Download WWII Fronts/Major Battles

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Swedish iron-ore mining during World War II wikipedia , lookup

Consequences of the attack on Pearl Harbor wikipedia , lookup

Historiography of the Battle of France wikipedia , lookup

Naval history of World War II wikipedia , lookup

World War II by country wikipedia , lookup

Technology during World War II wikipedia , lookup

Allied Control Council wikipedia , lookup

Consequences of Nazism wikipedia , lookup

Allied plans for German industry after World War II wikipedia , lookup

Causes of World War II wikipedia , lookup

Allied war crimes during World War II wikipedia , lookup

Foreign relations of the Axis powers wikipedia , lookup

British propaganda during World War II wikipedia , lookup

Battle of the Mediterranean wikipedia , lookup

Allies of World War II wikipedia , lookup

Diplomatic history of World War II wikipedia , lookup

Home front during World War II wikipedia , lookup

End of World War II in Europe wikipedia , lookup

American Theater (World War II) wikipedia , lookup

Operation Bodyguard wikipedia , lookup

The War That Came Early wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Major Battles
MR. MIZE
EUROPEAN FRONT: Before U.S. Enters the War
 BATTLE OF BRITAIN 1940
 Hitler knew he couldn’t defeat the British Navy
 Began this battle as an air war (Luftwaffe)
 Worked well at first…
 British develop superior aircraft
 Begin bombing German cities while Germany
bombed England at night.
London“The Blitz”
The New Normal in
London…
**Based on the picture to
the left of a London
Subway Station during
WWII answer the
following questions…
1. What does this picture
tell of the London people?
2. What does the picture
show about conditions in
London during WWII?
3. Could Americans pull
together like this?
Explain.
VT – What do you See, Think, Wonder
See – I see a little girl enjoying
her childhood
Think – I think people did what
they could to avoid thinking
about the war
Wonder – I wonder how much
she knew about what was going
on in terms of WWII
Now that the entire picture
is shown, what do you
See, Think, Wonder
WHERE DO WE START?
 EUROPE
 NORTH AFRICA
 ASIA (PACIFIC)
Hitler Was Everywhere!
FRONTS
 EUROPE:
 ALLIES TAKE ON GERMANY:
 GOAL: TO DEFEAT THEM
 PACIFIC:
 DEFENSIVE
 DEFEAT NAZIS FIRST
Chapter 29; Section 3 Main Ideas
Main Idea #1: Allied Powers
implemented “total war”
Main Idea #2: Allies win major battles
on each of the 4 fronts
Main Idea #3: Allied achieve success
on the Western and Eastern Front and
met at Berlin
Section 3; The Allies Turn the Tide, but prior to 1942 the German and Japanese War
machines were on the brink of winning WWII
 All-Out War (total war) for the Allied Powers turned the tide in favor of the Allies



Governments Increase Power to get the maximum war effort by taking more control
over the economy (factories began making tanks rather than refrigerators, prices and wages
were regulated), society (rationing of goods and selling war bonds, limited the rights of
citizens, and imprisoned Japanese Americans and Canadians)
Women Help Win the War as women left the home and began to work in factories to help
with the war effort(“Rosie the Riveter” came to symbolize U.S. women’s efforts)
NORTH AFRICAN FRONTS
 OFFENSIVE FIGHT
 DECIDE NOT TO
HELP SOVIETS
INSTEAD STICK TO
PLAN TO ATTACK
FROM NORTH
AFRICA INTO SICILY
ROOSEVELT AND CHURCHILL
MEET IN MOROCCO: 1943
NORTH AFRICAN BATTLES
 OPERATION TORCH
 NOVEMBER 1942
 DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER
 MOROCCO & ALGERIA FIRST FALL AS THEY HAVE
GERMAN PUPPET GOVT
 TUNISIA: ROMMEL(THE DESERT FOX) AND HIS AFRIKA
CORPS
 MAY
1943: AXIS TROOPS
SURRENDER AFRICA
European Battles
 Eisenhower
plans attacks on Italy after
success in N. Africa with help of British
 Campaign begins June 1943
-Sicily
-Anzio
-Rome
 Mussolini forced to resign in August 1943
European
Front
April 29, 1945
Mussolini and
15 other fascist
leaders are
executed and
hanged in the
Piazzale Loreto
in Milan.
Stalingrad
 MAJOR BATTLES: Battle of Stalingrad
SOVIETS BATTLE GERMANS AT
STALINGRAD- AUGUST 1942-1943
 Bloodiest standoff on the war
 Over one million casualties: 199 days
 Allies decided to let Russia fight on their own
THIS DECISION WILL COST THE U.S. FUTURE
RELATIONS WITH SOVIETS.
EUROPEAN FRONT AND BATTLES
 OPERATION OVERLORD (D-DAY)



FDR
STALIN
CHURCHILL
MEET
TO PLAN INVASION ACROSS
ENGLISH CHANNEL
NORMANDY
GERMANS EXPECTED THEM TO
ATTACK ELSEWHERE AT CALAIS
EUROPEAN BATTLES
 NORMANDY, FRANCE (D-DAY)
 LARGEST AMPHIBIOUS INVASION
 JUNE 6, 1944
*Code Breakers intercept Axis correspondence*





150,000 ALLIED SOLDIERS
600 WARSHIPS
GENERAL DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER/Rommel for Germans
BY JULY: ALLIED FORCES IN FRANCE WAS OVER 1
MILLION
HITLER HESITATES TO FIGHT BACK
World War II
D-DAY
INVASION
OF NORMANDY
WHAT DO I NEED TO KNOW?
 NAZIS CONTINUE TO FIGHT THROUGH AIR
ATTACKS 1943 & 1944
 OPERATION OVERLORD: DRIVE THE NAZIS
OUT OF FRANCE AND HEAD THEM TOWARDS
DEFEAT AT HOME
 JUNE 6, 1944
 LARGEST AMPHIBIOUS INVASION

(INVASION BY SEA)
WHERE DID THIS TAKE PLACE?
 60 MILE STRETCH OF NORMANDY COAST
(NORTHERN FRENCH COAST)
 HITLER CAUGHT UNAWARE: THOUGHT
ATTACK WOULD BE FURTHER UP THE COAST
AT CALAIS
 326,000 SOLDIERS LAND THE FIRST WEEK,
50,000 VEHICLES, 100,000 TONS OF SUPPLIES
THE BEACHES
 CODE NAMES:
 JUNO
 GOLD
 OMAHA
 UTAH
 SWORD
WHO WAS INVOLVED?
 AMERICAN LEADER: DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER
 GERMAN LEADER: ROMMEL
 SOLDIERS
 AMERICAN
 CANADIAN
 BRITISH
 GERMAN
D-Day
American
soldiers
wading
through water
into Nazi
machine-gun
fire on the
coast of
France.
European Front
 Battle of the Bulge
 When? – December 16, 1944

Where? – border areas near
Luxembourg, France and Germany
 Results? – The Germans began a
counterattack against the Allies as
the Allies attempted to drive the
Germans completely out of
France.
 Importance? – Germans begin
retreat signaling their defeat.


First time allies will enter Germany
since war started
First time allies will see
concentration camps
· V-E Day (Victory in Europe)May 8, 1945
 BATTLE OF THE BULGE (BELGIUM)
 LAST GERMAN OFFENSIVE OF WWII
 DECEBMER 1944
 CLEARED WAY TO GERMANY
 SOVIETS ATTACK FROM THE EAST
 AMERICANS FROM THE WEST
 TIED DOWN HUGE AMOUNTS OF ALLIED RESOURCES
TAKE GERMANY
Red army soldiers raising the Soviet flag on the roof of the
Reichstag (German Parliament) in Berlin, Germany.
Churchill
waves to
crowds in
Britain after
broadcasting
to the nation
that the war
with Germany
had been won,
V-E Day Celebrations in New York City, May 8, 1945.
V-E Day celebrations, Bay Street, Toronto, Canada
May 7, 1945
VE-Day Parade, Red Square, Moscow, Russis
ASIAN FRONT
 DEFENSIVE
FRONT
AGAINST
JAPAN
 JAPAN HAD
TAKEN OVER
GUAM, WAKE,
SINGAPORE
AND
PHILIPPINES
 How do we get
them back?
Island Hopping
• The two main goals of
the U.S. in the Pacific
were:
•
I. to regain the Philippines.
II. to invade Japan.
 The U.S. began a policy
of island hopping, using
islands as steppingstones towards Japan.
•
ASIAN FRONT
 February of 1945

The U.S. recaptured the
Philippines, Iwo Jima and
Okinawa.
 Raising the Flag on Iwo
Jima: depicts five United
States Marines and a U.S.
Navy corpsman raising
the flag of the United
States atop Mount
Suribachi during the
Battle of Iwo Jima.
ASIAN FRONT: THE TIDE TURNS
 BATTLE OF THE
CORAL SEA
-JAPAN WANTS
TO TAKE
AUSTRALIA
-May 1942
-Japan loses
-Japanese naval
aviation begins to
decline.
ASIAN FRONT CONTINUED
 MIDWAY ISLAND
-CODE BREAKERS
READY AMERICANS
FOR THE ATTACK.

TAKE OUT FOUR OF
FIVE JAPANESE
CARRIERS

It limited Japan's ability to
attack Hawaii again or
other Allied positions.
OTHER ASIAN BATTLES
 MORE BLOODY BATTLES:
-GUADALCANAL



SOLOMON ISLANDS
AMERICANS CUT OFF JAPANESE SUPPLY LINES
Became military base from which to counterattack the Japanese
 IWO JIMA
 OKINAWA
 HEAVY CASUALTIES ON BOTH SIDES IN THESE
BATTLES
VICTORY IN THESE ISLANDS WIL BE
KEY TO ALLIED VICTORY IN JAPAN