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World War I and South Carolina

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What role did South Carolina play with its involvement in World War I? How World War I Began It begins in the Balkans with Russia and Austria-Hungary trying to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: World War I and South Carolina


1
World War I and South Carolina
  • What role did South Carolina play with its
    involvement in World War I?

2
How World War I Began
  • It begins in the Balkans with Russia and
    Austria-Hungary trying to dominate the region.
  • Serbian Nationalists want to assassinate Archduke
    Ferdinand in 1914. He has a bomb thrown into his
    open topped car and he throws it out. Later he
    is visiting individuals hurt in the attack and he
    is shot.

3
The Assassination of Franz Ferdinand
4
  • Over the next few weeks, most of the major
    European countries are at war
  • President Wilson issues a proclamation of
    neutralityU.S. will stay out of the war.

5
Central Powers
  • Austria-Hungary
  • German Empire
  • Bulgaria
  • Ottoman Empire

6
Allied Powers
  • Russia
  • England
  • France
  • United States (joined in 1917)

7
How the U.S. became involved World War I (WWI)
  • The U.S. remained neutral for the first 3 years
    of the war.
  • So what got us involved?
  • The sinking of a British passenger ship, the
    Lusitania, by German U-boats in the spring of
    1915.
  • Why does this matter?
  • The ship was carrying 100 American passengers.

8
A German U-Boat
9
The Lusitania Sunk
10
  • The German Command said it would torpedo any
    boat. Neutrality did not matter!
  • The last straw was the interception of the
    Zimmerman Note.
  • This telegraph proposed German support for a
    Mexican attack in the U.S. southwest.

11
  • For their involvement, Mexico would get the land
    it lost during the Mexican-American war. (Texas,
    Arizona, New Mexico, California, Colorado, Utah,
    and Nevada)
  • On April 4, 1917 the Senate voted yes to enter
    the war.
  • On April 7, 1917 the House voted yes to enter
    the war.

12
TheZimmermanTelegraph
13
World War I Map
14
We Want You!
  • The U.S. was not ready to enter the war, so
    Congress passed the Selective Service Act to
    ensure there would be enough soldiers for the
    effort.
  • Selective Service Act Draft law that required
    any male between the ages of 21-30 to register
    for service and serve if called.

15
WWI Recruiting Poster
16
WWI Recruiting Poster
17
WWI Recruiting Poster
18
  • Almost 24 million males signed up for the draft
    and 2.7 million were called up for service.

Sample Draft Card
19
  • On November 11, 1918 Germany signs the armistice
    which ends the war.
  • Today, we celebrate Veterans Day (Armistice Day)
    to remember the end of World War I

20
South Carolina Military Bases
  • Camp Sevier Located in Greenville to train
    soldiers to fight in WWI. They even had to use
    wooden guns because the real ones could only be
    used for war.
  • Camp Wadsworth Located in Spartanburg to train
    the National Guard troops for the war.
  • Fort Jackson Located in Columbia which
    transformed a barren farm into the largest
    military base in the state.

21
  • Parris Island - Located on Parris Island in the
    southern part of South Carolina where Marines
    were trained to fight in WWI.
  • Charleston Naval Yard Located in Charleston,
    this naval yard built and repaired ships for the
    war effort.

22
Camp Sevier
Camp Wadsworth
Charleston Naval Yard
Fort Jackson
Parris Island
23
A Major South Carolinian in WWI
  • Bernard Baruch (born in Camden) was chosen by
    President Wilson to lead the War Industries Board
  • Under his leadership, the country produced every
    kind of war supply possible
  • This production helped the U.S. achieve victory
    in WWI

24
The Great Migration
  • In 1910, three out of every four black Americans
    lived on farms, and nine out of ten lived in the
    South before WWI.
  • After 1917, hoping to escape tenant farming,
    sharecropping, and peonage, 1.5 million southern
    blacks moved to cities in the late teens and
    1920s.

25
  • During the 1910s and '20s, Chicago's black
    population grew 148 percent, Cleveland's by 307
    percent, Detroit's by 611 percent.
  • African Americans created cities-within-cities
    during the 1920s. The largest was Harlem, in
    upper Manhattan, where 200,000 African Americans
    lived in a neighborhood that had been virtually
    all-white fifteen years before.
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