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Early in the war, Germany, Japan, and Italy have considerable military success. The Allies, except for France, which had surrendered in 1940, are fortunate not to be overwhelmed completely. Fearing that they will be disloyal, President Roosevelt orders the detention of Japanese Americans, a serious violation of basic American civil rights. Millions die in the Holocaust, a systematic attempt by the Nazis to destroy those they consider to be inferior—Slavs, the mentally ill, homosexuals, political prisoners, and, especially, Jews. The war occasions extensive demographic changes (one of the AP themes). Urban areas expand to meet the demand for labor in warrelated industries. Rural and less developed areas in the West and Southwest grow as well, a result of receiving government military contracts. As in every American war, blacks contribute significantly in WWII, despite obstacles placed before them. But the military will not be desegregated until 1948. The considerable financial resources needed to wage war drive up the national debt. In fact, New Deal spending pales in comparison with wartime military expenditures– see chart on p. 831. The success of the D-Day landing in the summer of 1944 affords the Allies a bridgehead in France from which they can move inland and ultimately invade Germany itself. With the Soviets counterattacking from the east and the British and Americans closing in from the west, Hitler’s Third Reich is doomed. In April 1945, shortly after Hitler killed himself, Germany surrenders, a victory President Roosevelt does not see, having died suddenly the month before. With the war in Europe over, the Allies turn all of their attention to defeating Japan. After bloody battles in the pacific, President Truman orders atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, inflicting enormous civilian casualties. Japan soon surrenders. See the photo and poster on p. 827, depicting the important role women played in the war effort. In 1944, FDR successfully won reelection for a fourth term, in large part, because of the military successes and grassroots support from such groups as organized labor. The 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor caused a violent hatred of Japan among Americans. Robbed Americans of good sense and sense of justice. Isolationist feelings from Americans were now replaces by feelings of revenge against Japan. “Get Japan first” was the battle cry of many Americans on the Pacific Coast. Anti-Japanese sentiment remained stronger than the antiGerman sentiment throughout the war. In Washington D.C., the ABC-1 agreement was created with the British as a “getting Germany first” strategy. Lack of attention on Germany would cause Hitler to go after the Soviet Union and Britain and have a stronger foothold in Europe then he already did. Knock out Germany first, then focus on Japan was the goal. However it was met with a lot of criticism from revenge-thirsty citizens. From the beginning, the Allies were thought to triumph. The U.S. was potentially the mightiest military power on earth, potentially. But when it came down to it, bullets were going to win the war. Expense was no limitation, but time was the biggest necessity. America’s biggest problem was preparing for all out war production, while hoping that dictators wouldn’t attack their adversaries, Britain and Soviet Union. Knowledge of German scientists creating new weapons such as rocket bombs and possibly atomic arms added to haste. America faced the challenge of being able to mobilize after being in isolation for so long. The United States was forced to feed, clothe, and arm itself, along with transporting goods. The United States had to send large amounts of good and munitions to allies who were as far away as Austrailia. American unity was no problem thanks to the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Many of the few pro-Hitlerites in United States melted away, where as millions of Italian Americans and German Americans loyally supported the nation’s war program (compared to WWI where many immigrants questioned it). WWII speeded the assimilation of many ethnic groups into American society. Prior to 1941, immigration was cut off, however many ethnic communities were now well-settled. These immigrants were crucial to Roosevelt’s re-election, as opposed to when the government was on a “witch-hunt” for minority groups during WWI. 110,000 (2/3 were American-born U.S. citizens) Japanese Americans were sent to concentration camps on the Pacific coast because the Washington top command feared some Japanese Americans would betray America and act as saboteurs for Japan in the case of invasion. Post-Pearl Harbor hysteria had a good deal to do with the camps. FDR issued the “Executive Order 9066” which gave military commanders to designate “exclusion zones” in which the Japanese were sent. Two known well known commanders were Major Karl Bendetsen and Lt. John L. Dewitt. Dewitt is known for saying: “a Jap’s a Jap.” Unfair and unnecessary: loyalty and combat of Japanese Americans proved to admirable. These camps deprived these people of their dignity and basic rights. Families were forced to bring the clothes on their back because they were evacuated from their homes so fast, therefore no time to pack. Many Japanese men and women were unprepared for the harsh winters of camps in Wyoming and died. Some families were authorized to return to their home by American families sponsorship and the Japanese family confirmed loyalty. Conditions of the camp: Tar-paper covered barracks No plumbing No cooking facilities Fred Korematsu, a Japanese American man, violated the Civilian Exclusion Order No. 34 when refusing to go to an internment camps and stayed at his home in San Leandro, California. Korematsu argued the Executive Order 9066 was unconstitutional and violated the 14th amendment Fred Korematsu was arrested and convicted affirming the constitutionality of the Exclusion Order. In 1988, the United States government officially apologized for the internment camps and gave each camp survivor $20,000 in reparations. By 1942, many of the New Deal programs such as the CCC, WPA, and the NYA were shut down by the new conservative Congress. In 1943, Roosevelt replaced “Dr. New Deal” with “Dr. Winthe-War”. It not only acknowledged the urgency of the war but the power of revitalized conservative forces in the country. WWII wasn’t as much as a crusade around the U.S. as WWI was. Propaganda was mainly in the Atlantic Charter and much of the focus was on ACTION. Made in August, 1941. Created by the United States and Britain (later agreed to by all Allies) and defined Allies’ goals for postWWII world. Goals: 1. No territorial aggrandizement 2. No territorial changes against wishes of the people 3. Restoration of self government to those without 4. Free access to raw materials 5. Reduction of trade restrictions 6. Global cooperation to secure better economy and social conditions for all 7. Freedom from fear and want 8. Freedom of seas 9. Abandonment of the use of force 10. Disarmament of aggressor states WWII caused the American economy to take a huge turn. Huge military orders soaked up the idle industrial capacity of the still-lingering Great Depression, in 1942 $100 billion worth of orders sprung up. The War Production Board made American factories create the following weapons: 40 billion bullets 300,000 aircrafts 76,000 ships 86,000 tanks 2.6 million machine guns Created on executive order by FDR on January 16th, 1942 and ended with defeat of Japan. Replaced in 1945 by Civilian Production Administration. Regulated the production of materials and fuels during WWII. Converted/expanded peacetime industries to meet war needs, allocate scare materials vital to war production, and established priorities of distribution of materials and services. It prohibited nonessential production. Rationed materials included: Gasoline Heating Oil Metals Rubber Paper Plastic Henry J. Kaiser was a well-known for his ship construction. One of his ships was completed in two weeks. Built “Liberty Ships” every 45 days. “Liberty Ships” were cargo ships that were relatively cheap to build and based off a British concept. During the Japanese invasion of British Malaya (first major battle of WWII between Japan and Britain) and the Dutch East Indies, access to rubber was temporarily cut off causing a national speed limit and gasoline rationing in order to conserve rubber and create 51 synthetic rubber plants. Farmers, the ones not in the war, also increased their output using new machinery and improved fertilizers. 1944 and 1945 were record-breaking years for wheatharvests. These wonders of production once again caused economic strains to the United States. The Office of Price Administration brought ascending prices under control with regulations. Rationing held down the consumption of meat and butter, but like anything else “banned” a black market ensued for the goods. Labor unions member ship grew from 10 million to 13 million during the war to fight the War Labor Board imposed wage ceilings. Even though with many “No-Strike” pledges, many unions had walkouts that created obstacles for the war effort. Well know strikers were the United Mine Workers, lead by John L. Lewis. In retaliation towards these rash acts of laborers, Congress passed the Smith-Connally Anti-Strike Act in 1943. It authorized the federal government to seize and operate tied-up industries. It also made strikes against any federal government-operated industry were made a criminal defense. Because of this act, many coal mines were taken over by the government. While 15 million men were enlisted during WWII, nearly 216,000 women were employed for noncombat duties.Women’s branches of military were known as the WAAC (Army), WAVES (Navy), and SPARS (Coast Guard). However, women were not the only people kept at home. Certain industrial categories (shipbuilders) and agricultural workers from the draft in order to keep production flowing. Even with these exemptions, the U.S. was still short on laborers, so we made an agreement with Mexico to send over thousands of Mexican agriculture workers called braceros. Braceros were apart of the western U.S. economy for nearly 20 years. Not only used in agriculture, but work on the railroad too. More than 6 million women took jobs outside of the house, when half of them had never participated in wage-earning jobs. Because many were previous stay-at-home mothers, the government was forced to set nearly 3,000 day-care centers for children care. Women who went to work in industrial factories for war materials such as planes, tanks, and munitions were know as “Rosies” from “Rosie the Riveter”. Even after the war ended, many of these women kept their factory jobs leading to an economic revolution of women’s roles in American society. But the majority of American women didn’t work for wages in the wartime economy but continued on with the traditional housewife roles. By the end of the war 2/3 of women war workers left the labor force not only by choice but by force of employers looking to reemploy the returning servicemen. She was the symbol of economic power and feminism for women in the workforce. The name actually came from a popular song about a woman working on the assembly line, doing her part in the war effort. Many of the 15 million men and women in uniforms chose not to go home at the end of the war. Towns like Los Angeles, Detroit, Seattle and Baton Rouge sucked people to them through war industries. California’s population grew by nearly 2 million. The South was “the nation’s number one economic problem” –(FDR) in 1938 When the war started, FDR seized the opportunity to accelerate the region’s economic development. The South received a disproportionate share of defense contracts, including nearly $6 billion of federally financed industrial facilities. 1.6 million blacks left the South to seek jobs in the war plants of the West and North. As they migrated around the nation, race relations became a national problem, rather than a regional issue. Tensions arose over employment, housing and segregated facilities. A. Philip Randolph threatened a massive “Negro March on Washington” in 1941. Head of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters “Negro March on Washington” was to demand equal opportunities for blacks in war jobs and in the armed forces. He inspired the Freedom budget that aimed to deal with the economic problems facing the African American community Roosevelt responded to the March on Washington by issuing an executive order forbidding discrimination in defense industries. He also established the Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC) to monitor compliance with his edict. Blacks were also drafted in the army, but they were generally assigned to service branches rather than combat units and were subjected to segregated blood banks. However, the war helped embolden blacks. “Double V”– victory over the dictators abroad and over racism at home National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) recruited nearly half a million members Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) was founded in 1942 The mechanical cotton picker was introduced in 1944. It did the work of 50 people at 1/8 of the cost. 5 million black tenant farmers and sharecroppers headed north in the 3 decades after the war. This movement was considered one of the great migrations in American history. Within a single generation: almost the majority of African Americans left the South. Thousands of Native Americans found war work in major cities and thousands more went into service. 90% of Native Americans resided on reservations in 1940; 6 decades later more than ½ lived in cities, mostly in southern California. 25,000 Native American men served in the armed forces. Comanches in Europe and Navajos in the Pacific made valuable contributions as “code talkers” These men transmitted radio messages in their native languages which were incomprehensible to the Germans and Japanese They were called “walking codes” and each person had to memorize the language. They were there for every major engagement from 1942-1945. http://www.navajocodetalkers.org In 1943 “zoot-suit” clad Mexicans and Mexican Americans in Los Angeles were viciously attacked by Anglo sailors who cruised the streets in taxis for victims. Order was only restored when the Mexican Ambassador made an emotional plea. Near the same time, another brutal race riot killed 25 blacks and 9 whites in Detroit The war invigorated the economy and lifted the country out of a decade-long depression in America The gross national product vaulted from less than $100 billion in 1940 to more than $200 billion in 1945. Corporate profits rose from $6 billion in 1940 to almost twice that in 4 years. Disposable personal income more than doubled. On December 7, 1944 Macy’s department store rang up the biggest sales day in history. When the price controls were finally lifted in 1946, Americans lust to consume pushed prices up to 33% in less than 2 years. The war pointed the way to the post-1945 era of biggovernment interventionism. Millions of men and women worked in the armed forces. Millions more worked the defense industries where their employers and unions were monitored by the FEPC and WLB and their personal needs were cared for by government-sponsored housings projects, day-care facilities, and health plans. The Office of Scientific Research and Development channeled hundreds of millions of dollars into university-based scientific research, establishing the partnership between the government and universities. The war cured the depression, not the New Deal. The wartime bill amounted to more than $330 billion (ten times the direct cost of WWI and twice as much as all previous federal spending since 1776) FDR wanted the pay-as-you-go policy to finance the war. However, the costs were too big. The income-tax net was expanded to catch about four times we many people as before. The maximum tax rates rose as high as 90% Only about 2/5 of the war costs were paid from current revenues, the rest was barrowed. The national debt skyrocketed from $49 billion in 1941 to $259 billion in 1945. The war cost $10 million an hour. Besides attacking Pearl Harbor, the Japanese launched widespread and successful attacks on various Far Eastern bastions. These bastions included American outposts of Guam, Wake and the Philippines. The Japanese quickly seized the British-Chinese port: Hong Kong and British Malaya which held rubber and tin. Then, they went to Burma. They cut the Burma Road, which the US had used to send munitions to the armies of Jiang Jieshi, who was trying to resist Japan. When the Japanese took the road, the US had to fly over the Himalaya mountains from the India-Burma theater. Japan took the Dutch East Indies and destroyed the British, Australian, Dutch, and American naval and air forces In the Philippines: General Douglass MacArthur, 20000 American troops and a much larger force of ill-trained Filipinos held off violent Japanese attacks until April 9, 1942 when they surrendered. MacArthur had left to Australia, as ordered by Washington, as he left he said “I shall return” The Japanese treated the troops horribly as they walked the 80 mile Bataan Death March to prisoner-of-war camps. The island fortress of Corregidor held out until May 6, 1942 when it too surrendered, and left Japanese forces in complete control of the Philippine islands. Japan attacked New Guinea, north of Australia, and landed on the Solomon Islands where they threatened Australia itself. Australia and the United States fought back in May of 1942 in Coral Sea They inflicted heavy losses on the Japanese. For the first time in history, the fighting was done by carrier-based aircraft and neither fleet saw or fired a shot directly at the other. Japan then looked to the Midway Islands, more than 1000 miles north of Honolulu. The planned to launch devastating assaults on Pearl Harbor. They hoped to force the weakened American Pacific fleet into destructive combat or compel the US to negotiate a cease fire in the Pacific. The battle was fought near Midway on June 3-6, 1942. Admiral Chester W. Nimitz was a high-grade strategist who directed a smaller but freely skilled carrier force under Admiral Raymond A. Spruance The fighting was all done by aircraft and the Japanese retreated after losing four vitally important carriers. Midway was highly important as it raised American spirit and halted Japan’s forces. As America pushed Japan into the eastern Pacific, it did win them an easy victory of Kiska and Attu in the Aleutian islands off Alaska. This brought fear that the US would be invaded as much of American strength was divided to the defense of Alaska, including the construction of the “Alcan” Highway through Canada. They shouldn’t have worried, as the Japanese had over extended themselves in 1942. The United States was finally able to seize initiative in the Pacific. In August of 1942, American forces gained slight ground on Guadalcanal Island in an effort to protect the lifeline from American to Australia through the Southwest Pacific. In an early naval defeat by Japan, American supplies ran dangerously low and American barely held on for weeks. The Japanese troops evacuated Guadalcanal in February 1943. Their losses were significantly higher than America’s: 20,000 to 1,700 The American navy began to inflict horrible losses on the Japanese. Finally, conquest of New Guinea was completed by August 1944 when General MacArthur fought his way through the tropical jungle. Instead of following the old-fashioned strategies that would dictate Americans to reduce the number of Japanese outposts directly, the forces took to “leapfrogging”. They would take a nearby island, set up airfields on them and then bomb the enemy bases. As the US cut off important supplies to Japan, the number of forces decreased. Admiral Nimitz skillfully coordinated the efforts of naval, air and ground units. In May and August of 1943 Attu and Kiska were easily retaken. In November 1943 “bloody Tarawa” and Makin fell under suicidal resistance. In January and February 1944, the key outposts in the Marshal Islands surrendered bloody Tarawa Attu and Kiska New Guinea From bases in the Marianas, the United States’ B-29 super bombers carried out round-trip bombing raids on Japan. In the “Great Mariana’s Turkey Shoot” (June 19, 1944) the Hellcat fighter plane and new technology of antiaircraft destroyed 250 Japanese aircraft with only loosing 29 American planes. The Battle of the Philippine Sea: US naval forces sank several Japanese carriers The Japanese navy never recovered. Great Mariana’s Turkey Shoot Battle of the Philippine Sea “Suicide Cliff” a mass suicidal leap of surviving Japanese soldiers and civilians The major islands of the Mariana’s fell to the US in July and August 1944. Round the clock bombing of Japan began in November 1944. Americans were having trouble in Europe just like the Pacific Hitler’s U-Boats were dominating the Seas 1942-500+ ships lost, 111 in June alone The tide turned (ha) slowly but surely with the help of air patrols, radar, and bombing sub bases. The upperhand was finally gained in 1943 when the British cracked the “Enigma” codes and could intercept the location of U-Boats The turning point in the air had come in late 1942 Recovering from the Battle of Britain the RAF with the help of the American Air Force launched massive bombing raids on Germany In May they launched a 1000 plane bombing raid on Cologne There were victories in Africa, as well Marshal Erin Rommel “The Desert Fox” had taken most of North Africa and was prepare to breakthrough the Allied lines but a shipment of American Sherman tanks helped British General Bernard Montgomery counter attack at El Alamein and drive the Germans back over a thousand miles to Tunisia Highly Decorated in WWI Between the Wars he held positions at several military academies and published several military textbooks which attracted the attention of Hitler He was essential in the Blitzkrieg and helped capture Poland and France with his armored and mobile infantry forces He had immense success in Northern Africa as he drove his tanks all the way to Egypt, but he was so strung out and under supplied he only had 13 tanks left at El Alamein and was forced to retreat After North Africa he went sort of unemployed as a General and finally went on to help with the defense of France. Rommel’s career came to an end after the failed assassination attempt of Hitler in 1944 While not directly part of the attempt, Rommel had been in favor of removing Hitler Facing the choice of a public trial and execution, Rommel instead chose forced suicide, to die with his honor intact. On October 14 he took a cyanide pill Rommel had a reputation as one of the few humane officers in the Nazi army. He did not kill Jewish prisoners or citizens and his armies were never accused of war crimes There was also great success in Russia in 1942 In September the Russians were finally able to gain victory at Stalingrad—the graveyard of Hitler’s hopes More than 20 German divisions were surrounded and captured In November, the Red Army launched a counteroffensive that was not halted until the end of the war In a year, Russia had reclaimed 2/3 of the land lost to Germany August 23, 1942-February 2, 1942 Among the bloodiest battle in the history of modern warfare Soviets: 478,741 killed or missing, 650,878 wounded and sick, 40,000 civilians dead, 4,341 tanks, 15,728 artillery pieces, 2,769 combat aircraft -Total: 1,129,619 casualties Germans: 750,000 killed, missing or wounded, 91,000 captured, 900 aircraft , 1,500 tanks, 6,000 artillery pieces Total: 841,000 casualties TOTAL: 1,970,619 Casualties Hitler’s main goals after the tough winter of 1941 was to defeat Russia before the US entered the war, and to capture valuable petroleum deposits in the Caucasus In July, heavy bombing began with some 1,000 tons of bombs. The city was turned to rubble The Luftwaffe dominated the skies and the city was all but leveled by August By late August the Germans had reached the Northern and Southern Outskirts of the City. The Soviets moved in and hunkered down in buildings all across the city using snipers and small machine gun teams as their main tactic Fighting bogged down and turned to greuling hand to hand combat German tanks and aircraft became virtually useless as Germans and Soviets often occupied different levels of the same buildings Fighting was so close quarters there was even combat in the sewer system below the city, the Germans began to nick name it the “rat war” One railway station changed hands 14 times in six hours Eventually, the Germans reached the Volga River and the Soviets evacuated the city On November 19 they launched a massive counter attack which split the German Army and trapped 245,000 soldiers in the city In 1942 already millions of soviets lay dead and an area the size of Chicago to the Eastern Seaboard lay ruined Russia strongly desired that the allies create a second front to relieve the pressure on Russia FDR rashly promised to open a second front by the end of 1942 With the losses of WWI still in their minds, British strategists preferred to attack Hitler’s fortress through the “soft underbelly” of the Mediterranean The next choice of attack was North Africa Led by General Dwight D. Eisenhower, 400,000 allied troops with the help of 850 ships invaded The Germans were eventually trapped in Tunisia and surrendered in May 1943 After the fall of Africa, FDR and Churchill met in Casablanca and decided to step up the Pacific war and to invade Scicily They also called for the controversial “unconditional surrender” Many argued that this caused the enemy to fight harder even though it cannot be proven it affected the war in any way Sicily fell in August of 1943 and shortly after Mussolini was deposed and Italy unconditionally surrendered However, Germany did not leave Italy Italy was soon forgotten after the invasion of France, but fighting did not end there until May of 1945, shortly before Germany’s official surrender Born in 1885 to a military ancestral family His fathers family had fought in the Revolutionary War, and he had many great uncles and his grandfather who fought and died in the Civil War for the CFA, his Grandfather died during Pickett’s Charge. His maternal Grandfather had fought in the Indian Wars He attended VMI and West point and graduated in 1909 He was on the 1912 and 1916 Olympic Team As an Aide to General Pershing in the pursuit of Pancho Villa he led the first ever motorized attack At the onset of WWI Pershing promoted him to Captain and attached him to the tank training school for US troops. With his service there he was eventually promoted to Colonel Patton commanded American-crewed French Renault tanks at the Battle of Saint-Mihiel and in the MeuseArgonne Offensive. He was wounded in the leg and sat out the rest of the war. He was awarded three medals Between the wars Patton met and worked with Eisenhower on the doctrines of armored warfare and he championed for the advancement of the US armored program. However he was largely ignored by the government At the onset of the war, Patton was a Brigadier General and in command of the 2nd armored Division He participated in the invasion of Morocco and was eventually promoted to lieutenant general and given command of the II Corps He was known for his strict regulations and discipline of troops including down to fine for not shaving daily Under his direction the II Corps were able to help defeat Rommel’s Afrika Corps He was placed in command of the seventh army in Sicily his army moved quickly through the island and liberated Palermo and Messina In Sicily he got into some trouble when he slapped a private After the invasion of Normandy he was given command of the Third Army, which used armored and air support possibly the best out of any other commander in the war He advanced across France, relived Bastogne in the battle of the Bulge, and the final advance into Germany the Third Army was in continuous combat for 281 days. It had advanced farther and faster than any army in military history, crossing 24 major rivers and capturing 81,500 square miles of territory, including more than 12,000 cities and towns. the U.S. Third Army, which under his leadership advanced farther, captured more enemy prisoners, and liberated more territory in less time than any other army in history Stalin had not quit asking for a second front Finally after the Big Three conference in Teheran, the agreed to coordinate Russian attacks on the Eastern Front with an Allied invasion of France Eisenhower was once again chosen to lead this, after having proved himself in Africa and the Mediterranean The operation, set for June 6, 1944, involved 3 million men, 4600 vessels, and numerous airplanes The allies were barely able to gain a fingerhold on the beaches, however, air superiority for the allies prevented German reinforcements and eventually the allies were able to push inland Once out of the containment of the beaches, American soldiers began to push across France Patton and his armored divisions made leaps and bound across the country Paris was liberated in August of 1944 Aachen—the first German city—fell in October of 1944, it was the beginning of the end for Hitler Codenamed Operation Neptune Began at 6:30 am Consisted of two phases: an airborne assault landing of 24,000 shortly after midnight and an amphibious landing of Allied infantry and armoured divisions 160,000 troops landing on June 6, 1944. 195,700 Allied naval and merchant navy personnel in over 5,000 ships were involved The night before the amphibious landing took place there was the massive paratroop drop It was the last drop done at night due to its unsuccess 45% of American paratroopers were scattered and unable to find their units This did have some success as it confused Germans as to where the Americans were forming The Amphibious landing took place on Sword, Juno, Gold, Omaha, and Utah beaches as well as an assault on the cliff top emplacement Pointe du hoc The British attacked at Sword and Gold, the Canadians at Juno, and the Americans at Omaha and Utah. Omaha was the most fortified and suffered the most casualties, Gold and Juno suffered moderate, while Sword and Utah faced little resistance The Presidential campaign came at an “awkward” time in 1944 as the war was reaching its climax However, the election process continued and the Republicans were faced with the difficulty of dethroning Roosevelt Thomas E. Dewey was nominated on the Republican ticket as a more liberal and internationally focused candidate with a popular vote getting background To offset these views, the older more conservative isolationist John Bricker of Ohio was nominated as vice president While FDR had aged under the terrible strain of the war, he was indispensible to the Democrats However, he was sort of forgotten at the conference and the focus shifted to the vice-presidential nomination Henry Wallace had served four years as VP and sought reelection. However, he was distrusted by many conservative Democrats and was passed over Smiling Senator Harry S. Truman of Missouri was selected Truman had only previously come to the public spot light due to chairing a senate committee investigating unnecessary expenditures in the war No one had anything good to say about Truman—more importantly they had nothing bad to say While FDR was busy fighting a world war, Dewey went on the offensive He attacked New Dealism and the “Old men” in Washington His foreign policies, however, were extremely similar to those of FDR In the closing weeks of the campaign FDR finally emerged to defend himself The CIO helped immensely—”What were you doing in 1932?” However, the success of the war garnered a 432 to 99 victory over Dewey Republicans were still under the taint of the Hardingites Isolationism By mid-December 1944, the Nazi forces were on the retreat and U.S. victory in Germany seemed imminent. Hitler made one final push with his remaining reserves. Secretly concentrating his troops in the snowy Ardennes Forest, Hitler, on December 16, 1944, hurled his troops at the thinly held and surprised American lines. Pushing on for 10 days, Hitler’s objective was Antwerp, a Belgian port. Nazi forces created a “bulge” in the surprised/outnumbered Allied line. However, the 101st Airborne Division held on to Bastogne. General A. C. McAuliffe refused to surrender to the Germans. Allied reinforcements rushed in to win the Battle of the Bulge. American troops reached the Rhine river by March 1945. Luckily, one undiminished bridge was found, and General Eisenhower’s troops pushed on to reach the Elbe River by April 1945. Eventually, U.S. and Soviet troops met each other a little south of Berlin. “Amerikanskie tavarishchi” Americans were surprised to see the horrors of the concentration camps. Previously, Roosevelt’s administration had refused a large number of Jewish people from coming to America and his military commanders declined bombing rail lines that carried concentration camp victims. Soviet troops finally reached Berlin in April 1945. Adolf Hitler and his mistress committed suicide in an underground bunker on April 30, 1945. Meanwhile, the United States was still dealing with the sudden death of President Roosevelt who died of a massive cerebral hemorrhage on April 12, 1945. The German government surrendered unconditionally on May 7, 1945 and May 8 was officially declared V-E Day. America’s “silent service” was devastating Japanese merchant ships. 1,042 ships were destroyed by the end of the war. The U.S. launched devastating bombing raids from captured Mariana islands like Saipan. In a 2 day bombing raid on Tokyo (March 9-10 1945), 250,000 buildings were destroyed and 83,000 people died. General MacArthur, after taking control of New Guinea, headed to the Philippines with 600 ships and 250,000 men. Japan made one final effort to stop MacArthur by targeting his transports and supply ships. Japan’s navy clashed with the U.S.’s at Leyte Gulf, fighting on the sea and in the air from October 23-26, 1944. The Americans won and Japan was done as a sea power, losing roughly 60 ships. MacArthur next landing on the Philippine island of Luzon in January of 1945. By March, he took the Philippine capital, Manila. The Philippines, however, where not conquered until July. Iwo Jima was MacArthur next target. It was captured in March 1945 after a 25 day assault and 4,000 American casualties. Okinawa was the last island between MacArthur and Japan. After 50,000 American casualties, Okinawa fell into American control in June of 1945. While strategists in Washington were planning an all out invasion of the Japanese main island, Tokyo recognized imminent defeat and sent peace feelers to Moscow, which had not entered war with Japan yet. Having broken the Japanese radio codes, the Americans knew of Japan’s actions. However, Japan still showed no signs of a willingness to surrender unconditionally. Stalin, Churchill, and Truman met in Potsdam, Germany from July 16 to August 2, 1945. Participants met to discuss how to deal with the newly defeated Germany. Other goals included peace treaties and post-war order. Actions agreed upon include: Allie occupation in Germany to insure demilitarization, movement to democracy, decentralization, and decartelization. Division of Germany and Austria into four occupation zones. Division of Berlin and Vienna into four occupation zones. Prosecution of Nazi’s. Giving back all German annexations in Europe. War reparations to the Soviet Union. Shifting of Germany’s eastern border to the Oder-Neisse line, reducing Germany’s size by ¼ of it’s prewar borders. On July 26, 1944, Churchill, Truman, and Chiang Kaishek issued the Potsdam Declaration. The declaration outlined the terms of surrender for Japan. At the end of the conference, the United States, Great Britain, and China gave Japan an ultimatum: surrender or meet “prompt and utter destruction.” Original codename: “Development of Substitute Materials” The project was in operation from 1942 to 1946 under Major General Leslie Groves. The U.S., Canada, and the Britain were involved in the project (the Manhattan Project absorbed the British Counterpart, Tube Alloys). The project employed more than 130,000 people. It cost nearly $2 billion (equivalent to $25.8 billion today). The first atomic bomb, nicknamed “The Gadget,” was set of at 05:30 on July 16, 1945 at Trinity Site, NM. The test was codenamed Trinity. The Gadget exploded with the energy equivalent to 20 kilotons of TNT. The shock wave could be felt over 100 miles away. The mushroom cloud reached 7.5 miles high. The explosion could be heard as far away as El Paso, Texas. A cover story about an ammunition explosion at Alamogordo Field was issued. “Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.” On August 6, 1945, an American bomber dropped on atomic bomb on the city of Hiroshima, Japan. About 180,000 Japanese were either dead, wounded, or missing. On August 8, the Soviet Union entered the war with Japan, as previously agreed. Soviet troops quickly took over Japanese defenses in Manchuria and Korea in a 6 day victory march. On August 9, American bombers dropped the second atomic bomb on Nagasaki. About 80,000 were killed or missing. On August 10, the Japanese surrendered on one condition: that Hirohito be allowed to remain as emperor. The Allies excepted this condition on August 14. The official end came on September 2, 1945. Surrender ceremonies were conducted by General MacArthur on the battleship Missouri in Tokyo Bay. Meanwhile, Americans back at home were celebrating V-J Day Americans suffered roughly 1 million casualties. Comparatively, this number was low (Soviet Union lost about 20 million). Compared to past wars, the proportion killed by disease was greatly reduced due to the use of blood plasma and drugs such as penicillin. The American homeland was also left virtually unscathed, unlike other nations involved. How was America transformed from a peacetime to a wartime economy? What were the steps that America took to mobilize for their war with the Axis powers? What was the impact of the war on domestic America? What was America’s strategy for winning the war against the Axis powers? What turned the tide of the war in the Pacific for American troops? How did WWII end and what were the terms of settlement?