* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download World War II Powerpoint
Fascism in Europe wikipedia , lookup
Allied plans for German industry after World War II wikipedia , lookup
Allied war crimes during World War II wikipedia , lookup
Pursuit of Nazi collaborators wikipedia , lookup
Consequences of the attack on Pearl Harbor wikipedia , lookup
Role of music in World War II wikipedia , lookup
Collaboration with the Axis Powers wikipedia , lookup
German–Soviet Axis talks wikipedia , lookup
Technology during World War II wikipedia , lookup
Allied Control Council wikipedia , lookup
Aftermath of World War II wikipedia , lookup
Appeasement wikipedia , lookup
German evacuation from Central and Eastern Europe wikipedia , lookup
World War II by country wikipedia , lookup
Western betrayal wikipedia , lookup
British propaganda during World War II wikipedia , lookup
World War II and American animation wikipedia , lookup
Nazi Germany wikipedia , lookup
Consequences of Nazism wikipedia , lookup
New Order (Nazism) wikipedia , lookup
Foreign relations of the Axis powers wikipedia , lookup
American Theater (World War II) wikipedia , lookup
Economy of Nazi Germany wikipedia , lookup
End of World War II in Europe wikipedia , lookup
Allies of World War II wikipedia , lookup
Home front during World War II wikipedia , lookup
Diplomatic history of World War II wikipedia , lookup
World War II 1939 - 1945 The gross domestic product (GDP) or gross domestic income (GDI) is a basic measure of a country's overall economic output. It is the market value of all final goods and services made within the borders of a country in a year. It is often positively correlated with the standard of living The Great Depression Hits America • • • • • Long Term Causes Huge war debts American loans to Europe Widespread use of credit Overproduction of goods Industrial wages rise as farm earnings fall • • • • • Immediate Causes New York Stock market crash Farmers unable to repay loans Banks demand repayment of loans American Loans to other countries dry up Without capital, Businesses and factories fail Worldwide Economic Depression • • • • Immediate Effects Vast unemployment and misery Protective tariffs imposed Loss of faith in capitalism and democracy Authoritarian leaders emerge • • • • Long Term Effects Rise of fascism and Nazism Governments experiment with social programs People blame scapegoats World War II begins Dictators rise to power and the world avoids conflict due to Great Depression… Why would an entire group of people allow someone so evil to take over a government? Benito Mussolini – Italy Fascism – extreme nationalism and a strong centralized government led by a dictator He hated the Treaty of Versailles because he thought Italy should have gotten more land. Blackshirts – gangs of fascist thugs loyal to Mussolini bring Italy under his control Signed an alliance with Hitler in 1936 – “axis” between Rome and Berlin Goal – create a new Roman Empire Result – Invaded and conquered Ethiopia and Albania General Hideki Tojo – Japan Militarism – extreme nationalism, values military virtues and ideals and takes an aggressive military approach to expanding its power Japan needs living space and natural resources for the growing population. Result – Conquers Manchuria (northern China) As WWII starts, Japan conquers European colonies in the Pacific. The Japanese said they were liberating the Asians from the Europeans, but really wanted the natural resources. Joseph Stalin – Soviet Union Communism – one party rule and the elimination of private property, does not tolerate opposition Economic Plans for Soviet Union – gov’t take control of agriculture and business Result – food shortage and starvation Reign of Terror Purges – purified the Communist party Millions are put on trial for being “enemies”. They are executed or sent to Gulags in Siberia. 10 to 50 million died from 1930 – 1950 Stalin’s Gulags – Work Camps Adolf Hitler – Germany Nazism – extreme nationalism, control of all industry by the state, superiority of the Aryan race and leadership by a dictator He hated the Treaty of Versailles because he felt it humiliated Germany The Great Depression hits Germany, and Hitler comes to power Mein Kampf (“My Struggle”) – Hitler’s autobiography It mapped out his future plans and the Nazi philosophy: Purifying the Aryan race, expand military, expand borders, and make Germany great again. Here is some Hitler Youth propaganda from a pamphlet titled "Faith and Action" where it talks about race and how "physical characteristics" are NOT important! "Race means to be able to think in a certain way. He who has courage, loyalty and honor, the mark of the German, has the race that should rule in Germany, even if he does not have the physical characteristics of the "Nordic" race. The unity of the noble and a noble body is the goal to which we strive. But we despise those whose noble body carries an ignoble soul. A variety of related European races have merged in Germany. One trunk grew from these roots. Each race gave its best strength. Each contributed to the German soul We Germans have a fighting spirit, a look to the horizon, the "desire to do a thing for its own sake" of the Nordic race. Another racial soul gave us our cozy old cities and our depth. Yet another racial soul gave us mastery of the magical realm of music. Yet another gave us our ability to organize, and our silent obedience. We can not hold it against anyone if he carries a variety of racial lines, for the German soul does as well, and created out of it the immeasurable riches which it possesses above all other nations. The greatness of our Reich grew out of this soul. But the Nordic race must dominate in Germany and shape the soul of each German. It must win out in the breast of each individual. Today our ideal is not the artist or the citizen, but the hero. Our highest treasure is the soul that we have been given. He who mixes his blood with that of foreign inferior races ruins the blood and soul that have been given to him to pass on in purity to his children. He makes his children impure and miserable, and commits the greatest crime that he as a National Socialist can commit. But he who follows the laws of race fulfills the great commandment that only like should be brought together with like, keeping apart those things like fire and water which do not mix." Under his leadership: 1. Germanys rearms 2. Unemployment drops and the economy improves 3. Autobahn is built Authoritarian Dictators Activity • Divide the paper into 4 squares. • List each of the rulers and their political strategies in each of the 4 boxes. • Include an illustration to remind you of these leaders and their power. ex) Flag or cartoon showing complete authority… 3 colors HITLER: ASSASSINATION PLOT. Aggression, Appeasement & War Italy, Germany & Japan form alliance – let each other attack countries & take over new lands GERMANY ITALY JAPAN Hitler Mussolini Tojo Germany and Hitler’s Goals – Reunite all German speaking people, become the greatest empire on earth – More “living space” for the German people Goose Steps to War March 1936 – reoccupies the Rhineland March 1938 – Takes Austria Sept. 1938 - Demands Sudetenland, part of Czechoslovakia Britain and France appease him, do not want Chamberlin Clip another war Appeasement – give in to keep peace March 1939 – takes the rest of Czechoslovakia Appeasement – give in to keep peace Hitler’s Pact with Stalin,1939 Stalin and Hitler sign a ten year Nonaggression Pact HITLER & STALIN CARTOON. "The Two Boa Constrictors (Hitler and Stalin)": "I don't quite know how to help you digest, my dear Adolf...but I understand you very well". They would not invade each other and would split up Eastern Europe. Secretly Hitler planned on invading the Soviet Union after he conquered the west. Sept 1, 1939 – Invades Poland Britain and France promise to protect Poland World War II begins when Germany invades Poland Sides of the War Allied Powers Great Britain France United States in 1941 Soviet Union in 1941 China Axis Powers Germany Italy Japan Blitzkrieg – lightening warfare – Combination of ground and air attacking at the same time – Panzers (German tanks) and Luftwaffe (German Air force) The Western Front By June of 1940 France had fallen to Germany. Germany had trapped the French and British troops at Dunkirk. This could have been the end of WWII. Miracle at Dunkirk – British citizens rescued the soldiers across the channel with whatever could float and hold men. Boat used in the miracle at Dunkirk The Battle of Britain, 1944 – AKA The Blitz German Luftwaffe bomb Great Britain and destroy Britain’s air defenses. Eventually Hitler stopped the attack on Great Britain (when he realized he was not winning) and set his eyes on the Soviet Union. WWII: LONDON BLITZ, 1944. The guard chapel of the Wellington Barracks, London, after a V-2 attack, 1944. …even with all of this destruction, the British – led by Winston Churchill – refuse to quit Americans wanted to stay isolated when WWII started. Congress passed Neutrality Acts Banned the U.S. from providing weapons, loans, and can only trade nonmilitary goods. Lend Lease Act – Authorized America to give aid to any country whose defense was vital to America’s defense. CARTOON: LEND-LEASE ACT. The Way of a Stork: English cartoon by L.G. Illingworth, 1941, characterizing the birth of the Lend-Lease Act as a 'happy event' for Britain. FDR was more concerned with the war in Europe. He did not expect the Japanese to attack FDR placed trade restrictions on Japan hoping that would stop their hostility. Japan depended upon trade with America. Japan wanted America out of the Pacific Japan attacked Pearl Harbor on Dec 7, 1941 Why – They thought they could cripple the American Pacific fleet and conquer Asia before America could rebuild. WWII: PEARL HARBOR, 1941. Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, December 7, 1941. The USS Arizona at the height of the fire. USS Arizona The USS Arizona is the final resting place for many of the ship's 1,177 crewmen who lost their lives on December 7, 1941. F.D. ROOSEVELT CARTOON. "The Sun is Rising": cartoon, shortly after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. FDR declares war on Japan on Dec 8, 1941. FDR says that December 7, 1941 is “a day that will live in infamy.” Italy and Germany declared war on the U.S. on December 10, 1941. Selective Training and Service Act A draft for males ages 21 – 36. Males were selected by lottery. 16 million Americans served as soldiers, sailors and aviators. Called themselves “GI’s” – government issue Women served as nurses, clerks, mechanics, drivers, typists in the military. Navajo Code Talkers They were young Navajo men who transmitted secret communications on the battlefields of WWII. http://www.navajocodetalkers.org / Tuskegee Airmen The Tuskegee Airmen were dedicated, determined young men who enlisted to become America's first black military airmen, at a time when there were many people who thought that black men lacked intelligence, skill, courage and patriotism. They came from every section of the country, with large numbers coming from New York City, Washington, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia and Detroit. Each one possessed a strong personal desire to serve the United States of America at the best of his ability. War Production – The government controlled what was produced and what went toward the war effort. – Ex – Liberty Ships, Ford made B-24 Bomber Convert peacetime industry into industry that produced war goods. Government financed the war through war bonds, loans and higher taxes. American Propaganda Poster against the Japanese. American Propaganda Poster against the Japanese. American Propaganda Poster against the Germans. As men were drafted into the armed forces, women moved into the manufacturing and defense industries. WWII: INDUSTRY. Women on the assembly line. WWII: WOMEN WELDERS at the Landers, Frary and Clark Plant, New Britain, Connecticut. Photographed, 1943, by Gordon Parks. “Rosie the Riveter” The government used her in posters and recruitment films to the 1940’s to attract women to work. WOMEN WORKERS CARTOON. Rosie the Riveter Steps Out: American cartoon comment, c1943, on the rising number of women employed in factories during World War II. After the war, women were expected to leave the work place and give their jobs back to the returning servicemen. Women were still paid less than men. Rationing – fair distribution of scarce items Ration books were given to Americans, and they could only buy a certain amount of ration points each month. The books contained Items were issued point values. As you bought items, you handed over the stamps. Once you were out of stamps, you could no longer buy those items for that month. Victory Gardens A home vegetable garden planted to add to the home food supply and replace food sent to the soldiers. A Black Market was created to buy rare goods. 1. 2. 3. 4. With a partner, find the average number of people who live in your households combined. (your number + their number / 2) Review the receipt, what is the total amount due? Calculate 20% of the total amount. Use the discount/sale book, plus your knowledge of the cost of items, and items from the old receipt to create a menu to feed the number of people in step 1, for one week (all meals). You must stay within the 20% range from step 3. Answer the following questions: 1. What items are necessities? 2. What could you do to cut costs if we were to go into a total war situation today? 3. Is there anything that surprised you in this activity? Why or why not? Battle of the Atlantic – The USA must trade and send soldiers to Britain for the war effort. German “wolf pack” u-boats try to destroy American Ships as they cross the Atlantic Ocean. WWII CARTOON: GERMAN U-BOAT An American Cartoon by D.R Fitzpatrick, 1 November, 1941, on the sinking of the American destroyer "Reuben James" by a German submarine. American Convoys crossed Atlantic. This was the safest way to cross the Atlantic. North Africa Campaign American General Eisenhower defeats German General Erwin Rommel, the “Desert Fox” in May 1943. WW2: AFRICA, 1943. American soldiers attached to a tank destroyer unit taking cover from overhead artillery shells somewhere in Tunisia, April 1943. Invasion of Italy – American General George Patton led the invasion and liberates Italy in Sept 1943. – Mussolini is murdered by the Italians as he tried to escape. Mussolini and his mistress are Murdered by the Italians. Hitler breaks the pact with Stalin and invades the Soviet Union for “living space” for the German people. WWII: STALINGRAD ATTACK. German troops charging up a hill near Stalingrad, October 1942. Scorch the Earth Policy – The Soviets burned the earth as they retreated. WORLD WAR II: EASTERN FRONT. German soldiers advancing through a Russian village set afire by retreating Soviet troops, November 1941. Germany advances to Stalingrad from 1941 – 1942. Battle of Stalingrad – Germany was not used to the Russian winter and many freeze to death. – Feb 1943 – Germany surrenders 22 divisions to the Soviet army. GERMAN SURRENDER, 1943. Surrender of the German "Wehrmacht" (armed forces) in the Northern encircled area of Stalingrad. A column of prisoners of war at the bank of the river Wolga, 02.02.1943. • We love Patton because… • We hate Patton because… • 1-2 Examples The Eastern Front 1941-1945 The Battle of the Atlantic 1941-1945 The Western Front 1944-1945 The Invasion of Italy 1943-1944 The North African Campaign 1942-1943 Operation Overlord – The invasion of France from Great Britain. Goal – Liberate France from the Germans and defeat the Germans. D-Day – June 6, 1944 – The largest landing by sea in history at Normandy, France. 150,000 Bombers, airborne, Allied troops, and equipment land at Normandy. WWII: NORMANDY. An American landing craft off the Normandy beaches on D-Day, June 6, 1944. WWII: D-DAY/NORMANDY. American troops wading ashore in Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944. WWII: NORMANDY, 1944 An American landing craft on a Normandy beach, June 8, 1944. WWII: NORMANDY: D-DAY. American medics administer first aid to soldiers wounded in the initial attack on a beachhead, in Northern France, June 1944. Liberating France from Germany – The Allies pushed through and officially liberated France on Aug 25, 1944. WWII: WEST FRONT, 1945. U.S. Infantrymen of the 90th Division pass concrete dragon's teeth of the Siegfried Line of Habscheid, Germany, as they move to the front in February 1945. Battle of the Bulge – The largest battle in WWII, and largest battle ever fought by the U.S. Army. WWII: BATTLE OF THE BULGE. Tanks and infantrymen of the 82nd Airborne Division push through the snow in Belgium: December 1944. Soviets advance to Berlin – Stalin wanted to make it there before the Allies. – The Germans had killed millions of Russians and he wanted revenge. WWII: VOLKSTURM, 1945. Two members of the "Volkssturm" (Nazi combat group), a boy and an older man, with bazookas in a trench. Picture taken by Hilmar Pabel, April 1945. Hitler commits suicide before being captured as the Soviets surround Berlin. WWII: BERLIN FALLEN, 1945. Two Russian soldiers hoisting the Soviet flag on the destroyed Reichstag building. Picture taken May 1945 by J. Cheldej. Germany surrenders on May 8, 1945. VE Day – Victory in Europe NEW YORK: V-E DAY, 1945. Crowds fill Times Square, New York City, on V-E Day, 7 May 1945. Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill meet to discuss the end of the war. WWII: YALTA CONFERENCE. Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin at Yalta Conference, February 1945. They decide to split Germany and Berlin into four zones. Each zone would be controlled by the major Allies. Stalin promised elections in Eastern Europe and enter war against Japan. The enemy of my enemy is my friend… or is he Discuss with a partner: Think of a time when you or someone you know became friends with someone just because of a common enemy. How strong was that relationship? Could it last? What if…. Page 80 Think about the way the war in Europe ended, consider alternate endings. Write 3-4 sentences per scenario. What if- 1. Allied forces were defeated at Normandy? 2. Allied forces got to Hitler first? 3. Hitler had not committed suicide? 4. Hitler developed and used the atomic bomb first? 5. Stalin did not cooperate at the Yalta Conference? How could humans do this to other humans? Jews were blamed for the problems in Germany. Jews were expelled from schools and jobs. Kristallnacht (Night of Broken Glass) Jewish homes, shops and synagogues were destroyed by the SS. KRISTALLNACHT A storefront blast in Germany. All Jews were required to wear a yellow star. The Jews were moved and imprisoned in ghettos. Many were murdered in the ghettos by mobile killing squads. WWII: SS EXECUTION. SS-execution commando during World War II. Dead were in the streets in ghettos. • Judenrat- “Jewish Council” – local government in the ghetto, and stood between the Nazis and the ghetto population – forced by the Nazis to provide Jews for use as slave labor, and to assist in the deportation of Jews to extermination camps – Those who refused or were unable to cooperate fully were rounded up and shot or deported to the extermination camps. – collaborated with the Nazis, might save the lives Concentration/Work Camps – Jews were sent to Concentration Camps once the ghettos were overcrowded. 15,000 camps were created. Workers at a Concentration Camp AUSCHWITZ, c1944. Women on the train station ramp at the concentration camp Auschwitz c1944. CONCENTRATION CAMP. Prisoners doing forced labor at a factory, undated. Death Camps – The Final Solution Jews were sent to Death Camps because ghettos and Concentration Camps were overcrowded. Auschwitz – As it looks today Living Quarters at the Camps. Six million Jews were murdered. •Firing squad, starvation, Lethal injections, pills, gas ovens, open bon fires, medical experiments, Poisonous gas Gas ovens Furnace Poisonous Gas Showers Firing squad Mass Grave Pit open bon fires The Nazis tried to burn all evidence as the Allies approached. CONCENTRATION CAMP, 1944. Skeletons of murdered camp inmates in front of furnaces at the concentration camp Majdanek. The picture was taken by M. Trachmann after the liberation by the Red Army on 07.27.1944. Full credit: Nowosti ullstein bild / The Granger Collection The Germans did medical experiments on children and adults. 6 million undesirables were also murdered. (Over 12 million total were murdered by the Nazi regime.) Gypsies, Political dissidents, Poles, Slavs, Jehovah Witnesses, Catholics, Russian POWS, Communists, Trade Unionists, Socialists, Mentally and Physically disabled, Homosexuals http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/media_nm.php?lang=en&ModuleId=10005143&MediaId=3372 Nuremberg Trials Nazi officers were put on trial for war crimes and some were sentenced to death. CARTOON: NUREMBERG TRIALS. End of the Road: American cartoon, 1946, by D.R. Fitzpatrick on the Nuremberg trials of Nazi leaders for war crimes The Philippines, which is an American possession, is taken away by the Japanese in May 1942. Bataan Death March – 76,000 POW’s (Amer. & Filipinos) were marched over 68 miles to prison camps. 10,000 died in the march. America stopped the advance of Japan - Battle of Coral Sea stopped Japan from taking Australia. - Battle of Midway stopped the Japanese eastward spread, turning point in war. WW II: BATTLE OF MIDWAY. June 3-6, 1942. The Japanese cruiser "Mikuma" in flames, shortly before she sank. Aircraft Carriers are floating airfields. They are used as the base for the attacks in the Pacific. They extended the area in which airplanes can fly. Island Hopping is the American plan of action to capture Japanese held islands. Guadalcanal – jungle warfare Philippines – Japanese sea power destroyed Iwo Jima – Marines raised U.S. flag on Mt. Surabachi WWII: IWO JIMA, 1945. Raising the flag on Iwo Jima, Feb. 23, 1945. Okinawa – kamikaze pilot (suicide pilots) WORLD WAR II: KAMIKAZE plane attack on the USS Missouri in 1945. Invasion of Japan – U.S. starts bombing Japan Albert Einstein wrote a letter to FDR warning him about the Germans ability to build a new bomb – the atomic bomb. President Harry Truman decides to drop the atomic bomb – Save lives, time and money Hiroshima is bombed on August 6, 1945. Aerial view of Hiroshima before the bomb, April 1945 The Ruins of Hiroshima Enola Gay was the fastest plane the US Military had. It dropped the bombs on the Japanese cities. The actual bomb The blast, .034 seconds after detonation Nagasaki is bombed on August 9, 1945. Japan surrenders on Sept 8, 1945 VJ Day – Victory in Japan Estimated WWII Deaths Country Military Deaths Civilian Deaths Total Death 3,250,000 2,350,000 5,600,000 226,900 60,000 286,900 1,740,000 393,400 2,133,400 France 122,000 470,000 592,000 Great Britain 305,800 60,600 366,400 United States 405,400 n/a 405,400 Soviet Union 11,000,000 6,700,000 17,700,000 China 1,400,000 8,000,000 9,400,000 Axis Germany Italy Japan Allies American Casualties in WWII Service Army Number Deaths Serving 11,260,000 318,274 565,861 Navy 4,183,466 62,614 37,778 Marines 669,100 24,511 67,207 Coast Guard Total 241,093 1,917 NA 16,353,659 407,316 Army figure includes Army Air Force Wounded 670,846 The war is over!! Our GI’s are coming home!!