Title: World War II
1World War II
2World War II will change the worldhow?
- Atomic Age begins
- Jets and rockets invented
- Radar and Sonar
- Penicillin and Antibiotics created
- USA and USSR emerge as Superpowers
3Who are major players at the start of the war?
4What were the causes?
- Major cause
- Treaty of Versailles - Germany
- Punished
- Humiliated
- Blamed for WWI
- Its Economy Suffering
- Inflation
- Unemployment
5Hitler sworn in in 1933 der Fuhrer
- Seeking revenge for the Treaty of Versailles
6Birth
- Adolf Hitler was born on April 20, 1889 in
Braunau, Austria. - Adolf was 1 of 6 children - 3 of who died at
early ages
7 Parents
Alois Schickelgruber Hitler was a customs
official who was illegitimate by birth. His
father, Adolfs grandfather, may have been
Jewish. He died when Adolf was 14 and left him a
small inheritance.
Klara Hitler was very young when she married the
older Alois. She showered young Adolf with love
and affection. Adolf carried a picture of his
mom until the day he died. She died of breast
cancer when Adolf was 18 years old.
8Education
- Attended a Benedictine monastery school where he
took part in the choir. - When it was time to choose a secondary school,
Adolf wanted to become an artist. - His father wanted him to become a civil servant,
but after his father died, he dropped out of high
school and attempted to get into the Vienna
Academy of Fine Arts - he failed. - The following slides are examples of Adolfs
artwork.
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10Military Service
Adolf left Austria at the age of 24 to avoid
mandatory military service that was required of
all men.
But he did sign up for military service at the
start of WW I. He joined a Bavarian unit of the
German Army. This is a picture of Hitler
listening to an enlistment speech.
11World War I
- Excited to fight for Germany.
- Found a home fighting for the Fatherland.
- Highest rank held was corporal.
12Military Record
- Was awarded the Iron Cross twice. (5 medals
overall) - Highest military honor in German Army.
- Depressed after WWI
- Believed there was a anti-war conspiracy among
Jews. - Began preaching against Jews and communists
13NAZI Party is Formed
14Beer Hall Putsch
- October 30, 1923
- Hitler held a rally in Munich beer hall and
declared revolution - Led 2000 men in take over the Weimar Republic
- Failure
- Hitler was imprisoned
15Mein Kampf
- Hitlers book My Struggle - wrote while in jail
- Sold 5 million copies, made him rich
- Topics included Jews were evil, Germans were
superior race, Fuhrer principal, dislike of
Communism and Democracy and need to conquer Russia
16U. S. Policies Leading to WWII
- Isolationism of the 1920s
- Neutrality of the 1930s
17League of Nations
- Proposed by Woodrow Wilson
- League of Nations is rejected by the USA
- The worlds most powerful nation rejects world
leadership! - USA also disagrees with the harsh punishment of
Germans under the Treaty of Versailles
18Situation Leading to War
- Kellogg-Briand Pact (1928)
- Frank Kellogg US Secretary of State
- Aristide Briand French Foreign Minister
- War is illegal
- Japan
- Attempt to take Manchuria from China
- 1939 Japan controls 25 of China
- Ethiopia
- Italy invades in 1936.
- League of Nations condemns but no action
taken.
19Timeline of Events
- 1 Hitler pulls Germany out of the League of
Nations. - What is this saying to the world?
- 2 Germany invades the Rhineland, Austria,
Sudetenland, Czechoslovakia - What does this violate?
20League without the USA
- The League without the US
- Weak
- Ineffective
- Unable to stop the rising power of the Fascists!
- Ie. Hitler, Mussolini and Franco, Tojo
21Adolf Hitler
22Mussolini
23Stalin
24Appeasement
- Giving Hitler what he wants to avoid war!
- The Rhineland
- Austria
- The Sudetenland
- Czechoslovakia
- Neville Chamberlain
- Prime Minister of Great Britain 1930s
- peace in our time Herr Hitler is a man who we
can work with
25Rome-Berlin Axis
Anti-Comintern Pact
- Established Germany and Italy as the
- Axis Powers
- Japan, Germany and Italy
- Goal to stop communism
26Collapse of European Democracies
27Where is Stalin?
- Trying to figure out who he wants as an ally in
the case of war. - G. Britain and France
- OR
- Germany and Italy
- RESULT
- Nazi-Soviet Pact would never attack one
another. - Ultimately, Stalin sides with G. Britain and
France
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29FASCISM vs COMMUNISM
- Communism
- Society without social classes
- Community property shared
- Appealed to working or lower classes
- Fascism
- Appealed to upper and middle class
- Attempt to preserve the social classes
- Own private property
- Common agreements
- Control people through force and censorship
- Opposed democracy
-
30How does the war start?
31German Blitzkrieg
- Fast, concentrated air and land attacks
- Take enemy by surprise
- Hitler takes over Poland in one month!
32September 3, 1939
- Official start of WWII
- Great Britain and France declare war on Germany
- Maginot Line created
- Front lines modern technology brought in,
housing, undergroud rail lines, heavy artillery. - Located along border of Germany and France
- PROBLEM only protected along French border.
- This leaves France vulnerable to an attack from
where???
33German advances
- Phony War ends
- Lull in fighting for months after declaration of
war - Hitler starts up again and takes
- Denmark, Norway, Netherlands, Belgium and
Luxemburg in days!!
34Battle of Dunkirk
- Fall of France
- Battle of Dunkirk
- Vichy France
- Unoccupied French area in south
- Charles deGaulle
- Free French movement - resistance movement
35Battle of Britain
- Germanys air attack on England (Aug 1940)
- Luftwaffe vs. RAF Royal Air Force
- Why air?
- Ultimately attacks London The Blitz
- Firebombs used
- 20,000 civilians killed, 70,000 injured
- Britain defended homeland from Germans
- Deciphered German code
- Knew that Hitler would not attack Britain again
until the Luftwaffe established air
superiority.it never did!
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37Your opinion
- Why is the Battle of Britain considered by many
as the most important battle of the war?
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39Where is United States in all of this?
- U.S. Neutrality!
- Congress passes Neutrality Acts
- No weapons to nations at war
- No loans to nations at war
- Cash and Carry
- Could trade nonmilitary goods to nations at war
provided that they - 1. pay for them in advance
- 2. transport the goods themselves
40Lend-Lease Act
- By 1940, Serious situation in Great Britain
- FDR policy Lend Lease Act
- Lend without payment war materials to Great
Britain..and later to Soviet Union. - If your neighbors house is on fire, you dont
sell them a hose. You lend it to him and take it
back when the fire is out.
41Causes of US Involvement
- The U.S. demanded that Japan withdraw from China
and French Indochina. - US beings limiting sales and trade to Japan
- Japan thought that attacking the U.S. would
provide them an easy win, and a territory with
abundant land and resources to rule once they
were victorious. - Desperately needed raw materials
42Attack on Pearl Harbor
- Morning hours of December 7, 1941
- 755 am
43Attack on Pearl Harbor
- Japan
- 81 Fighter Planes
- 135 Dive Bombers
- 104 Horizontal Bombers
- 40 Torpedo Planes
- At least 5 Midget Submarines
44Oklahoma Capsized
- 5 torpedo hits
- ship capsized
- 429 men dead
- 32 survivors cut out of hull in following days
45USS Maryland and USS Oklahoma
46USS West Virginia
47USS Shaw
48Pearl Harbor Attack Casualties
- Japan
- Less then 100 men
- 29 planes
- 5 midget submarines
- United States
- 2,335 servicemen killed, 68 civilians killed,
1,178 wounded - 188 planes
- 18 ships (8 battleships, 3 light cruisers, 3
destroyers, 4 other vessels)
49December 8, 1941 FDR Speech
- Yesterday, Dec. 7, 1941 - A date which will live
in infamy the United States of America was
suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and
air forces of the Empire of Japan.
50USS Arizona
51USS Arizona Memorial
52German Advances when U.S. Enters the WWII
53Mobilizing for WAR
- Enormous task of mobilization men and women
volunteered for service - Selective Training and Service Act
- 21-36 yrs of age to register for military service
- GIs government issue
- All ethnic and racial backgrounds fought in WWII
- 350,000 women also served
- Non combat jobs
- Factories converted victory gardens planted
scrap drives and recycling to collect materials
54Economy for War
- War Production Board (WPB)
- Convert peacetime industries to war production
industries - Halt sale and production of lawnmowers, cars etc.
- Office of War Mobilization
- Headed by James Byrnes
- Centralization of war production
- Office of War Mobilization
- Liberty Ships strong merchant ships created to
carry supplies and troops - Henry Kaiser - Cut production of ships from 200
days to 40.
55Munitions Ready!
- By 1945, US had produced
- 300,000 airplanes
- 80,000 landing craft
- 100,000 tanks
- 5,600 merchant ships (2,600 Liberty ships)
- 6 million rifles and machine guns
- 41 Billion rounds of ammunition
56Financing the War
- Increased spending to win war.
- 1939 Avg spending was 8.9 billion/yr
- 1945 Avg spending was 95.2 billion/yr
- Between 1941-1945 US 321 Billion
- TEN TIMES THE AMOUNT OF World War I!!!
- Liberty Bonds sales 186 Billion
- Taxes funded 41 of war effort
- National Debt in 1945 259 Billion !!
57Daily Life on Home front
- Everyone had a member in the warfriend or
relative. - Shift in jobs both relocation and new employees.
- Population growth
- Grew by 7.5 million between 1940-45
- Baby Boom
- Why?
58Shortages and Rationing
- Food fell in short
- Victory gardens created
- Foreign nations cut supplies of sugar, fruits and
coffee - Ration coupons
- Could only purchase a certain amount of certain
goods with coupons. - Once you ran out.oh well.
- Items rationed sugar, coffee, meat, butter,
canned vegetables/fruit, shoes. Also gas, tires
and metal. - Is this trip necessary? Dont you know that
there is a war on?
59Atlantic Charter
- Atlantic Charter (August, 1941)
- Agreement signed between
- Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt
- Major principle stated the following
- They sought no territory at wars conclusion
60Dwight D. Eisenhower
61North African Campaign
- General Erwin Rommel Germany
- Nickname Desert Fox
- VS.
- General Bernard Montgomery G. Britain
- Wins a decisive victory at El Alamein (Egypt)
- November, 1942
- One of the first major defeats of the Axis powers
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63Major BattlesBring textbooks tomorrow!
- Battle of Stalingrad
- Battle of the Bulge
- Battle of the Coral Sea
- Battle of Midway
- Battle of Guadalcanal
- Battle of Iwo Jima
- Battle of Okinawa
64Normandy InvasionD-Day
- D-Day term given to the first day of a major
battle. - June 6, 1944
- Invasion of Western Europe
- 60 miles of Normandy Coast of France
65D-Day is the name given to the day of the allied
invasion of France during WWII. It took place on
June 6, 1944 and was the greatest land-and-sea
opertion in history.
D-Day is the name given to the day of the Allied
invasion of France during WWII. It began on June
6, 1944, and was the greatest land-and-sea
operation in history.
Scene from the movie Saving Private Ryan
66The Germans thought the attacks would be on
Calais. Once they realized Normandy was the true
site of invasion, it was too late.
67Commanded by Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Allied
forces decided to invade Normandy, since their
only other option, Pas De Calais, was highly
secured. Just after midnight on June 6th, 23,500
American and British paratroopers landed on the
behind German lines. 1,200 transport planes and
700 gliders were used.
68A little after daybreak, 4,000 transports, 800
warships, and an unknown number of smaller boats
arrived at the beaches of Normandy with the US
and British armies.
69Obstacles found on Omaha Beach
70Atlantic Wall
Another obstacle was the Atlantic Wall. It was
built along the western coast of Europe to guard
against an allied invasion.
71Normandy Invasion
The Allies invaded five beaches
Utah Omaha Gold Juno Sword. Omaha was the
toughest of them all. Two American divisions sent
to Omaha. Highest number of casualties out of all
five,about 2,400 casualties.
72WESTERN FRONT ENDS
- Battle of the Bulge
- Hitler losing men after Normandy.
- Drafted men 15 yrs old to fight
- General George Patten and General Omar Bradley
pushed Axis back - Largest battle in Western Europe during WWII.
- Largest battle every fought by US soldiers
- 600,000 fought
- 80,000 die
- Germans lost 100,000 men
73EASTERN FRONT
- Struggle between Soviet (Red Army)and German
forces - Casualties
- 11 million Soviets dead
- 3 million Germans dead
- Total Soviet civilian and military deaths
- 18 million people
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75Election of 1944
FDR won an unprecedented fourth term in office
in 1944.
However, in April of 1945, FDR died, forcing
Vice-President Harry Truman to assume the
Presidency.
76Harry S Truman taking the oath of office after
the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt, April 12,
1945.
77Victory in Europe
By April of 1945, American and Soviet troops
were closing in on Berlin.
- Adolf Hitler committed suicide on April 30, 1945
- Germany officially surrendered on May 7, 1945.
The endless procession of German prisoners
marching through the ruined city streets to
captivity.
78Red army soldiers raising the Soviet flag on the
roof of the Reichstag (German Parliament) in
Berlin, Germany.
79- On May 8, the Allies celebrated
- V-E Day (Victory in Europe).
Churchill waves to crowds in Britain after
broadcasting to the nation that the war with
Germany had been won.
80V-E Day Celebrations in New York City, May 8,
1945.
81V-E Day celebrations, Bay Street, Toronto, Canada
May 7, 1945
82VE-Day Parade, Red Square, Moscow, Russia on
6/24/1945
83Island Hopping in the Pacific
- The two main goals of the U.S. in the Pacific
were - I. to regain the Philippines.
- II. to invade Japan.
- The U.S. began a policy of island hopping, using
islands as stepping-stones towards Japan.
84 By February of 1945, the U.S. had recaptured
the Philippines and captured the islands of Iwo
Jima and Okinawa.
Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima depicts five United
States Marines and a U.S. Navy corpsman raising
the flag of the United States atop Mount
Suribachi during the Battle of Iwo Jima.
85- The photograph became the only photograph to win
the Pulitzer Prize in the same year as its
publication. - most significant and recognizable images of the
war - possibly the most reproduced photograph of all
time.
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87 The Japanese continued to fight, oftentimes
using kamikaze attacks against U.S. ships.
Yoshinori Yamaguchi's plane explodes in a ball of
fire.
The Yokosuka D4Y3 dive bomber piloted by
Yoshinori Yamaguchi strikes the USS Essex,
November 25, 1944.
88Damage to Essex flight deck.
89Burial at sea after the Kamikaze attack. Sixteen
men lost their lives as a result of this action.
90Defeat of Japan
The U.S. planned to invade Japan in 1945,
though experts warned that the invasion could
cost over a million casualties.
Upon learning about the atomic bomb, Pres.
Truman sent the Japanese the Potsdam Declaration,
warning them to surrender or face prompt and
utter destruction.
Stalin, Truman and Churchill at the Potsdam
Conference.
91 Unaware of the atomic bombs, the Japanese
ignored the Potsdam Declaration.
The first atomic bomb ever made was a
uranium-enriched bomb. It was dropped on the city
of Hiroshima, Japan, on August 6, 1945.
92Paul Tibbets, pilot of the Enola Gay, which
dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, on
August 6, 1945.
93 On August 6, 1945, the U.S. dropped an atomic
bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, killing at least 70,000
people and destroying most of the city.
94A Uranium bomb, the first nuclear weapon in the
world, was dropped in Hiroshima City. It was
estimated that its energy was equivalent to 15
kilotons of TNT. Aerial photograph from 80
kilometers away, taken about 1 hour after the
dropping.
95The aftermath of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.
96Ohmura Navy Hospital A 14 year old girl
after the bombing of Hiroshima at Ohmura Navy
Hospital on August 10-11.
97Severe burns. Only his waist was protected from a
burn by a waistband he wore (within 1km from the
hypocenter).
98Kimono pattern. Burned areas on the back and on
the dorsal portion of the upper arm show that
thermal rays penetrated the black or the dark
colored parts of kimono she wore.
99 On August 9, the U.S. dropped another atomic
bomb on the city of Nagasaki, killing at least
40,000 people.
Mushroom cloud from the nuclear explosion over
Nagasaki rising 60,000 feet into the air on the
morning of August 9 1945
100Before and after photos of downtown Nagasaki.
101Number of Atomic Bomb Casualties Hiroshima and
Nagasaki
In 10,000s
Deaths
Injuries
102- August 14, 1945 Japan officially surrendered.
- V-J Day (Victory over Japan).
For millions of Americans, Alfred Eisenstaedt's
1945 LIFE photograph of a sailor stamping a
masterly kiss on a nurse symbolized the joy of
V-J Day.
103Crowds outside the White House celebrate V-J Day,
the Japanese surrender and the end of World War
II. August 1945