Long Term Effects
After World War II, the Double V Campaign had faded away from the newspapers. However, the need for complete social equality was always present. From the supporters of the Campaign and the people who endorsed it, many used the experience to help with their own movements.
The people who were major participants in the campaign later came back in the mid 1950's to the late 1960's to help gather support for the Civil Rights Movement. Already familiar with the marches from the Double V Campaign, Africans Americans and some liberal whites marched once again.
Like the Double V Campaign, different societies were formed in order to ensure more rights for African Americans. In Chicago, groups such as the Urban League, the Federation of Churches, the Civil Liberties Committee, and the Chicago Council Against Racial and Religious Discrimination were formed. Chicago and other cities had largely based these groups off of the ones the Campaign had formed.