05/28/2026
Rockford Historical Society Vice-President Terry Clement and the Rockford Area Museum present his weekly series of articles relating to the upcoming semiquincentennial of the United States.
AMERICA 250
On June 12, 1942, President Roosevelt, by executive order created the Office of War Information (OWI). This replaced four different federal agencies that disseminated government information to the public: the Foreign Information Service, the Office of Facts and Figures (OFF), the Office of Government Reports, and the Division of Information of the Office of Emergency Management. By combining so many different divisions, branches, and offices into one central organization, Roosevelt sought to avoid conflicting and confusing government statements, and losing the trust of the people. Because the OWI's mandate covered both foreign and domestic audiences, two branches were created: the Overseas Operations Branch and the Domestic Operations Branch. The OWI worked with radio broadcasts, newspapers, posters, photographs, films and other forms of media.
To get these messages out, however, the federal government turned not to its own employees or to its military, but the Boy Scouts of America.
The Boy Scouts of America were to become The Poster Boys of World War II.
The Scout Oath:
On my honor, I will do my best
To do my duty to God and my country and to obey the Scout Law;
To help other people at all times;
To keep myself physically strong, mentally awake and morally straight.
The scouts had already proven themselves during WWI, selling War Bonds, scrap collections, and as Civil Defense Messengers.
The OWI posters had to be placed in street-level windows of every store, office, restaurant, and "service establishment of every kind". Almost 200,000 different designs were printed to support the war effort. While the total number of individual copies is difficult to pinpoint, some series, like those distributed by the OWI from 1943–1945, saw millions of copies printed.
Starting in October 1942, Boy Scouts of America distributed thousands of OWI posters every two weeks to 2,300 communities. While total cumulative numbers vary, the Scouts could receive over one million posters per month to distribute to local stores.
The Boy Scouts of America wanted to be officially and formally recognized by President Roosevelt as America's main distributor of government information. On February 16, 1943, President Roosevelt signed a letter asking the scouts "to take an important commission as Government Dispatch Bearers for the Office of War Information." The Boy Scouts of America would become the "Official Dispatch Bearers" for the OWI.
Although the OWI and the poster program had some rocky moments before its eventual dissolution at the end of the war, the operation successfully used 1,600,000 young people to inform and inspire civilians on the Homefront. The Office of War Information was no longer necessary when World War II came to a close. The agency was officially disbanded by President Truman in 1945.
https://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2005/summer/posters