G.I. Bill: Difference between revisions
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Benefits included helping to pay for returning veterans to finish their schooling, or enroll in new studies at colleges and universities, and helped veterans to acquire home mortgages.<ref name=nytimes1994-06-22/> | Benefits included helping to pay for returning veterans to finish their schooling, or enroll in new studies at colleges and universities, and helped veterans to acquire home mortgages.<ref name=nytimes1994-06-22/> | ||
In the post-war years 10 million veterans took advantage of the bill.<ref name=nytimes1994-06-22B/> 2.5 million veterans took advantage of the Bill's education benefits during the 1946-47 academic year, alone. | |||
In an article reviewing the impact of the Bill, fifty years after its passage, the ''[[New York Times]]'' wrote:<ref name=nytimes1994-06-22/> | In an article reviewing the impact of the Bill, fifty years after its passage, the ''[[New York Times]]'' wrote:<ref name=nytimes1994-06-22/> | ||
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</ref> | </ref> | ||
<ref name=nytimes1994-06-22B> | |||
{{cite news | {{cite news | ||
| url = | | url = https://www.nytimes.com/1994/06/22/opinion/the-gi-bill-50-years-on.html?unlocked_article_code=BIArLrMEhMjFIi2FCi1-PV4lR8X9RRdBmTdp411GXqXKwVhIg4lLtF-NVC_sCqNr9yoGloKEZc5e5WLmDNDz09W3HwmGaRWA5Ro8cG8ZedYmfYLmb3BfCUESx6Qu_dww4n6GQrqUZ_pgUaZdhsiTnBVz_qNcN_v79P2uMgFkAmTEoNde6PxhkFz4s2asuNdYucVTC2RJzduDQAVF0SbVyjl2DHgS4jIotNQMz83pL7piUT33-VXQR7k5IGuzFkhQ8s8rDfrs15dQ7P-6IW6K71JY6hnasbgs_2wjQbhx2bC1wzxUM2VNPbl5IBctGbntYcKUHBzNEij4plGybnbZQFw&smid=em-share | ||
| title = | | title = The G.I. Bill, 50 Years On | ||
| work = | | work = [[New York Times]] | ||
| date = 1994-06-22 | |||
| date = | | page = A20 | ||
| page = | |||
| archiveurl = | | archiveurl = | ||
| archivedate = | | archivedate = | ||
| accessdate = 2023-10-12 | | accessdate = 2023-10-12 | ||
| url-status = live | | url-status = live | ||
| quote = | | quote = And so Americans who never dared dream of attending college joined a flood that crested in 1946-1947, when 2.5 million veterans qualified for $500 or more in annual tuition, plus monthly allowances of $65 for single students, $90 for married. Almost overnight on U.S. campuses, Quonset huts and prefab houses bloomed to accommodate this influx. In a stroke, the legislation kept a demobilizing army from engulfing the labor force, threw open cloistered academic doors and offered energizing plasma to schools of every kind, public or private. | ||
}} | }} | ||
</ref> | </ref> |
Revision as of 19:59, 12 October 2023
The Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944 (commonly known as "the GI Bill") was an act of the U.S. Congress to provide benefits to Americans returning to civilian life after military service.[1]
Benefits included helping to pay for returning veterans to finish their schooling, or enroll in new studies at colleges and universities, and helped veterans to acquire home mortgages.[1]
In the post-war years 10 million veterans took advantage of the bill.[2] 2.5 million veterans took advantage of the Bill's education benefits during the 1946-47 academic year, alone.
In an article reviewing the impact of the Bill, fifty years after its passage, the New York Times wrote:[1]
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However, even though the bill had undergone multiple updates, benefits had been eroded by inflation.[1] Young veterans, returning to civilian life after service in World War 2, were generally able to live on their GI Bill benefits, while they studied, but, by 1994, those benefits were only a modest contributions to a returning veterans education costs.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 William Celis 3d. 50 Years Later, the Value of the G.I. Bill Is Questioned, New York Times, 1994-06-22, p. B7. Retrieved on 2023-10-12.
- ↑ The G.I. Bill, 50 Years On, New York Times, 1994-06-22, p. A20. Retrieved on 2023-10-12. “And so Americans who never dared dream of attending college joined a flood that crested in 1946-1947, when 2.5 million veterans qualified for $500 or more in annual tuition, plus monthly allowances of $65 for single students, $90 for married. Almost overnight on U.S. campuses, Quonset huts and prefab houses bloomed to accommodate this influx. In a stroke, the legislation kept a demobilizing army from engulfing the labor force, threw open cloistered academic doors and offered energizing plasma to schools of every kind, public or private.”