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The Video the Government Tried to Erase: Hemp for Victory (1942) [Unedited]

Hemp for Victory: The Bureaucratic Hypocrisy and Strategic Necessity of WWII

Of all the chapters in the long timeline of American hemp, none is quite as paradoxical as the years between 1942 and 1945. It is a masterclass in political pragmatism, proving that while bureaucracy can write laws, reality always dictates terms.

The Crisis of 1942: The Loss of Manila Hemp

Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, the theater of war expanded rapidly across the Pacific. By early 1942, Imperial Japanese forces had seized control of the Philippine Islands. For the U.S. military, this wasn’t just a territorial loss; it was a supply-chain catastrophe.

The Philippines were the world’s primary source of abaca (commonly known as Manila hemp), a fiber prized for its marine durability. Synthetic alternatives like nylon were still in their infancy and lacked the tensile strength required for massive naval mooring lines, towing cables, and parachute rigging.

The U.S. military calculated that a single soldier required roughly several pounds of hemp for clothing, gear, and footwear alone. The military was facing a literal breaking point.

THE WAR INDUSTRIAL UTILITY OF HEMP
Naval Rigging & Cables High salt-water resistance
Parachute Webbing High tensile break thresholds
Fire Hoses & Threading Mildew resistant wrapping

The Great Policy Flip-Flop

Faced with disaster, the U.S. Department of Agriculture pulled a staggering u-turn. Just five years prior, the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937 had successfully regulated industrial hemp out of existence, burying it under immense taxes and bureaucratic red tape.

To undo their own damage, the government formed War Hemp Industries, Inc., a government-subsidized corporation tasked with building 42 specialized processing mills across the American Midwest—primarily in Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Minnesota.

To mobilize the workforce, the USDA released the famous educational film “Hemp for Victory”. The narrator explicitly commanded the public:

“In 1942, patriotic farmers at the government’s request planted 36,000 acres of seed hemp… target for 1943 is 50,000 acres of seed hemp… Hemp for mooring lines! Hemp for towing lines! Hemp for tackle and gear!”

Farmers and their sons were even granted draft deferments if they committed to growing hemp, recognizing agricultural production as vital military service.

The Post-War Erasement

By the time Germany and Japan surrendered in 1945, American farmers had successfully cultivated over 140,000 acres of industrial hemp, effectively securing the military’s supply lines.

But as the smoke cleared, the political winds shifted back. The War Hemp Industries mills were abruptly liquidated. The tax exemptions vanished. The restrictions of the 1937 Act were tightly re-enforced, and the government systematically attempted to purge copies of the “Hemp for Victory” film from public record. It wasn’t until 1989 that hemp advocates recovered a copy from the Library of Congress archives, proving the campaign had existed.

The Modern Takeaway: Respecting the Raw Material

The “Hemp for Victory” era shows us that when luxury and aesthetics give way to survival, human innovation strips away the fluff and returns to what works.

We bring that exact mindset to our laboratory at Wellspring. Our 1776 Heritage Reserve is built with zero compromise. We don’t distill away the dense cannabinoids, the dark plant waxes, or the bitter terpenes to make a “smooth, fruity syrup.”

Instead, our formula offers 1776mg of unrefined CBD paired with 250mg of raw CBDa. The high concentration of CBDa (the acidic precursor to CBD) means maximum bioavailability, bringing you a raw, potent extract that echoes the strength of the wartime yields.

It tastes intensely earthy and undeniably bitter—but it represents the unpolished efficiency of a plant that rescued a nation under fire.

heritage-reserve-cbd-cbda-drops

1776 Heritage Reserve Raw CBD CBDa Drops

The 1776 Heritage Reserve: Raw, Unrefined, and Unapologetic. Experience hemp the way the Founding Fathers…
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