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Early Events of the War
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Rhineland
Austria
Sudetenland
Munich
Czech
Poland****** Sept 1, 1939
Sitzkrieg – Belgium, Lux, Denmark, Norway,
Netherlands
• Russia – Estonia, Lat, Lith, trying for Finland
France
Battle of Britain
Formation of Axis Alliance
Eastern Europ. Join axis
War Plans
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December 22, 1941:
Churchill and Roosevelt
met for three weeks to
work out war plan
Despite the bombing of
Pearl Harbor, Decision
to strike against Hitler
first because Germany
and Italy were seen as a
greater threat than
Japan
Why?
The Battle of the Atlantic
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Allies depended on supplies from U.S.; After
America’s entry into the war, Hitler was
determined to prevent food and war
supplies from reaching Britain and the USSR
Hitler ordered submarine (wolf packs)
attacks against supply ships while the Allies
organized convoys of cargo ships with
destroyer and airplane escorts
In the first seven months of 1942, German
U-boats sank 681 Allied ships in the Atlantic
Only in 1943 do the Allies make gains
because of the increased effort in US ship
building
ALLIES ATTACK U-BOATS
U-426 sinks after attack from the air, January 1944. Almost two-thirds of all Uboat sailors died during the Battle of the Atlantic.
War with Russia
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http://www.pbs.org/behindcloseddoo
rs/in-depth/stalin-stands.html
THIS WEBSITE IS AWESOME MUST
UPDATE ALL EASTERN FRONT
NOTES!!!
Operation Barbarossa 1941–1945
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German invasion of USSR June 22, 1941
largest invasion in the history of warfare:
• 3.9 million troops, 600,000 motor vehicles, and
2,700 aircraft invaded 1,800 mile wide front
• involved a total of nine million troops
• Germany encroached 1,240 miles to the east
• In the first month, 90% of Russian tanks
destroyed
• Captured 3 million Soviet POWs
• 65% of Allied military casualties on eastern front
But basically a failure for Germany
• For every five German soldiers who died in WWII,
four of them died on the Eastern Front.
 Soviet Union counterattacks and eventually
pushed German army back 1,550 miles to Berlin
3 Major Events in Barbarossa
Moscow
 Leningrad
 Stalingrad
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Siege of Leningrad
September 8, 1941 – January 27, 1944
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900 days siege of civilian city
• Hitler cut off the city from food and supplies and
razed to the ground.
• 1942: Using frozen Lake Ladoga Soviet trucks
brought in food, fuel, and troop reinforcements,
and evacuated 850,000
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But thousands froze to death or died from starvation or
disease while being bombarded continually by German
artillery.
By the time the Russian Army finally broke through in
January 1944, more than 640,000 had died.
Battle of Moscow
October 2, 1941 – December 1941
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Operation Typhoon, Germany’s full-scale attack on
Moscow
Under a "state of siege," 500,000 men and women
dug 5,000 miles of trenches around the city
Stalin had 900,000 troops
• Commanded them to die defending the city
Battle of Moscow
October 2, 1941 – December 1941
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Mid-November:
Germans within 20 miles
of Moscow suburbs, but
were soon struggling
with temperatures as
low as -40°C and
blizzard conditions
December 5: USSR
counterattacked.
• pushed the Germans back
almost 100 miles from the
city.
• first Soviet victory against
Hitler.
Turning point of the war: Battle of Stalingrad
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Russia at war against Germany since 1941
Stalingrad: a major industrial center in Russia
• Hitler wanted to capture Caucasus oil fields
and destroy Stalingrad
August 1942: series of bombing raids sets much
of the city on fire; this was followed by weeks
of hand-to-hand combat in the city
Then winter set in:
• Germans unprepared: wearing summer
uniforms / short on food
• Soviet army brings in fresh supplies and
surrounds the city cutting off German supply
lines
• Germans now were on the defensive
The Germans surrendered in January 1943
Soviets begin to move west on the offense
BATTLE OF STALINGRAD
•The Soviets lost more than 1 million men in the battle
(more than twice the number of deaths the U.S. suffered
in all the war)
•Stalin never forgave Roosevelt and Churchill for not
helping out
•
THE NORTH AFRICAN FRONT
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“Operation Torch”
Invasion of Axiscontrolled North Africa in
1942
Led by American General
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Allied troops land in
Casablanca, Oran and the
Algiers in Algeria
Fought Afrika Korps led by
German General Edwin
Rommel (“the Desert
Fox”) into Egypt
Germans surrender in May
1943
Map at:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldw
ars/wwtwo/launch_ani_el_alamein.sht
ml
CASABLANCA MEETING
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FDR and Churchill met in Casablanca
• 1) Plan amphibious invasions of France
and Italy
• 2) Only unconditional surrender would be
accepted
ITALIAN CAMPAIGN
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Allies easily took Sicily in 1943
King Emmanuel III stripped Mussolini
of his power and had him arrested
• Germans rescued him by dropping 100
parachutists at his mountain prison and flying
him to Munich.
• Mussolini is captured April 28,1945 by Italian
partisans.
• They shot him and hung his body upside down
in Milan Square.
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Hitler’s forces continued to resist the
Allies in Italy; Hitler’s strategy: he
would rather fight in Italy than on
German soil
Not until 1945 and the collapse of
Germany was Italy secured by the
Allies
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/interactive/animations/w
wtwo_map_italy/index.shtml
ALLIES LIBERATE EUROPE
the Allies left
fake clues, set
up phantom
army, and sent
fake radio
messages to
make it look
like the
invasion would
take place
near Calais
D-DAY JUNE 6, 1944
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D-Day was an amphibious landing – soldiers going
from sea to land
“Operation
Overlord”
Commander
General Dwight D.
Eisenhower
Also called “DDay,”
June 6, 1944
Largest land-seaair operation in
military history
Established a
second front for
the war
D-Day (Operation Overlord)
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Allied forces landed at Normandy in Northern France
• 3 divisions land via parachute behind German lines
Remaining British, American, and Canadian forces
landed at beaches named Gold, Juno, Sword, Utah,
and Omaha
• 160,000 Allied troops landed along a 50-mile stretch of
• 5,000 Ships and 13,000 aircraft supported the D-Day
invasion
• more than 9,000 Allied Soldiers were killed or wounded
• Despite heavy losses, Allies hold the beach
Within a month, the Allies had landed 1 million troops,
567,000 tons of supplies and 170,000 vehicles
Map at:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/wwtwo/launch_ani_overlord_cam
paign.shtml
OMAHA BEACH 6/6/44
Landing at Normandy
Planes drop paratroopers behind enemy lines at Normandy, France
FRANCE FREED
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After bombing roads,
bridges, and German troops
there was a gap in enemy
defense line
General George Patton led
Third Army through the gap
and liberated Paris on
August 25, 1944
By September 1944, the
Allies had freed France,
Belgium and Luxembourg
That good news and the
American’s people’s desire
not to “change horses in
midstream” helped elect FDR
to an unprecedented 4th term
General George Patton (right) was
instrumental in Allies freeing
France
The Battle of the Bulge
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October 1944, Allies captured
first German town, Aachen
Battle of the Bulge - Germans
final counter attack on the
western front
• Hitler hoped breaking through
the Allied line would break up
Allied supply lines
• December, German tank
divisions and 200,000 German
troops attacked Allies
• The Germans drove 60 miles
into Allied area creating a
“bulge” in the line
• reinforcements arrived and
the allies were able to push
the Germans back
• Battle a turning point: Germans
were now on the defensive in the
Eastern Front too
American soldiers photographed in the
Ardennes during the Battle of the Bulge.
BATTLE OF THE BULGE
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Little seemed
to have
changed, but
in fact the
Germans had
sustained
heavy losses:
120,000
troops, 600
tanks and
1,600 planes
Firing Bombing of Dresden
February 13, 1945
 series of Allied firebombing raids on
Dresden, Germany
 killed as many as 135,000 people
(real number unknown).
 8 square miles of city destroyed.
 It was the single most destructive
bombing of the war
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LIBERATION OF DEATH CAMPS
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While the British and
Americans moved from the
west to the east into
Germany, the Soviets moved
from the east to the west into
German-controlled Poland
The Soviets discovered death
camps that the Germans had
set up within Poland
• Find thousands of starving
prisoners and extensive evidence
of the murders
• Stunned Soviets call it a “murder
camp”
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The Americans also liberated
Nazi death camps within
Germany
Liberation of the Death Camps
General (later US President)
Dwight Eisenhower
inspecting prisoners' corpses
at a liberated concentration
camp, 1945
FDR DIES; TRUMAN PRESIDENT
•On April 12,
1945, FDR
suffered a stroke
and died– his VP
Harry S Truman
became president
ALLIES TAKE BERLIN; HITLER
COMMITS SUICIDE
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By April 25, 1945, the Soviet army had stormed
Berlin
Hitler hid in his underground headquarters in Berlin
On April 29, he married girlfriend Eva Braun then
wrote a last note in which he blamed the Jews for
starting the war and his generals for losing it
The next day he gave poison to his wife and shot
himself; bodies were then burned
V-E DAY
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General Eisenhower
accepted the unconditional
surrender of the Third Reich
On May 8, 1945, the Allies
celebrated V-E Day – victory in
Europe Day
The war in Europe was finally
over
American
soldier
celebrating
the end of
the war
Unconditional Surrender
V-E celebration in New York City