Meat is Such a Treat – and the Black Market’s Hottest Commodity in the 1940s!

Photo Credit: Weegee / Arthur Fellig / International Center of Photography / Getty Images
Photo Credit: Weegee / Arthur Fellig / International Center of Photography / Getty Images

Americans faced a major toilet-paper shortage with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, but this wasn’t the first time they nearly ran out of a product that was deemed essential. In 1943, the US government started rationing meat, and the American public was far from happy about it. President Franklin Roosevelt told everyone they’d have to make do with less during World War II and, as a result, meat boomed on the black market.

Early wartime rationing in the United States

Various types of meat on display at a grocery store
Meat with ceiling prices and point values per pound, 1943. (Photo Credit: Anthony Potter Collection / Getty Images)

The United States began rationing supplies immediately after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941. However, it wasn’t until the following year that these efforts began limiting consumer goods.

Initially, America’s meat was being diverted to service members who needed more protein, in comparison to those on the home front. However, as historian Leslie Przybylek points out, meat wasn’t just a major component of the American diet, it was also a symbol of success and national identity.

It’s easy to forget that America was fresh off the Great Depression, and many still remembered Prohibition, another period in American history when people were denied something they thoroughly enjoyed.

What did rationing look like during World War II?

Propaganda poster featuring the exchange of money for a cut of meat and the words, "SUCKER! IF YOU PAY OVER CEILING PRICES"
Propaganda poster discouraging the purchase of meat on the black market. (Photo Credit: Hulton Archive / Getty Images)

The American rationing system was implemented in the spring of 1942. Rations took the form of stamps, which could be turned in for specific food items.

However, the system was in constant flux. Stamps and the value of papers were changed every few months. Sometimes a product would be taken off the ration list when a new book came out, which resulted in confusion over what stamps could be used.

While many protein sources were available through the rationing system, the availability of meat became limited. The American “Share the Meat” campaign asked all Americans over the age of 12 to limit their meat consumption to two and a half pounds per week. Dieticians, national meat councils and local authorities worked together to make protein-pack recipes as a meat-filler, but the American public was dissatisfied and illegal operations surrounding meat began to flourish.

‘Meatleggers’ and the black market

Still from 'Black Marketing'
Black Marketing, a World War II-era propaganda film produced by the US Office of War to discourage people buying meat on the black market. (Photo Credit: Roger Smith / US Office of War Information / Farm Security Administration / Library of Congress / Public Domain)

By 1943, consumers were facing shortages and limits on their favorite meats: beef, pork, veal, lamb and, especially, steak. Good cuts of meat were becoming increasingly impossible to find, and independent operators, who became known as “meatleggers,” began buying and slaughtering animals clandestinely, selling the meat on the black market at higher prices.

These cuts didn’t require consumers to waste their rationing points, and they had better access to the meat they so desired.

Legally, the unregulated killing of cows and pigs added to the criminal activity of the black market meat industry. Underhanded businessmen would attend livestock auctions and outbid legal buyers to get the cattle and resell it to butchers.

The slaughtering process for the black market meat business was also underground, meaning it was unsanitary. Thus, the meat being sold posed a health risk to Americans at home.

Black Marketing

Still from 'Black Marketing'
Black Marketing, a World War II-era propaganda film produced by the US Office of War to discourage people buying meat on the black market. (Photo Credit: Roger Smith / US Office of War Information / Farm Security Administration / Library of Congress / Public Domain)

The federal government made attempts to stop the illegal sale of meat on the black market.

A 1943 propaganda film, titled Black Marketing, focused on illegal transactions happening on the black market. The popular radio show Fibber McGee and Molly featured a black market meat storyline, in which everyone who purchased and ate black market meat fell ill.

Nonetheless, the underground meat market continued to flourish in United States during the Second World War.

Ray Sprigle and the Pittsburgh meat scandal

Women lined up outside of a building, with a man standing nearby, holding a protest sign
Protester holding a sign, asking people to not buy poultry on the black market, 1942. (Photo Credit: Weegee / Arthur Fellig / International Center of Photography / Getty Images)

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania’s meat black market was one of the biggest in America. As early as 1943, local newspapers called for the end of the “meatleggers” in their city. The black market industry was thriving in broad daylight, prompting Post-Gazette reporter Ray Sprigle to go undercover as a buyer to see how much illegal meat he could procure.

Over a one-month period (March-April 1945), Sprigle was able to get his hands on more than a ton of black-market meat. His findings ran in a seven-part series on the front page of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and 22 other newspapers, as well as Time magazine that April.

As a result of Sprigle’s work, some black market dealers were indicted by a grand jury, and the Office of Price Administration (OPA) made significant program revisions.

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However, while some people praised the investigation and findings, others hated it; consumers didn’t want to give up meat. As such, the black market for meat remained a lingering problem in America until October 1946, when President Harry S. Truman finally removed meat products from ration rolls.

Madeline Hiltz

Maddy Hiltz is someone who loves all things history. She received her Bachelors of Arts in history and her Master’s of Arts degree in history both from the University of Western Ontario in Canada. Her thesis examined menstrual education in Victorian England. She is passionate about Princess Diana, the Titanic, the Romanovs, and Egypt amongst other things.

In her spare time, Maddy loves playing volleyball, running, walking, and biking, although when she wants to be lazy she loves to read a good thriller. She loves spending quality time with her friends, family, and puppy Luna!

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