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Transcript
1941-1945
DRQ 14.1
List 3 important steps the U.S. took in moving from isolation
to involvement before the attack on pearl harbor.
o Atlantic Ocean supply
route
o trade between U.S./Britain
o improved German U-boats
o German battleship
“Bismarck”
o U-Boat Attacks
o German wolf packs
o The Allies Fight Back
o American
production/technology
o gave Allies the advantage
o Allies cracked the “Enigma”
Code
o 1941 - Hitler broke Soviet pact
o invaded the Soviet Union
o Soviets joined the Allies
o Russian winter proved a great
ally
o Germans controlled large area
o Thousands die during siege of
Leningrad.
o The Battle of Stalingrad
o Soviets refused to surrender
o Hitler defeated in early 1943
o marked beginning of Germany’s
collapse
o Germany pushed out of Russia
o 12 million Soviet soldiers and
millions of civilians were killed
o Control of Mediterranean Sea
o oil from Suez Canal
o General Erwin Rommel
o Germany’s “desert fox”
o Led forces in N. Africa
o Faced defeat at El Alamein
o Operation Torch
o Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
o First U.S. combat action
o gains Allied control of N. Africa
o On to Italy
o Allies invade/take Sicily
o Mussolini captured/executed
o Tuskegee Airmen play vital role
o Thousands die at “Bloody
Anzio”
o Planning “Operation Overlord”
o invasion of mainland Europe
o Gen. Omar Bradley in charge
o Germans develop V1/V2 rockets
o The landing at Normandy
o June 6, 1944 – D-Day
o Largest invasion in history
o Allied soldiers storm the
beaches
o Allies establish a beachhead
o Paris freed in 2 months
o The Battle of the Bulge
o Allies moved eastward
o Germans launch counterattack
o Gen George S. Patton provides
relief for trapped Allied soldiers
DRQ 14.2
Name three U.S. Generals involved in the European theater of
battle and brief ly describe what role they played
.
o Hitler’s scapegoats
o Jews blamed for Germany’s
problems
o Jews forced to wear Stars of David
o Hitler in Power
o 1933 - German anti-Semitic laws
o 1935 – Nuremburg Laws
o stripped Jews of citizenship/rights
o Attacks on Jews
o Nov. 9 & 10, 1938 - Kristallnacht
o “night of broken glass”
o Jewish businesses/synagogues
destroyed - hundreds were killed
o many sent to concentration camps
o Flight from Germany
o Many foreign countries refused to
accept Jewish refugees.
o Concentration Camps/Ghettos
o POW’s, Jews, “enemies of state”
o Some risked lives for Jews
o The Diary of Anne Frank
o prisoners overworked and
starved
o ghettos were separated/sealed
off
o thousands died in Warsaw
ghetto
o the Jewish Fighting
Organization
o The Final Solution
o Hitler proposed genocide
o Called for death camps
o sped up extermination of Jews
o Millions of various people died
at the hands of the Nazis
o Jewish immigration limited
o protect American jobs
o Nazi atrocities dismissed as
rumors
o 1944 – the War Refugee Board
o assisted any victims facing death
o Liberating the Nazi Camps
o Russians discover camps such as
Auschwitz and Buchenwald
o Bodies stacked like wood
o survivors barely alive
o The Nuremburg Trials
o 22 Nazi leaders tried for war
crimes
o Some Nazi leaders discovered
later and still tried for crimes
DRQ 14.3
List in order at least 5 major events that affected the
development of the holocaust
o Pearl Harbor attack gives time
o Japanese Advances
o captured Wake Island and Guam
o captured Hong Kong and
Singapore
o captured oil reserves and
strategic bases in S.E. Asia
o The Philippines
o Gen. Douglas MacArthur
o led the defense of the Philippines
o American/Filipino troops forced
to retreat and surrender
o MacArthur vowed, “I shall
return”.
o the Bataan Death March
o five-day forced march with little
food or water – thousands perish
o April, 1942 – Doolittle’s Raid
o revenge for Pearl Harbor
o shook Japanese confidence
o The Battle of Coral Sea
o Admiral Chester Nimitz
o marked first time Japanese
stopped
o The Battle of Midway
o U.S. broke Japanese code
o knew beforehand about the
attack
o planes from carriers
attacked/sank Japanese ships
o turning point in the Pacific
theater
o first defeat for the Japanese
o Guadalcanal – U.S. victory
o The Allies Press On
o MacArthur’s “island hopping”
o “Navajo code talkers”
o Back to the Philippines
o Battle of Leyte Gulf
o Japanese first used kamikaze attacks
o MacArthur returned to Philippines
o Iwo Jima and Okinawa
o American B-29 bombers raid targets
o Iwo Jima – entrenched Japanese
soldiers fought to the death
o Okinawa – bloodiest battle - would
provide launching point for possible
invasion
DRQ 14.4
List and brief ly describe 3 major battles that took place during
the Pacific Theater of World War II
 Conserving Food/Other Goods
 victory gardens provided some
food
 rationing was
needed/implemented
 families received ration books
 scrap drives helped conserve
items
 Investing in Victory
 Americans bought war bonds
 Paying the Personal Price
 flags displayed families’ sacrifice
 journalist Ernie Pyle and
cartoonist Bill Mauldin
 described war/lives of soldiers
 FDR’s “four freedoms” speech
 speech, worship, want, fear
 The Office of War Information
 spread pro-war propaganda
 posters – encouraged work,
support for war, Axis threat
 Hollywood Helps Out
 movies - major form of
propaganda
 movie stars sold war bonds and
entertained the troops.
 The Barnette Ruling
 West Virginia vs. Barnette
 can’t be forced to salute the flag
 Executive Order 9066
 to remove all persons of Japanese
ancestry from the western U.S.
 110,000 people relocated to camps
 2/3 were American citizens
 confinement was called
“internment”
 Japanese American Loyalty
 442nd Regimental Combat Team,
 made up of only Japanese
Americans
 highest decorated unit of the war
and for its size, all of U.S. History.
 Korematsu vs. the United States,
 Fred Korematsu challenged
internment
 Courts ruled limit of civil rights
during war is legal
 Office of Price
Administration
 oversaw wartime rationing
 War Production Board
 oversaw converting industries
to war production
 government increased
spending
 caused increase in national
debt
 Americans paid increased
income tax
DRQ 14.5
List and brief ly describe 3 ways in which the war
affected American life on the home front
 The Yalta Conference – 1945




The Big Three - FDR, Churchill, Stalin
make peace plans for Europe
divided Germany and Berlin
Stalin promised free elections
 Crossing the Rhine
 key barrier to the center of Germany
 Allies used bridge at Remagen
 The Question of Berlin
 Soviets reached Berlin first
 Eisenhower held U.S. troops back
 April 12, 1945 – word of FDR’s death
 Hitler’s Death
 April 30, 1945 – Hitler’s suicide
 May 8, 1945 – VE Day - Germany
surrendered - victory in Europe.
 The costly invasion
 invasion might cost 1 million lives
 Japan Continues Fighting
 bombers destroyed Japanese cities
 the Japanese vowed no surrender
 The Atomic Bomb
 Manhattan Project developed A-bomb
 Harry S. Truman became president
 made decision to use the bomb
 Aug. 6, 1945 - the Enola Gay dropped




the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima
3 days later - Japanese don’t respond
2nd atomic bomb dropped - Nagasaki
Emperor calls for people to surrender
August 15, 1945 – VJ Day – the Japanese
surrendered
 Creation of the United Nations
 June 1945 – representatives from
50 nations form UN in San
Francisco
 The Potsdam Conference
 Allied leaders discuss future of
Europe
 Stalin breaks promises from Yalta
 Rebuilding Europe and Japan
 MacArthur in Japan
 establish democracy
 rebuilding their economy
 Japanese officers tried and
executed
 U.S. worked to rebuild Europe,
 tensions with Soviet Union
increased