buy some to help stop Russia from their craziness.
Agree with Chief. Wonder if GOP wackos would buy any? Save the world – help Ukraine stop Russia NOW!