Andy Wilson December 1, 2005 History 443 Dr. Rankin African Americans in World War II: Achieving the Double-V 1. The Homefront a. Discontent b. Struggles in the work force 2. The Battlefront a. 92nd Division b. Tuskegee Airmen c. The Red Ball Express 3. After War a. Civil Rights b. Double-V Bailey, Beth, Farber, David, The “Double-V” Campaign in World War II Hawaii: African-Americans, Racial Ideology, and Federal Power, The American Experience in World War II, Rutledge, New York, 2003. Dalfiume, Richard M., The “Forgotten Years” of the Negro Revolution, The American Experience in World War II, Rutledge, New York, 2003. Goulden, Marc, Magnusson, Sigurdur, Modell, John, World War II in the Lives of Black Americans: Some Findings and interpretation, The American Experience in World War II, Rutledge, New York, 2003. Miller, Donald M., The Story of World War II, Touchstone, New York 2001. Sandler, Stanley, Homefront Battlefront: Military Racial Disturbances in the Zone of the Interior, 1941-1942, The American Experience in World War II, Rutledge, New York, 2003.