with an advertising and educational campagin
George Creel was the head of the U.S. Committee on Public Information during World War I. He was responsible for shaping the U.S. propaganda efforts to garner public support for the war.
with an advertising and education campaign
with an advertising and education campaign
George Creel
George Creel
The Committee on Public Information was formed in the United States during World War I with George Creel as its chairman. The committee was responsible for promoting public support for the war effort through propaganda and information campaigns.
George Creel.
George Creel of WW1 was an investigative journalist, politician and also the head of the U.S. Committee on Public Information, a committee created by President Woodrow Wilson.
The Committee on Public Information (CPI), established during World War I, aimed to promote the war effort and shape public opinion in favor of U.S. involvement. It disseminated propaganda through various media, including posters, films, and speeches, to rally support and encourage enlistment and war bond purchases. The committee was headed by George Creel, who played a crucial role in crafting the messages that aimed to unify the nation and bolster morale.
George Creel
Committee on Public Information, set up by executive order of President Woodrow Wilson, 14 April 1917. Formally it consisted of the secretaries of state, war, and the navy, with the journalist George Creel as civilian chairman. The committee was responsible for uniting American support behind the World War I effort. Creel, handling most of the work, plus a far-flung organization abroad and at home, presented the war issues with pamphlets, films, cables, posters, and speakers (known as Four-Minute Men). The committee's sophisticated use of propaganda became a model for future government efforts to shape mass opinion.
It was George Creel, he worked for the Denver Newspaper. He was the Head of the Committee for Public Information and he use "Expression not Repression" to help advertise for the first World War to get the general public of America to get on board and support the war.