* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download WWII PowerPoint - SchoolWorld an Edline Solution
Consequences of Nazism wikipedia , lookup
Anglo-German Naval Agreement wikipedia , lookup
Technology during World War II wikipedia , lookup
German military administration in occupied France during World War II wikipedia , lookup
World War II by country wikipedia , lookup
Historiography of the Battle of France wikipedia , lookup
Consequences of the attack on Pearl Harbor wikipedia , lookup
Foreign relations of the Axis powers wikipedia , lookup
British propaganda during World War II wikipedia , lookup
Fascism in Europe wikipedia , lookup
Nazi Germany wikipedia , lookup
Allies of World War II wikipedia , lookup
Nazi views on Catholicism wikipedia , lookup
World War II and American animation wikipedia , lookup
Home front during World War II wikipedia , lookup
End of World War II in Europe wikipedia , lookup
Diplomatic history of World War II wikipedia , lookup
American Theater (World War II) wikipedia , lookup
Economy of Nazi Germany wikipedia , lookup
New Order (Nazism) wikipedia , lookup
Appeasement wikipedia , lookup
WORLD WAR II CHAPTER 24: WORLD WAR LOOMS FASCISM CREATES TWO LEADERS • Fascism: type of government emphasizing loyalty to the state and obedience to its leader • Similar to Communism b/c: • Rule by one • Denied individual rights • State was supreme • Unlike Communism b/c: • • • • Believed in separate social classes No clearly defined theories Made up of middle and upper classes Fascists = nationalists; Communists =internationalists BENITO MUSSOLINI • Newspaper editor • 1919 became leader of Fascist Party • Black Shirts – followers who acted as his militia • Ran a campaign of terror on Italian Commies • Oct. 1922 30,000 Fascists marched to Rome demanding he be made leader • King Victor Emmanuel III said OK • Mussolini now Il Duce, or the Leader legally ADOLF HITLER • Little known leader, born in Austria • Fought in WWI for Germany • 1920 joined, and led, political group, National Socialist German Workers’ Party • A.k.a. Nazi Party • Nazism: German brand of fascism supported by middle and lower classes • Swastika: symbol (crooked cross) • Brown Shirts: private militia • Der Führer: Hitler’s title (the leader) ADOLF HITLER (cont) • 1923 arrested and jailed after trying to seize Munich • Mein Kampf: book Hitler wrote in prison • Aryan: German race (especially blond hair/blue eyed) – superior to all, esp. Jews • Need to conquer other areas • Jan. 1933 Hitler becomes Chancellor legally • President thinks Hitler could be used as a puppet • Hitler created a totalitarian state • Opponents banned • SS (Shutzstaffel) protection squad created • Gestapo German secret police created ADOLF HITLER (cont) • Wanted total control over everyone • • • • Burned books Hitler Youth and League of German Girls Censored churches HUGE waves of anti-Semitism (we’ll get to this more in depth later) WORLD DRIFTING TOWARDS WAR • 1931 Japan takes Manchuria • League of Nations condemned Japan, so Japan withdrew from the League • League did nothing • May 1936 Mussolini goes after Ethiopia • Again, League did nothing • July 7, 1937 Japan invades China • And again, League did nothing SIDE TRACK BONUS QUESTION • Why do you think the League of Nations, among other western European nations (i.e., Great Britain, France) did NOTHING? ANSWER: because they would do ANYTHING to keep peace and not start another war. WORLD DRIFTING TOWARDS WAR • Hitler Defies the Treaty of Versailles • March 7, 1935 Hitler took back Rhineland – the buffer zone/industrial gem between France and Germany • Great Britain and France’s reaction appeasement, or giving in to an aggressor (Hitler) in order to keep peace • EFFECT: Hitler saw he could get away with it, so sped up his military and territorial expansion • Nov. 1936 Axis Powers – Japan, Germany, and Italy – formed GERMANY RHINELAND FRANCE WORLD DRIFTING TOWARDS WAR • Through this, U.S. chooses isolationism: the belief that political ties to other countries should be avoided • Nov. 5, 1937 Hitler announces his plan to expand the Third Reich • March 1938 Hitler annexes Austria • France and Great Britain did NOTHING! HITLER GOES FOR SUDETENLAND • Sudetenland: area in Czechoslovakia that used to be German land (many Germans) • Sept. 1938 Hitler demanded that Czechs give it back to Germany • Sept. 29, 1938 Munich Conference – meeting b/t Great Britain, France, Germany, and Italy • RESULT: Britain and France say Hitler can take back Sudetenland if he respects Czechs new borders (appeasement) • 6 months later…Hitler invades Czechoslovakia SIDE TRACK BONUS QUESTION #2 • What major country (that probably should have been there) was not at the Munich Conference? • ANSWER: Czechoslovakia they had no say in the agreement NAZIS & SOVIETS ARE FRIENDS… • Aug. 23, 1939 USSR and Germany signed nonaggression pact – promised never to attack each other • Secretly planned to also conquer Poland and divide it in 2 • Sept. 1, 1939 Germany attacks Poland • Sept. 3, 1939 Britain and France declare war on Germany • BEGINNING OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR TWO SIDES •AXIS POWERS: •Germany •Italy •Japan •ALLIED POWERS: •France •Great Britain •USSR •United States •NOTE#1: countries enter war at different times •NOTE #2: these countries are the “main players.” More were involved. HITLER’S LIGHTNING WAR • Blitzkrieg: Germany’s military strategy involving fast-moving airplane from their air force (Luftwaffe) and tanks from their army (Wehrmacht), followed by massive infantry • A.k.a., the Lightning War • Destroyed Poland, esp. Warsaw • Western ½ fell to Germany, eastern ½ fell to the USSR EERIE CALM • For months, the French and British troops waited for war on the Maginot Line (French/German border) • “The Phony War” Allied troops marched towards Germany b/c they were bored • April 9, 1940 Hitler invaded Denmark and Norway (get closer to Britain) • May 1940 Hitler strikes Luxembourg, Holland, and Belgium (get closer to France: done in 10 days) • “The Phony War” was over FRANCE • May 26, 1940 Germans trap French on a peninsula (Brits help out) • June 10, 1940 Italy enters war and attacks France • June 22, 1940 France surrenders • Vichy France: southern part of France used as a puppet gov’t for the Axis • Charles de Gaulle: French general – fled to London and started making plans to get France back • THE POINT? The French fought back GREAT BRITAIN • Winston Churchill: P.M. of Britain • “We shall never surrender.” • Fight for Britain an air battle • RAF – 2900 planes v. Luftwaffe – 4500 planes • Sept. 7, 1940 – May 10, 1941 Battle of Britain: Nazis attacked Britain especially big cities like London • RESULTS: Hitler called off attacks • LESSON LEARNED: Hitler’s advances could be stopped SIDE TRACK BONUS QUESTION #3 • Next, we are going to learn about the Shoah, which is considered one of the most important events in WWII. Question is, what is the Shoah? • ANSWER: The Holocaust Shoah is the Hebrew word for it LEADING UP TO THE HOLOCAUST • Holocaust: massive slaughter of civilians, especially Jews • Nazis promoted anti-Semitism • Jews were blamed for the economic problems of the country after WWI and during the Depression • Anti-Semitism had been going on for centuries in Germany, and Europe, before the Holocaust LEADING UP TO THE HOLOCAUST • 1933 law states Jews cannot hold public office • 1935 Nuremberg Laws: deprived Jews of their natural rights • Nov. 9, 1938 Kristallnacht – “Night of the Broken Glass” • Nazis attacked Jews and destroyed their homes and businesses • EFFECT: signaled beginning of elimination of the Jews • Ghettos – segregated Jewish areas – were created in Polish cities THE “FINAL SOLUTION” • Final Solution: Hitler’s plan of genocide – killing of an entire people • Jews (especially), Poles, Russians, Gypsies, homosexuals, insane, and disabled • Hitler did this b/c he was impatient that Jews weren’t dying fast enough THE “FINAL SOLUTION” • Hitler sent SS from town to town to hunt down Jews • SS took Jews to isolated spots and killed them in mass graves • Took other Jews to concentration camps where they’d work as slaves MASS EXTERMINATION • Early 1942 Final Stage • Death camps built with gas chambers for mass murder 6000 per day • Auschwitz: largest death camp NUMBERS • 6 million Jews died in death camps and Nazi massacres • Most of the Jews were either from Poland or the Soviet Union http://www.cbsnews.com/section s/i_video/main500251.shtml?id= 2274705n U.S. IN…SORT OF • Summer 1941 U.S. begins supplying the Allies • Hitler attacks these ships with his Kriegsmarine (Navy) U-boats • Sept. 4, 1941 U-boats attack U.S. destroyer • U.S. Navy “unofficially” at war with Germany PACIFIC CAMPAIGN • Dec. 7, 1941 Japanese attack Pearl Harbor • Led by Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto – greatest naval strategist in Japanese history • Destroyed nearly the entire U.S. Pacific fleet in 2 hours • Dec. 8, 1941 U.S. declared war on Japan Franklin Delano Roosevelt, President of the United States, gave a speech to Congress about the attack. CHAPTER 25: THE U.S. IN WWII WAR IN NORTHERN AFRICA • Sept. 1940 Mussolini goes after British controlled Egypt • Brits fight back and push out Italy • General Erwin Rommel: German general who helps Italians fight war in Africa • A.k.a., the “Desert Fox” • Pushed Allies back and took major port city of Tobruk NORTH AFRICA CAMPAIGN • Allies have two generals go and win it back • General Bernard Montgomery: British • General Dwight Eisenhower: American • Operation Torch: Eisenhower’s plan to invade Morocco and Algeria to trap Rommel • RESULT: Rommel’s Afrika Korps smashed by May 1943 SOVIETS V. NAZIS • June 22, 1941 Operation Barbarossa: German blitzkrieg invasion of the USSR • Went after Leningrad and Moscow • Leningrad destroyed • Moscow saved b/c of reinforcements and Russian winter SIDE TRACK BONUS QUESTION #4 • What other major leader in World History lost his battle with Russia due to its crude winters? • ANSWER: Napoleon during WWII, the Soviets also used the scorched-earth policy like the Russians did against Napoleon PACIFIC CAMPAIGN • At first, the Japanese had a wave of victories • At peak, Japan controlled over one million miles of land and 150 million people • Jan. 1942 Japan took Philippines, a U.S. territory • Bataan Death March: brutal transfer of American & Filipino POW’s by the Japanese in 1942 “I was questioned by a Japanese officer who found out that I had been in a Philippine Scout Battalion. The [Japanese] hated the Scouts….Anyway, they took me outside and I was forced to watch as they buried six of my Scouts alive. They made the men dig their own graves, and then had them kneel down in a pit. The guards hit them over the head with shovels to stun them and piled earth on top.” - Lieutenant John Spainhower PACIFIC CAMPAIGN • Allies Turn the Tide • Doolittle Raid on Tokyo did little to destroy the city, but raised American morale • June 4, 1942 Battle of Midway: battle b/t Japanese and Americans for the American controlled Midway Island • U.S. destroyed the largest naval force ever assembled in naval history (done by Yamamoto) • New type of warfare used airplanes took off from aircraft carriers and did all the fighting • RESULTS: Americans won and it turned the tide of war in the Pacific against the Japanese PACIFIC CAMPAIGN • Allies go on the Offensive • Led by General Douglas MacArthur – commander of the Allied forces in Pacific • His strategy: island hop, take weak islands, get close to Japan • Aug. 7, 1942 – Feb. 1943 Battle of Guadalcanal: ended with the Japanese leaving the “island of death” ON THE ROAD TO VICTORY • Dec. 22, 1942 Stalin asks Churchill and FDR for help on the western front • Agreed to help, but in different ways STALINGRAD • Aug. 23, 1942 Battle of Stalingrad: fought b/t Germans and Soviets • Feb. 2, 1943 Germans surrendered • 99% of city destroyed • 1 million Russians died SIDE TRACK BONUS QUESTION #5 • How are the Battle of Stalingrad and the Battle of Midway similar? • ANSWER: both were major turning points in the war they both put the Axis Powers on the defensive and the Allies on the offensive INVASION OF ITALY • July 10, 1943 180,000 Ally soldiers land on Sicily • Sept. 3, 1942 Italy surrenders • Mussolini timeline: • • • • • • Fired Arrested Restored to Il Duce Gets run out of Italy Gets found by Italian opponents of him April 29, 1945 gets executed, and then hung in Milan town square SIDE TRACK BONUS QUESTION #6 • Next, we are going to learn about Operation Overlord, which is considered one of the most important events in WWII. Question is, what is Operation Overlord? • ANSWER: D-DAY D-DAY • Operation Overlord: invasion of Normandy that was the greatest land and sea attack in history • June 6, 1944 D-Day • Allies held beach head and won were able to push through German lines in France BATTLE OF THE BULGE • Germany is getting advanced on both fronts • Hitler decides to go with a counterattack on the western front • Dec. 16, 1944 Battle of the Bulge: held on an 85-mile front in the Ardennes Forest • Allies got surprised, but eventually won the battle GERMANY’S UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER • March 1945 Allies take Berlin • Apr. 29, 1945 Hitler makes final address to country • Blames Jews for war, generals for losses, and tells Germany he’s going to commit suicide • May 1, 1945 Hitler and his wife, Eva Braun, kill themselves • May 7, 1945 Eisenhower accepts unconditional surrender from Germany • May 8, 1945 V-E Day: Victory in Europe Day – war over in Europe VICTORY IN THE PACIFIC • Fall 1944 U.S. got Philippines back and are making their way towards Japan • Oct. 23, 1944 Battle of Letye Gulf: destroyed Japanese navy and now they only have Japanese army and kamikaze – suicide pilots – left to fight VICTORY IN THE PACIFIC • March 1945 U.S. takes Iwo Jima • Huge losses, but getting close to Japan • June 22, 1945 U.S. took Okinawa • Bloodiest land battle in the war, but again, closer to Japan SIDE TRACK BONUS QUESTION #7 • What was the Manhattan Project? • ANSWER: Find out on next page JAPANESE SURRENDER • Manhattan Project: creation of the atomic bomb, or A-bomb • Truman used it b/c it was speculated that if the troops invaded Japan, it’d cost ½ million lives • Truman warned the Japanese, but they ignored him • uh-oh… JAPANESE SURRENDER • Aug. 6, 1945 U.S. drops A-bomb on Hiroshima • 73,000 dead • Aug. 9, 1945 U.S. drops A-bomb on Nagasaki • 37,500 dead • NOTE: radiation killed many more • Sept. 2, 1945 Japanese surrender to MacArthur • WWII IS COMPLETELY OVER! AFTERMATH IN EUROPE • • • • 40 million dead 2/3 civilians Cities, towns, countryside destroyed Millions left homeless Nuremberg Trials: int’l military tribunal putting Nazi war criminals on trial • Many either executed or killed selves AFTERMATH IN JAPAN • U.S. took occupation of Japan • MacArthur in charge • Made it a constitutional monarchy (like Great Britain) • Demilitarized Japan left with only police AFTERMATH IN THE U.S. • We are out of the Great Depression • 1.2% unemployment • Largest mass migration in U.S. History • Millions went to CA between 1941-1944 • GI Bill of Rights – created in 1944 • Gave education and training for veterans; many used it to attend college (still exists) • Civil rights movements began to take place • Internment (confinement) camps – 110,000 Japanese Americans were relocated to remote prison camps • After the war, the Japanese Americans fought the injustice; every Japanese American sent to a relocation camp received $20,000 (under REAGAN!!) WHAT THE FUTURE HOLDS • Enemies became friends and friends became enemies • Japan and U.S. allies after WWII • USSR and U.S. enemies after WWII