Transformation on the Home Front World War II opened a new chapter in the lives of Depression-weary Americans. The United States of America had an unusual importance in the war, it had been spared the physical destruction that had taken place throughout the world. Americans on the home front did not see the fighting and brutality as other countries experienced it. However, the events and changes on the home front due to the World War transformed America. One of the greatest conversions was that of the American woman. Women around the country were transformed from the average house wife into a person with a voice and most importantly a purpose.For the first time women were working in the industries of America. As husbands and fathers, sons and brothers shipped out to fight in Europe and the Pacific, millions of women marched into factories, offices, and military bases to work in paying jobs and in roles reserved for men in peacetime. Women were making a living that was not comparable to anything they had seen before. They were dependent on themselves; for once they could support the household. Most of the work in industry was related to the war, such as radios for airplanes and shells for guns. Peggy Terry, a young woman who worked at a shell-loading plant in Kentucky, tells of the money that was to be made from industrial work (108). “ We made a fabulous sum of thirty-two dollars a week. To us that was an absolute miracle. Before that, we made nothing (108).” Sarah Killingsworth worked in a defense plant. “ All I wanted to do was get in the factory, because they were payin’ more than what I’d been makin’. Which was forty dollars a week, which was pretty good considering I’d been makin’ about twenty dollars a week. When I left Tennessee I was only makin’ two-fifty a week, so that was quite a jump (114).” Terry had never been able to provide for herself as she w...