The Road to WWII, Bubble Gum Cards, and the “Horrors of War”

Essential Question: How can everyday items help us understand the past?

Common Core Standards: R2, R4, R7, WHST1, WHST8

Introduction:

In the early 1930s, despite the harsh economic realities of the Great Depression, a Philadelphia bubble gum entrepreneur Warren Bowman was the first person to build gum factories in Japan. A physically imposing person at six foot three and weighing 220 pounds, Bowman was originally a used-car salesperson, who grabbed unsuspecting customers right off the street. Gum giant William Wrigley was his hero and soon Bowman managed to convince a bank to loan him several dollars to start his own business. He started with some old machines, barrels of sugar and glucose, and established the Bowman Chewing Gum Company, or GUM, Inc. His business quickly took off as he produced bubble gum brands that outsold many of his competitors and began introducing chewing gum cards into the packets he sold and distributed to local grocery stores.

In 1937, Bowman heard a news broadcast on his radio about the raging war in China, while also reading about the Japanese invasion of the Asian mainland in the newspaper. Although he was aware of his financial enterprise in Japan, an idea struck him. He could make collector cards showing scenes from the handful of wars going on in China, Spain, and Ethiopia and use them to sell his gum. Bowman figured that children would be attracted to the cards showing battle scenes, but he was also determined to use the cards to alert impressionable minds about the importance of peace rather than the sensationalism of war. He called upon his advertising executive George Moll, a Sunday school teacher, to begin working on his project.

What soon followed was a 240 card series picturing battle scenes and attacks on civilian populations. The “Horrors of War” series was a financial success. Each piece of gum, which sold for one cent, came with a picture card depicting the brutality of war—mostly atrocities committed by the Japanese military. The series, which finally produced 288 cards, grossed over 100 million dollars. Bowman insisted that he was trying to teach peace by exposing the horrors of war—each GUM, Inc. card had printed at the bottom the inscription “To know the HORRORS OF WAR is to want PEACE”—and claimed to have received the full support of the peace organization World Peaceways. Given the strong isolationist sentiment in America and the desire for neutrality Bowman’s rationale for producing the “Horrors of War” gum cards lent credence to the general belief that the ideal of peace carried substantial weight with the public. Even President Franklin D. Roosevelt used the cards as a way to explain the terrors of war to the American people.

However, Bowman’s collector cards did not meet the approval of teachers and parents who considered them too graphic and gruesome in detail. In the United States, many parents tried to prevent their children from purchasing the one-cent gum, or confiscated the cards. Japanese-Americans were also offended by the series and feared a nativist backlash reminiscent of the late 1800s and early 1900s. In Japan, moreover, the cards became a bone of diplomatic contention because some of the atrocities committed by the Japanese army in Manchuria and China were highlighted in the cards. In 1938, Japanese Embassy officials in Washington, D.C., presented a formal protest to the American State Department, insisting that Bowman withdraw his cards and gum from sale. The State Department refused to bow to Japanese protests, especially in light of the fact that the Japanese had sunk a U.S. gunboat, The Panay, on the Yangtze River, one of the events depicted in the card series. The Japanese then declared Bowman “an enemy of Japan” and ordered him to close his gum factories in their country.

Regardless of whether Bowman’s intentions were purely financial or altruistic, the “Horrors of War” series remains one of the most popular items for collectors and card buffs today.  As an educational tool, the cards can be examined on three different levels and lessons plans and DBQs can be created as methods of instruction. First, in terms of warfare these cards can highlight the development and modernization of weaponry making the destructiveness of war far more horrifying than previously imagined. Students will be able to identify the new methods of weaponry and their impact on physical structures and humankind. Comparisons can be made between weapons in previous wars and those developed since World War I. Second, in terms of peace, students will be able to see from these cards the enormity of destructiveness related to warfare as well as the many innocent civilians victimized by advanced armies. Themes related to peace can be ascertained in the backdrop of isolationist sentiment and larger questions raised with respect to diplomacy and statecraft. The notion of imperial conquest using force can be readily identified in the card series with respect to China and Ethiopia. Questions can be asked regarding Spain’s Civil War and its effect on the populace. Third, and last, the stories on the back of the cards can be used as a means of literary instruction. Apart from the visual imagery depicted in the scenes, is it possible for students to read the captions and learn about events taking place at that time? What historical lessons are being derived from the cards’ narratives and do they advance one’s understanding of the consequences and horrors of war? How did the isolationist sentiment of this period influence Bowman’s decision to produce this series of bubble gum cards? Based on reading the captions would students be more inclined to praise peace and condemn conquest?

Below are ten representative cards with the illustration and story for consideration. A brief excerpt of each collector card is provided along with questions that can be used in a document-based format.

DOCUMENT BASED QUESTION

The Great Depression, a time of terrible poverty and hardship, provided a springboard for leaders like Hitler, Franco, and the Japanese military to gain power in their respective countries. Each of these leaders and generals promised economic and social hope to those who had been hurt by the depression, but all of these plans came at a dramatic price. These individuals led campaigns that would drive the world into its second great conflict, World War II. In 1938, the war was still far off in the minds of many Americans, but GUM, inc. and owner/founder Warren Bowman saw the atrocities being committed by Spain, Germany, and Japan, and felt that he could make a pitch for peace. Utilizing the popular bubble gum cards of the era, he believed that “To know the HORRORS of WAR is to want PEACE”, as is stated on every card. In the following DBQ, answer the questions at the end of each card, and always keep in the back of your mind the theme presented at the bottom of each card.

“Big Shells Kill Madrid Children at Play”: “the zipping voices of shells close-at-hand became a familiar sound to the civilians in the cities of Spain under bombardment during the Civil War in 1936. After the intensive shelling for the day was ended, small boys who had been huddled in the vicinity would first cautiously peer out from their hiding places in cellars, then scurry about the ruins….Their playground was turned into a place of death and destruction by the relentless Spirit of War.”

  1. This picture portrays children being bombed, why might the creator have chosen this to promote peace?
  2. Based on when these cards came out (1938), why would the author be describing a scene in Madrid?

“Chinese Victims of War”: “War has always been a cruel butcher of men, a relentless destroyer of civilization. Japan’s undeclared war against China is even more horrible because it has caused the wholesale destruction of innocent families….What is to become of the World…if War is not outlawed!”

  1. What might make these “Chinese Victims” have to move through the mountains?
  2. How might this card promote peace?

“Bombing an American School Building”: “Happy youngsters at play in the school yard, surprised by cruel enemy bombers….Peace workers should be given every encouragement. A condition of patriotic peace is the only substitute for the Threat of War.”

  1. Why might this scene have been chosen as a way to promote peace?
  2. Do you think that the school children were the target in this bombing raid?

“Inside the Maginot Line”: “ Along the border where France and Germany touch fr 200 miles the French have been building since 1929 the world’s greatest fortification, known as the Maginot Line. It is directly opposite the rapidly building Germans “Siegfried Line.” … Diagrams at the right explain the unusual underground system.”

  1. What is the Maginot Line? Why is it significant during the late 1930’s?
  2. How did the Maginot Line represent a move away from peace?

“Chamberlain Meets Hitler in Peace Effort”: “With Sudetens and Czechs rioting, German divisions are mobilizing along the frontier….Britain’s Prime Minister courageously decided to go to Hitler to talk the whole thing over, to try to find a peaceful solution.”

  1. What prompted Chamberlain to meet Hitler at this time?
  2. What was the policy that Chamberlain and other leaders used towards Hitler?

“Cholera breaks out in Pootung”: “War, famine and pestilence go hand-in-hand, and so it was half expected that disease would be reported in some of the highly congested areas of war-cursed China….Their skin shrinks and grows gray in color. Thirst is unquenchable. Little can be done for suffers beyond alleviating their agony.”

  1. Why in wars is there often an issue with disease outbreaks?
  2. Did the Japanese do anything surprising the in the face of this epidemic?

“Japs Rain Death in Canton, Ignoring Protests”: “Ignoring strong foreign protest Japanese continued daily rids over Canton, South China’s capital, while helpless citizens, packed in the streets, stood transfixed with horror.”

  1. Why might the Japanese not have listened to foreign protests?
  2. Why would the Japanese choose to bomb Canton?

“Death Among the Water Lillies”: “The picture shows one of the artistic little ponds—once the decoration of a local mandarin’s garden—now a pathetic scene of desolation unnoticed by the triumphant but callous procession of Chinese troops.”

  1. How has this picturesque scene been changed by the war?
  2. Why did the creators choose this as a scene to promote peace?

“Rebels Bomb Barcelona’s Flower Promenade”: “The picture shows how horror overtook the scene of beauty when the bomb struck. Note the flowers and shrubbery being torn up by shrapnel, as shoppers were killed and children annihilated.”

  1. How has the war changed this once peaceful section of Barcelona?
  2. Would this have been a strategic target for bombing?

“Czechs Watch Border as Germany Marches”: “Already the steely defenses of Greater Germany surrounded the Czechs on three sides, while the Sudeten Germans within were ready for an outside coup as a result of dissatisfaction with Czech proposals in answer their grievances.”

  1. Why would the creator choose to show farmers and soldiers watching the German invasion?
  2. What is the significance of the German invasion of Czechoslovakia?