gallipoli
... The European Conflict Becomes a World War •By the end of 1915, none of the original combatants were fighting the war they had wanted and expected. There would be no quick victories, but there would be new enemies. •Cost and timetables had gone ...
... The European Conflict Becomes a World War •By the end of 1915, none of the original combatants were fighting the war they had wanted and expected. There would be no quick victories, but there would be new enemies. •Cost and timetables had gone ...
WWI Revised for wksts
... group of military ships for protection from German U-Boats Ships loss down 50% Germans will start using sea mines Barrier of mines across the North Sea – Still some floating around today! ...
... group of military ships for protection from German U-Boats Ships loss down 50% Germans will start using sea mines Barrier of mines across the North Sea – Still some floating around today! ...
World war I
... seemed to be no great danger and high speed meant increased fuel consumption and a reduced range of action. When Beatty and Hipper sighted each other's fleet, it was largely by chance as the two fleets would probably have passed each other had they not gone to investigate a neutral merchant vessel ...
... seemed to be no great danger and high speed meant increased fuel consumption and a reduced range of action. When Beatty and Hipper sighted each other's fleet, it was largely by chance as the two fleets would probably have passed each other had they not gone to investigate a neutral merchant vessel ...
Russia Exits the War
... all the resources of the countries that fought it: •War Bonds: Sold by the government to the nation’s people to gain money for the war and make civilians feel involved in their national militaries. (A loan to the government). Video: War Bonds / Weapons Production (click) http://www.efootage.com/stoc ...
... all the resources of the countries that fought it: •War Bonds: Sold by the government to the nation’s people to gain money for the war and make civilians feel involved in their national militaries. (A loan to the government). Video: War Bonds / Weapons Production (click) http://www.efootage.com/stoc ...
U.S. History Chapter 19
... the U.S. to enter World War I. • The Lusitania • 13. German promise to surface their U-Boats before firing on civilian ships, effort to keep the U.S. out of the war for at least one more year. • The Sussex Pledge • 14. Long-term cause for American entry into World War I, German policy of sinking all ...
... the U.S. to enter World War I. • The Lusitania • 13. German promise to surface their U-Boats before firing on civilian ships, effort to keep the U.S. out of the war for at least one more year. • The Sussex Pledge • 14. Long-term cause for American entry into World War I, German policy of sinking all ...
World War I, 1914 – 1918: A Source Based Study
... On March 21, the Germans attacked on a 96KM front ...
... On March 21, the Germans attacked on a 96KM front ...
america enters war
... It was Germany’s use of unrestricted submarine warfare that was the major reason that the United States entered World War I. ...
... It was Germany’s use of unrestricted submarine warfare that was the major reason that the United States entered World War I. ...
World War I - southsidehistory
... World War? Name at least two factors that may have played a role in starting the First World War. Germany’s Schlieffen Plan called for a two-front war with ...
... World War? Name at least two factors that may have played a role in starting the First World War. Germany’s Schlieffen Plan called for a two-front war with ...
The world at War: Causes of World War I
... army, navy, air force. In the late 1800s and early 1900s, European countries like France, Germany, and Great Britain were engaged in an arms race. ...
... army, navy, air force. In the late 1800s and early 1900s, European countries like France, Germany, and Great Britain were engaged in an arms race. ...
File world war i1
... ships became the number one task for the United States. •Shipyard workers were given “deferred” status. •Shipyards used prefabrication techniques. •Government converted commercial and private ships for transatlantic war use. ...
... ships became the number one task for the United States. •Shipyard workers were given “deferred” status. •Shipyards used prefabrication techniques. •Government converted commercial and private ships for transatlantic war use. ...
World War I - Reading Community Schools
... Nationalism- many of the countries in Europe felt a strong sense of pride in their country, and wanted to demonstrate their superiority over their rivals. Germans were proud of their new nation (est. 1871) and its industrial might, while the French were anxious to avenge their loss in the FrancoPrus ...
... Nationalism- many of the countries in Europe felt a strong sense of pride in their country, and wanted to demonstrate their superiority over their rivals. Germans were proud of their new nation (est. 1871) and its industrial might, while the French were anxious to avenge their loss in the FrancoPrus ...
WWI notes
... Chapters in Brief The United States mobilized a large army and navy to help the Allies achieve victory. The United States was not prepared for war, but it launched a draft and quickly put about 3 million men in uniform. Women were not drafted, but the navy accepted women volunteers as nurses and se ...
... Chapters in Brief The United States mobilized a large army and navy to help the Allies achieve victory. The United States was not prepared for war, but it launched a draft and quickly put about 3 million men in uniform. Women were not drafted, but the navy accepted women volunteers as nurses and se ...
The World at War
... Chapters in Brief The United States mobilized a large army and navy to help the Allies achieve victory. The United States was not prepared for war, but it launched a draft and quickly put about 3 million men in uniform. Women were not drafted, but the navy accepted women volunteers as nurses and se ...
... Chapters in Brief The United States mobilized a large army and navy to help the Allies achieve victory. The United States was not prepared for war, but it launched a draft and quickly put about 3 million men in uniform. Women were not drafted, but the navy accepted women volunteers as nurses and se ...
WSBCTC 1 Additional Reading - The Treaty of Versailles and the
... Espionage and Sedition Acts) Watch this video (7:10) for a general overview of the conflicts that have arisen throughout American history between civil liberties and wartime policy. The World War I-era Espionage and Sedition Acts are covered between the 4:50 and 5:50 mark. The internment of Japanese ...
... Espionage and Sedition Acts) Watch this video (7:10) for a general overview of the conflicts that have arisen throughout American history between civil liberties and wartime policy. The World War I-era Espionage and Sedition Acts are covered between the 4:50 and 5:50 mark. The internment of Japanese ...
Rachel Wrede - WorldHistoryMsWrede
... such as heating and toilets. Much of the time the trenches were as little as 40 meters away from the enemy and the method of attack was to 'go over the top' of the trench and charge at the opposing trench. Millions died as machine guns cut through most soldiers well before they reached the trenches. ...
... such as heating and toilets. Much of the time the trenches were as little as 40 meters away from the enemy and the method of attack was to 'go over the top' of the trench and charge at the opposing trench. Millions died as machine guns cut through most soldiers well before they reached the trenches. ...
WW I Power Point - Madison County Schools
... Food and supplies were almost nonexistent on the front lines. Trench warfare allowed for little land and heavy casualties. Young boys were replacing veteran soldiers on both fronts. ...
... Food and supplies were almost nonexistent on the front lines. Trench warfare allowed for little land and heavy casualties. Young boys were replacing veteran soldiers on both fronts. ...
World War I (1914
... 2.) British Indian, Australian, and New Zealand troops attacked the Ottomans. 3.) After 10 months and 200,000 causalities, the Allies withdrew. ...
... 2.) British Indian, Australian, and New Zealand troops attacked the Ottomans. 3.) After 10 months and 200,000 causalities, the Allies withdrew. ...
World War I
... German plan to avoid defeat from Russia by taking out France first and then fight Russians. Smash France in 30 days before Russia could respond with troops Go through Belgium to surround French troops, defeat the French and then rush to Poland front on the German rail system to ...
... German plan to avoid defeat from Russia by taking out France first and then fight Russians. Smash France in 30 days before Russia could respond with troops Go through Belgium to surround French troops, defeat the French and then rush to Poland front on the German rail system to ...
Warm-Ups for Thursday, Oct. 27 1. Czar Nicholas II was the last czar
... April 6, 1917 - U.S. declares war against Germany after the interception and publication of the Zimmermann Telegram and the sinking of three U.S. merchant ships by German U-boats. June 26, 1917 - American troops begin landing in France. November 20, 1917 - Battle of Cambrai, France. December 3, 191 ...
... April 6, 1917 - U.S. declares war against Germany after the interception and publication of the Zimmermann Telegram and the sinking of three U.S. merchant ships by German U-boats. June 26, 1917 - American troops begin landing in France. November 20, 1917 - Battle of Cambrai, France. December 3, 191 ...
WWI A Global Conflict
... bloody stalemate. Both sides dug trenches, from which they battled for the rest of the year. In December, the Allies gave up the campaign and began to evacuate. They had suffered about 250,000 casualties. Battles in Africa and Asia In various parts of Asia and Africa, Germany’s colonial possessions ...
... bloody stalemate. Both sides dug trenches, from which they battled for the rest of the year. In December, the Allies gave up the campaign and began to evacuate. They had suffered about 250,000 casualties. Battles in Africa and Asia In various parts of Asia and Africa, Germany’s colonial possessions ...
World War I - Enrichment Plus
... Germany was finding it hard to buy and transport enough food. Germany decided to step up the U-boat attacks in order to do the same to Britain. The Germans began to practice unrestricted submarine warfare. That means U-boats would sink any ship in the war zone around Great Britain without warning! S ...
... Germany was finding it hard to buy and transport enough food. Germany decided to step up the U-boat attacks in order to do the same to Britain. The Germans began to practice unrestricted submarine warfare. That means U-boats would sink any ship in the war zone around Great Britain without warning! S ...
Trench Warfare in WWI
... pockets of sleeping men. Two or three rats would always be found on a dead body. They usually went for the eyes first and then they burrowed their way right into the corpse. One soldier described finding a group of dead bodies while on patrol: "I saw some rats running from under the dead men's great ...
... pockets of sleeping men. Two or three rats would always be found on a dead body. They usually went for the eyes first and then they burrowed their way right into the corpse. One soldier described finding a group of dead bodies while on patrol: "I saw some rats running from under the dead men's great ...
Technology during World War I
Technology during World War I reflected a trend toward industrialism and the application of mass production methods to weapons and to the technology of warfare in general. This trend began fifty years prior to World War I during the U.S. Civil War, and continued through many smaller conflicts in which new weapons were tested.August 1914 marked the end of a relatively peaceful century in Europe with unprecedented invention and new science. The 19th-century vision of a peaceful future fed by ever-increasing prosperity through technology was largely shattered by the war's end; after the technological escalation during World War II, it was apparent that whatever the gains in prosperity and comfort due to technology applied to civilian use would always be under the shadow of the horrors of technology applied to warfare.The earlier years of the First World War can be characterized as a clash of 20th-century technology with 19th-century warfare in the form of ineffective battles with huge numbers of casualties on both sides. It was not until the final year of the war that the major armies made effective steps in revolutionizing matters of command and control and tactics to adapt to the modern battlefield, and started to harness the myriad new technologies to effective military purposes. Tactical reorganizations (such as shifting the focus of command from the 100+ man company to the 10+ man squad) went hand-in-hand with armored cars, the first submachine guns, and automatic rifles that could be carried and used by one man.