The G.I. Bill created the prosperity & laid the groundwork for the American superpower. But the postwar boom stopped at the color line. Black American frustration at discriminatory distribution of G.I. benefits would soon erupt into the modern Civil Rights Movement. These discriminatory practices and systemic barriers faced by Black -American veterans under the G.I. Bill had far-reaching consequences that persist today.
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The majority of Black applicants were rejected by racially biased banks, as observed by the National Urban League. Redlining, a discriminatory practice, further hindered Black veterans from purchasing homes by characterizing them as high-risk borrowers. This meant that most black Americans were confined to underinvested cities.
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In 1947, out of 67,000 mortgages insured by the VA in the New York and northern New Jersey suburbs, less than 100 were granted to nonwhites. Similar disparities existed in Mississippi, where only two out of over 3,200 VA-guaranteed home loans went to Black borrowers.
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The situation was not much better in other regions. Across the country, racial covenants explicitly prohibited returning servicemembers from owning or renting properties in white areas. Black- American families were restricted from purchasing homes through restrictive covenants in suburban neighborhoods.
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Even those Black veterans who managed to secure loans faced organized resistance and violence from white homeowners. As a result, when Black WWII veterans reached the age when wealth typically peaks, the median net worth of their households was significantly lower than that of white households, with a difference of $100,000.
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Consequently, Black veterans were largely excluded from benefiting from the postwar housing boom and the accumulation of property equity, which is a key pathway to generational wealth.
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Over a million Black men served in the military during the war and were eligible for educational benefits, including tuition payments and a stipend for college or training. However, the impact of military service and educational benefits differed by race and geography. Black men returning to the segregated South faced limited opportunities at historically Black institutions.
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The G.I. Bill, which provided educational support to World War II veterans, was race-neutral in its terms. But in practice, it was another matter. The G.I. Bill had different effects on educational attainment for Black and white veterans. Despite the promise of reducing educational gaps, it actually widened the economic and educational differences. Many Black veterans couldn’t afford to forgo work and take advantage of the bill’s benefits.
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Even for those who did pursue education, Black veterans faced significant disadvantages compared to their white counterparts. Poor preparation in public education, lack of prior educational attainment due to poverty and social pressures, and racial barriers prevented Black students from accessing universities. Black veterans were often left out as Northern universities hesitated to admit them, while Southern colleges barred their admission.
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The VA encouraged Black veterans to pursue vocational training instead of university admission and arbitrarily denied educational benefits to some students. The overwhelming majority of Black veterans ended up at underfunded and unaccredited Black colleges that couldn’t accommodate the influx of applicants.
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