10.8Students analyze the causes and consequences of World War II
... Essential Question Why did Japan attack the United States, and how did this effect the U.S. at home and Allies in Europe? ...
... Essential Question Why did Japan attack the United States, and how did this effect the U.S. at home and Allies in Europe? ...
Genocides and Conflicts.
... • After the Battle of Midway Americans went on the offensive with a strategy known as island hopping • American forces would capture some Japanese-held islands and then continue on to others. Each island that was captured was a stepping stone towards Japan. • On August 7,1942 U.S. Marines landed on ...
... • After the Battle of Midway Americans went on the offensive with a strategy known as island hopping • American forces would capture some Japanese-held islands and then continue on to others. Each island that was captured was a stepping stone towards Japan. • On August 7,1942 U.S. Marines landed on ...
Kennedy-Chapter 36
... Farmers, too, rolled up their sleeves and increased their output. The armed forces drained the farms of workers, but heavy new investment in agricultural machinery and improved fertilizers more than made up the difference. In 1944 and 1945, blue-jeaned farmers hauled in recordbreaking billion-bushel ...
... Farmers, too, rolled up their sleeves and increased their output. The armed forces drained the farms of workers, but heavy new investment in agricultural machinery and improved fertilizers more than made up the difference. In 1944 and 1945, blue-jeaned farmers hauled in recordbreaking billion-bushel ...
Name:
... Fall of France American Neutrality Franklin D. Roosevelt Neutrality Acts Cash and carry Lend-lease German wolf packs The attack on Pearl Harbor Why? When? By whom? Effect on Japanese Americans? Doolittle Raid? What was the Battle of the Atlantic? What new technology helped the Allied powers defeat G ...
... Fall of France American Neutrality Franklin D. Roosevelt Neutrality Acts Cash and carry Lend-lease German wolf packs The attack on Pearl Harbor Why? When? By whom? Effect on Japanese Americans? Doolittle Raid? What was the Battle of the Atlantic? What new technology helped the Allied powers defeat G ...
The United States at War - HASTworldhistory9thgrade
... alliance made up of Germany, Italy, Japan, and six other nations. Opposing the Axis powers were the Allied powers. Before the war was over, the Allied powers would include Britain, France, the Soviet Union, the United States, China, and 45 other countries. More than any war before it, World War II w ...
... alliance made up of Germany, Italy, Japan, and six other nations. Opposing the Axis powers were the Allied powers. Before the war was over, the Allied powers would include Britain, France, the Soviet Union, the United States, China, and 45 other countries. More than any war before it, World War II w ...
Page 630 Militarization of Japan - It was the gaining of power in
... 1931, starting World War II in the process. 3. Nanking - It was a Chinese city where the Japanese troops, in 1937, massacred over 200,000 people. This bloodletting even shocked the Nazis. The Japanese for their part kept on trying to conquer China. 4. Pearl Harbor - It was the location of the Pacifi ...
... 1931, starting World War II in the process. 3. Nanking - It was a Chinese city where the Japanese troops, in 1937, massacred over 200,000 people. This bloodletting even shocked the Nazis. The Japanese for their part kept on trying to conquer China. 4. Pearl Harbor - It was the location of the Pacifi ...
World War II (1939
... American industry key to victory Built tanks, bombs, guns, ships, ammunition, etc. War bonds (borrowed $$$ from Americans) raised about $50 billion for war effort Women “filling in” for men off at war Victory Gardens ...
... American industry key to victory Built tanks, bombs, guns, ships, ammunition, etc. War bonds (borrowed $$$ from Americans) raised about $50 billion for war effort Women “filling in” for men off at war Victory Gardens ...
essential question
... dropping the atomic bomb on Japan and answer the questions below: Do you agree with the decision to use the atomic bomb on Japan? Which arguments do you think were most important in making your decision? Which of these arguments could also be used to support using an atomic bomb on Afghanistan today ...
... dropping the atomic bomb on Japan and answer the questions below: Do you agree with the decision to use the atomic bomb on Japan? Which arguments do you think were most important in making your decision? Which of these arguments could also be used to support using an atomic bomb on Afghanistan today ...
American History Study Guide Chapter 23
... 1. Why did the Japanese attack Pearl Harbor? 2. How had the trade embargo affected Japan? 3. How did the American people respond to the attack on Pearl Harbor? 4. In what ways did almost every American citizen become involved in the war effort? 5. What were the initial successes of the Japanese as ...
... 1. Why did the Japanese attack Pearl Harbor? 2. How had the trade embargo affected Japan? 3. How did the American people respond to the attack on Pearl Harbor? 4. In what ways did almost every American citizen become involved in the war effort? 5. What were the initial successes of the Japanese as ...
U.S. Entry into the War, Ch 29 Sections 3-4
... The energy released by the bomb was powerful enough to burn through clothing. The dark portions of the garments this victim wore at the time of the blast were emblazoned on to the flesh as scars, while skin underneath the lighter parts (which absorb less energy) was not damaged as badly.[ ...
... The energy released by the bomb was powerful enough to burn through clothing. The dark portions of the garments this victim wore at the time of the blast were emblazoned on to the flesh as scars, while skin underneath the lighter parts (which absorb less energy) was not damaged as badly.[ ...
World War II SGQ Section One: Germany Sparks a New War in
... 49. After what battle were the Japanese in steady retreat? (The Pacific version of the Battle of the Bulge) 50. Why did the Japanese eventually begin using the kamikazes? 51. What were the lessons learned from the battles of Iwo Jima and Okinawa? 52. How did Truman justify using the atomic bomb? 53. ...
... 49. After what battle were the Japanese in steady retreat? (The Pacific version of the Battle of the Bulge) 50. Why did the Japanese eventually begin using the kamikazes? 51. What were the lessons learned from the battles of Iwo Jima and Okinawa? 52. How did Truman justify using the atomic bomb? 53. ...
World War II
... Australia. o Battle of Midway June 4-7 Interception and decoding of Japanese messages led to US destroying four Japanese aircraft carriers and 300 planes. Island Hopping Strategy adopted by Admiral Chester Nimitz. Seizing small strategic islands one at a time and putting air power and supplies. ...
... Australia. o Battle of Midway June 4-7 Interception and decoding of Japanese messages led to US destroying four Japanese aircraft carriers and 300 planes. Island Hopping Strategy adopted by Admiral Chester Nimitz. Seizing small strategic islands one at a time and putting air power and supplies. ...
Chapter 16, Section 1
... Take out your notebook Take out a piece of paper for your Warm-ups If you have the Warm-Ups from the last week of march bring them to me. ...
... Take out your notebook Take out a piece of paper for your Warm-ups If you have the Warm-Ups from the last week of march bring them to me. ...
EDUCATION GUIDE
... After the U.S. officially entered WWII in the wake of the Pearl Harbor attack, the nation mobilized to support the war effort. Below is an excerpt from a song written less than two weeks after the Pearl Harbor attack. Ask students to read the lyrics and discuss the questions below. ...
... After the U.S. officially entered WWII in the wake of the Pearl Harbor attack, the nation mobilized to support the war effort. Below is an excerpt from a song written less than two weeks after the Pearl Harbor attack. Ask students to read the lyrics and discuss the questions below. ...
questions about the “varying viewpoints” - apush11
... America was wounded but roused to national unity by Pearl Harbor. Roosevelt settled on a fundamental strategy of dealing with Hitler first, while doing just enough in the Pacific to block the Japanese advance. With the ugly exception of the Japanese-American concentration camps, World War II proceed ...
... America was wounded but roused to national unity by Pearl Harbor. Roosevelt settled on a fundamental strategy of dealing with Hitler first, while doing just enough in the Pacific to block the Japanese advance. With the ugly exception of the Japanese-American concentration camps, World War II proceed ...
Road to WW 2 and the Homefront
... whether this would have been the case. Invasion would also have meant the death of tens of millions of Japanese soldiers and civilians, who were being trained as militia. The Japanese were refusing to surrender (to surrender is a dishonor)-break for Pacific scene from Okinawa ...
... whether this would have been the case. Invasion would also have meant the death of tens of millions of Japanese soldiers and civilians, who were being trained as militia. The Japanese were refusing to surrender (to surrender is a dishonor)-break for Pacific scene from Okinawa ...
1 - Net Start Class
... World War II cost millions of human lives and billions of dollars in damages. It left Europe and Japan in ruins. ...
... World War II cost millions of human lives and billions of dollars in damages. It left Europe and Japan in ruins. ...
Name
... 11. What did Hitler order General Paulus to do? 12. What did Stalin order his commanders in Stalingrad? 13. What was the outcome and statistics of the Battle of Stalingrad? 14. What advantages might a weaker army fighting on its home soil have over a stronger invading army? 15. What did the conquest ...
... 11. What did Hitler order General Paulus to do? 12. What did Stalin order his commanders in Stalingrad? 13. What was the outcome and statistics of the Battle of Stalingrad? 14. What advantages might a weaker army fighting on its home soil have over a stronger invading army? 15. What did the conquest ...
Chapter 16 WORLD WAR LOOMS & Chapter 17
... Then he took the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg. Germany attacked France in May 1940—but not where the Allies expected. It cut off Allied forces in the north. The British sent all kinds of boats, from fishing vessels to yachts, to rescue nearly 340,000 British, French, and other Allied troops ...
... Then he took the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg. Germany attacked France in May 1940—but not where the Allies expected. It cut off Allied forces in the north. The British sent all kinds of boats, from fishing vessels to yachts, to rescue nearly 340,000 British, French, and other Allied troops ...