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Download Ch 35 - America in World War II
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Chapter 35 America in World War II, 1941–1945 I. The Allies Trade Space for Time • Time was most needed – America needed time to retool itself for war – U.S. to send food and munitions to its allies II. The Shock of War • National unity was strong after Pearl Harbor – Executive Order No. 9066 • Japanese internment (Korematsu v. U.S., 1944) • War changed American’s mood – The era of the New Deal was over – U.S. government now put emphasis on action. p800 p801 p801 p802 III. Building the War Machine • American economy snapped to attention – War Production Board (WPB) • Organized nation’s industrial /agricultural output – The Office of Price Administration (OPA) • Rationing, limit inflation / shortages – The National War Labor Board (NWLB) • Imposed ceilings on wage increases • Labor conditions – Labor union membership increased – The Smith-Connally Anti-Strike Act (June, 1943) • Feds could limit strikes p803 IV. Manpower and Womanpower • The armed service enlistments – 15 million men, 216,000 women (noncombat) – The Bracero program • Imported Mexican agricultural workers • 6 million women took jobs outside their homes – Government set up 3,000 day-care centers – The war foreshadowed an eventual revolution • Women’s role in American society / business p804 p804 V. Wartime Migrations • Demographic changes – 15 million men and women moved permanently – Urban areas grew, California’s population increased • Blacks moved north & west (The Great Migration) • Exodus of Native Americans from reservations – Work in factories, joined military • Served as “code talkers” • Races rubbing together created racial friction Map 35-1 p805 p806 p806 p807 VI. Holding the Home Front • Americans on the home front suffered little – More jons, higher wages – Corporate profits doubled in one year • The hand of the government touched lives more – Draft, rationing, direct industry/agriculture – Signaled era of big-government interventionism • The conflict was phenomenally expensive – The income tax expanded, rate rose as high as 90% – The national debt skyrocketed VII. The Rising Sun in the Pacific • Early success of the efficient Japanese militarists – Goal to win quickly (or they’d lose slowly) • Japan controlled eastern & then SE Asia • Japan expanded into the Pacific Ocean – The Philippines • Japanese Victory (Manila, Corregidor) • Bataan Death March to prisoner-of-war camps Figure 35-1 p808 VIII. Japan’s High Tide at Midway • Battle of Coral Sea (May 1942) – Carrier-based battle, draw, stop Australian invasion • Epochal Battle of Midway, (June, 1942) – Pivotal battle & U.S. Victory – Showed Japanese imperialists were overextended Map 35-2 p809 p809 IX. American frogging Toward Tokyo • America seized the initiative in the Pacific – Island hopping strategy • Bypassing heavily fortified Japanese islands • Capturing nearby islands – Bombing of Japan (Nov., 1944) X. The Allied Halting of Hitler • Allies win Battle of Atlantic (1942) • Turning points against Hitler (1942-1943) – German cities bombed by U.S. & G.B. – Allied victory in North Africa – Soviets stop Germans in Stalingrad • Decisive battle in the east Map 35-3 p811 XI. A Second Front from North Africa to Rome • Allies attack "soft underbelly” of Europe (Italy) • Casablanca Conference (FDR & Churchill Jan ‘43) – Step up the Pacific war – Invade Sicily – Insist on “unconditional surrender” of the enemy p812 p813 XII. D-Day: June 6, 1944 • Soviets wanted a “second front” against Germany – 20 million had died fighting against Nazi Germany • D-Day, June 6, 1944 (Normandy, France) – Allied invasion of Nazi control Europe – Largest military operation ever – Paris liberated (August, 1944) – Huge gains by U.S. tanks (Patton) – Aachen, Germany captured (October 1944) p814 XIII. FDR: The Fourth-Termite of 1944 • The presidential campaign of 1944 – Republicans: Thomas E. – Democrats: FDR (the “indispensable man”) XIV. Roosevelt Defeats Dewey • Results of the election: – Roosevelt won a sweeping victory – FDR victory 432 to 99 in the Electoral College – FDR popular vote 25,606,585 to 22,014,745 – Deciding factors • Successful war & future foreign policy issues Map 35-4 p815 XV. The Last Days of Hitler • Battle of The Bulge – Dec, 1944 (Ardennes Forest), Allied victory • Elbe River(April 1945) U.S./Soviets clasped hands • Holocaust publically revealed – U.S. government had long been informed • FDR dies, April 12, 1945 – Vice President Truman took the helm • Adolf Hitler commits suicide on April 30, 1945 – May 7, 1945, Germany surrenders unconditionally • May 8 V-E (Victory in Europe) Day p816 Map 35-5 p816 p818 XVI. Japan Dies Hard • Subs “The silent service” – Destroyed 50% of Japan’s merchant fleet • Giant bomber attacks were more spectacular • U.S. (General MacArthur) Pacific victories – Leyte Gulf (Oct. 1944) – Iwo Jima (March 1945) – Okinawa (June 1945) • Japanese suicide pilots (“kamikazes”) p819 XVII. The Atomic Bombs • The Potsdam Conference (Truman, Stalin, Churchill) – Japan told surrender or die, USSR would invade • The Manhattan Project developed the A-Bomb – Tested July, 1945 near Alamogordo, New Mexico – On August 6, 1945, U.S. bombed Hiroshima, Japan – On August 8, Stalin entered the war against Japan – On August 9 American aviators bomb Nagasaki – On August 10, 1945 Tokyo sued for peace • V-J (Victory in Japan) Day – Official surrender Sept.2, 1945 p820 XVIII. The Allies Triumphant • U.S. ~400,000 killed (USSR ~25 mil) • Total war – more civilians killed than soldiers • Keys to U.S. success – More men, weapons, machines, technology, money – American leadership (politically & militarily) – Collaboration with other nations (mostly G.B.) – Industrial production (Gov’t, owners & workers) – Commitment to democracy • U.S. Now the world’s leader (mil & econ) p821 p822 Table 35-1 p823 p823 p824 p826