* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download US Enters WWII - Cloudfront.net
Allied plans for German industry after World War II wikipedia , lookup
Swedish iron-ore mining during World War II wikipedia , lookup
Consequences of the attack on Pearl Harbor wikipedia , lookup
Operation Bodyguard wikipedia , lookup
Military history of the United Kingdom during World War II wikipedia , lookup
Causes of World War II wikipedia , lookup
Allied Control Council wikipedia , lookup
British propaganda during World War II wikipedia , lookup
World War II by country wikipedia , lookup
Military history of Greece during World War II wikipedia , lookup
Battle of the Mediterranean wikipedia , lookup
Consequences of Nazism wikipedia , lookup
Naval history of World War II wikipedia , lookup
Foreign relations of the Axis powers wikipedia , lookup
Diplomatic history of World War II wikipedia , lookup
Technology during World War II wikipedia , lookup
Allied war crimes during World War II wikipedia , lookup
Mediterranean and Middle East theatre of World War II wikipedia , lookup
Allies of World War II wikipedia , lookup
Home front during World War II wikipedia , lookup
European theatre of World War II wikipedia , lookup
Invasion of Normandy wikipedia , lookup
United States Navy in World War II wikipedia , lookup
WW II 1940 - 1945 U.S. Enters the War December 8, 1941: FDR appears before joint session of Congress declaring Dec. 7 "a day that will live in infamy" Congress votes to declare war on Japan December 10: Japanese forces invade the Philippines December 11: Germany & Italy declare war on US December 17: Admiral Charles Nimitz given command of Pacific Fleet –Admiral Husband Kimmel (commander at Pearl Harbor) relieved of duty December 20: FDR signs Draft Act December 22: Churchill comes to Washington to confer with FDR Japanese Aggression Continues Dec. 1941: Guam, Wake, Gilbert Islands fall Spring 1942: Singapore, Hong Kong, Burma, Malay, Dutch E. Indies fall Japan dominates 450 million people in their “Greater East Asia CoProsperity Sphere” The Home Front Military Mobilization Dec. 15: Congress passes 3rd Supplemental Defense Appropriations Act totaling $10,000,000,000 258,000 women enlist –WAACS (Women's Auxiliary Army Corps) –WAVES (Women Appointed for Voluntary Emergency Service) 16 million people served by end of war Economic Mobilization 1942: War Production Board –Regulates all non-essential production –Regulates use of raw materials War Production Emergency Price Control Act –Office of Price Administration (OPA) set prices & rationing (coupon books) –FDR freezes wages & prices to halt inflation War Labor Board –Sought to keep wages on pace with cost of living rise 5 million women join labor force Population shifted from NE to South & SW regions Rosie the Riveter US clocks set ahead 1 hour for Daylight Savings Time & stays throughout the war Rationing begins: –Gasoline, tires, meat, coffee, sugar, etc. –Shoe rationing begins: 3 pairs per person per year –Point (coupon) rationing system for food Smith-Connolly Labor Dispute Act (1943) –Required unions to give 30 day notice before strike in war plants & outlaws strikes in governmentoperated plants May 1943: John L. Lewis calls for soft coal miners strike –FDR orders mines to be seized & strike called off Federal Government seizes the railroads when strikes are threatened Office of War Mobilization created to coordinate war efforts Withholding of income for taxes expanded to pay for war Wartime Discrimination Dec. 1941: Alien registration begins focusing on Japanese & plans begin for internment June 1943: Detroit Race Riot –Anti-Black labor riots put down by federal troops A. Philip Randolph, “Father of Civil Rights Movement,” emerges Feb. 1942: Japanese relocation begins –Executive Order 9066 –100,000 Nisei lose property & forced into camps –Korematsu v. US Bracero Program Internment Camps Manhattan Project 1939: Einstein & Fermi warn FDR about German A-bomb research 1942: US research begins on building A-bomb 1942: The Critical Year The Grand Alliance Coalition of nations at war with Axis Powers January 1942: FDR & Churchill agree to a “Hitler first” policy Fighting in the Pacific Feb. 1942: Battle of the Java Sea –Allied naval forces virtually wiped out Philippines Fall March 1942: General MacArthur forced to flee –Vows “I shall return!” –Assumes command of Allies in Australia Bataan Death March Bataan Death March April 1942: 75,000 Filipino & Americans surrender in the Philippines Marched 100 miles to concentration camp while thousands die Doolittle Raid April: 16 US bombers under Maj. General Doolittle bomb Tokyo –Survivors land in China –Major moral booster Battle of the Coral Sea May: First major carrier battle –US inflict heavy losses on Japan saving Australia Battle of Midway June: Pacific naval battle Japanese lose naval superiority Major turning point in Pacific Japanese take Kiska & Attu islands in the Aleutians US begins ALCAN highway to connect Alaska to contiguous states Guadalcanal August: US forces land & begin first battle in grueling "island-hopping" plan to reach Japanese Islands Guadalcanal Naval Battle: US defeats major Japanese fleet –Forces Japan to abandon plans to support its forces on Guadalcanal European Strategy May: German U-Boats drop German saboteurs on Atlantic coast –Rounded up & executed June: Office of War Information established for propaganda June: Office of Strategic Services (OSS) created –Headed by William “Wild Bill” Donovan –Becomes CIA after war Churchill meets FDR in Washington to plan invasion of North Africa June: Eisenhower becomes commander of Allied forces July: Allied bombing of Germany begins A. Averell Harriman represents US in Moscow to negotiate coordination with Stalin August: US begins fullscale bombing of German forces in France September: U-Boat devastation reaches peak Battle of Stalingrad (1942) August: Germans begin siege September: Battle ends with major German defeat & surrender El Alamein (1942) October: British forces under Montgomery defeat Germany's "Desert Fox," Marshal Irwin Rommel Turning Point in North Africa Operation “Torch” November: Allied forces begin North African campaign by landing in Morocco & Algeria Attack Hitler’s “soft underbelly” 1943 European Theater February: US forces defeated by Rommel's Afrika Korps at Kasserine Pass –General George Patton takes command May: German forces in North Africa defeated in Tunisia –250,000 surrender May: Uprising in Warsaw Jewish Ghetto ends –Jews sent to concentration camps & ghetto leveled "SS thugs set ablaze entire blocks of flats in order to force the population to come out of hiding..." --Voice of Warsaw July: Kursk Salient –German forces begin last ditch offensive in Russia –It fails as the last initiative in the east July-August: Allies begin invasion of Sicily –“Soft Underbelly” –Frustrated Stalin –Leaflets dropped over Italy asking Italians to surrender Stalin’s 2nd front US bombers selectively bomb Rome Mussolini forced to abdicate Allies take Messina & Sicily September: Italy agrees to surrender –German calls Italy a traitor begins to treat it as an enemy –Invasion of the Peninsula begins Germans forced to abandon Salerno –Battle continues by inches up the peninsula October: Naples captured by US General Mark Clark –Germans destroy the city as they retreat December: Eisenhower becomes Supreme Commander of Allied Forces Pacific Theater February: Marines take Guadalcanal –Major step in the war as it st is 1 major land defeat for Japanese Island Hopping March: Battle of the Bismarck Sea off New Guinea –US defeats Japan convoy –Major blow against Japan holding New Guinea November: In bloody fighting, the US Marines take Tarawa & Makin Islands in the Gilberts Wartime Diplomacy Casablanca Conference January 1943: Roosevelt meets with Churchill Calls for unconditional surrender of Germany Decide on Italy first, then France Moscow Conference October 1943: US, USSR, Britain, & China meet to discuss treatment of Axis Powers after the war USSR enters against Japan after Germany done November: Congress passes the Connolly Resolution calling for a international peace organization Cairo Conference Dec. 1943: Roosevelt, Churchill, & Chiang Kaishek meet Call for unconditional surrender by Japan Japan must give up all gained territories Teheran Conference 1943: “Big Three” meet for 1st time Agree to timing of coordinated invasions Disputes over post-war world emerge here Nov-Dec. Teheran Conference “Big Three” 1944 European Theater Eisenhower arrives in London to take command & begins planning invasion of "Festung Europa" Allies land at Anzio, Italy meet stiff & bloody German resistance bogging down invasion February: German forces in Italy create a defensive line, “The Gustav Line” at Monte Cassino –Hold it with full force –Allies reluctant to destroy medieval monastery February: “Big Week" bombing raids over Germany March: US bombers begin bombing raids over Berlin –10% loss of planes B-17 Bomber Dresden after “fire bombings.” Roughly 130,000 people killed in raid. May: Monte Cassino falls after bombing reduces it to rubble –Gustav Line collapses May: Allied forces break out of Anzio beachhead & begin to move on Rome Monte Cassino June: Allies enter Rome June 6, 1944: D-Day Operation “Overlord” begins with invasion of Normandy 4600 ships, 10,000 planes, & 176,000 troops in largest invasion in history D-DAY Storming the Beach Breaking of German codes & use of misinformation leads to lack of German coordination in defense What is wrong with this picture? June th 10 : Allied beaches link up & forces begin march on Berlin Germany launches first V-1 rocket on London Allies capture French port of Cherbourg, Germans destroy port facilities July: General Patton leads "break out" thrust against Germans Plot to assassinate Hitler by bomb fails & military plotters executed Invasion of Southern France begins August: Paris falls after German general refuses Hitler's orders to resist at all costs The Yanks Are Back September: First V-2 rockets fall on London US forces enter Germany Battle of the Bulge December: Germany launches a counteroffensive in the Ardennes Forest in Belgium –Named after bulge created when center of allied advance retreats US st 101 Airborne Division surrounded by German force at Bastogne –When told to surrender, US General Anthony McAuliffe replies "Nuts!” –Siege relieved by Patton's 3rd Army Pacific Theater US forces take the Marshall Islands in the Pacific US forces capture Saipan Island - bombing of Japan begins Battle of Philippine Sea –Japan defeated at heavy costs to US naval forces August: Island of Guam retaken in heavy fighting October: MacArthur lands in Philippines fulfilling his promise Mac is Back Battle of the Leyte Gulf –Japanese risk major naval force to halt US invasion of Philippines –Suffer a major defeat –Japanese reduced to suicidal "kamikaze" attacks on US ships 1944 Election Republicans nominate Thomas Dewey, governor of New York, for president Democrats nominate FDR th for 4 term, –Running mate is Harry Truman of Missouri November: FDR wins term as president but campaigning left him weak & ill th 4 1945 European Theater 1000 US planes begin bombing of Berlin March: US forces capture last remaining bridge on the Rhine at Remagen & begin full scale invasion of Germany US & Russian troops begin liberating Nazi concentration camps discover remains of Nazi's "Final Solution" = genocide of 6,000,000 Jews Buchenvald April: US & Soviet Troops link up in Germany at Elbe River Shaking Hands at the Elbe April 30: Hitler commits suicide in his private bunker May 7: Germany Surrenders & VE Day declared Pacific Theater In the Philippines, MacArthur lands on the island of Luzon & sets out for Manila Iwo Jima US Marines capture the island Raise US flag on Mt. Suribachi 4000 US dead Iwo Jima Okinawa April 1-June 21: US Marines suffer 80,000 casualties capturing island Japanese suicide charges & cave retreats leave 160,000 Japanese dead Yalta Conference January 1945: FDR, Churchill, & Stalin meet Discuss plans for postwar world & agree to United Nations meeting in San Francisco Yalta Conference The End of the War April 12: FDR dies in Warm Springs, Georgia of a massive cerebral hemorrhage –Truman takes office –Promises to maintain FDR's program for the war The Champ is Gone April 25: United Nations meets in San Francisco July 5: Philippines recaptured Berlin divided among Big Four (US, USSR, GB, & France) July 16: Manhattan Project successful as atomic bomb is detonated at Alamogordo, New Mexico Los Alamos research plant in NM has two bombs Trinity Test Potsdam Conference July 17: Truman meets with Churchill & Stalin at Potsdam, Germany Tries to establish ground rules for post-war world Truman warns Stalin we have the bomb: Cold War begins? Potsdam declaration with China calls for unconditional surrender of Japan August 6, 1945: US drops Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima, Japan –180,000 killed, missing, or wounded Hiroshima August 8: Russia enters war against Japan August 9: Second A-bomb dropped on Nagasaki –80,000 killed or missing August 14: Armistice in Asia August 17: US & USSR th divide Korea at 38 parallel September 2, 1945: Japanese surrender aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay V-J DAY Aftermath 46-55 million dead – 30 million soldiers – 25 million civilians – 23 million Russians 35 million wounded