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The effects of the war in America

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The effects of the war in America f. Post WWI U.S. Economy i. demobilization transition from wartime to peacetime production levels ii. 4.5 million soldiers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The effects of the war in America


1
The effects of the war in America
2
I. U.S.s entry into the war led to a labor
shortage in the US
  • This caused
  • women to enter the workforce
  • about 150,000 Mexicans to enter
  • the country
  • African Americans to move north in search for new
    opportunities

3
II. The Great Migration
  • 1. The movement of African Americans from the
    South to northern cities between 1915 and 1930
  • 2. They were moving north to escape
    discrimination and difficult living and working
    conditions.
  • 3. African Americans encouraged one another to
    Get out of the South

4
III. Racial violence
  • 1. African-Americans who moved north usually had
    a higher standard of living than in the south.
  • 2. July 2, 1917- East St. Louis Illinois- White
    rioters rampaged the streets of this
    African-American neighborhood where 39 A-As were
    killed in the violence
  • 3. Why should African-Americans fight in war when
    they do not receive the freedoms they are
    fighting for?

5
IV. American Attitudes
  • 1. Many Americans believed that the U.S. should
    have stayed out of the war (political, religious,
    and/or personal reasons).
  • 2. Wilson created a committee on Public
    Information in 1917 to encourage the American
    people to support the war

6
3. Patriotic Organizations
  • Many American groups popped up that discriminated
    against anything German (i.e. books, language,
    music, sauerkraut, dachshunds, hamburgers)
  • Some groups promoted Americanization- this was
    to prepare foreign-born residents for full
    American citizenship- education was the main
    goal.

7
V. U.S. opposition to War
  • 1. The Quakers and the Mennonites were
    particularly opposed to the war because of the
    pacifism in religion- the refusal to use violence
    to settle disputes.
  • 2. Some Americans considered anyone against the
    war effort to be traitors they often encountered
    violence and abuse.
  • 3.The Socialist Party in America opposed the war
    because they felt it was a struggle to control
    foreign markets.

8
VI. Silencing the opposition
  • 1. Congress passed The Espionage Act and The
    Sedition Act- These outlawed acts of treason and
    made it a crime to criticize the government
  • 2. Many Americans believed this went
  • against 1st amendment rights
  • 3. Schenck vs. the United States- 1919 Supreme
    Court Case that stated that in times of war some
    things presented a clear and present danger to
    the country

9
The End of World War I
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I. The Great War finally ends
  • 1. Late summer of 1918, the Allied powers had a
    major offensive on the Western Front
  • 2. The Germans began to riot in the fall of 1918.
    The Chancellor asked for an armistice in October,
    and Kaiser Wilhelm stepped down from the throne
    Nov 9-

11
(Central Powers defeat!)
  • 3. Bulgaria first to fall, followed by the
    Ottoman Empire
  • 4. Revolution in Austria-Hungary- split into
    separate nations
  • 5. Germany- Kaiser William II abdicated new
    German Republic- signed armistice

12
II. The Peace Treaty
  • 1. 1100 a.m. on Nov 11, 1918
  • the warring parties signed a cease-fire
    (armistice)
  • 2. The nations met in Paris, France, at the
    Palace of Versailles, for a peace conference in
    January of 1919.

13
III. Peace in Europe
  • The Big Four
  • David Lloyd George (Britain)
  • George Clemenceau (France)
  • Woodrow Wilson (U.S)
  • Vittorio Orlando (Italy)- left during peace talks
    didnt receive territorial claims)

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  • B. Allied nations (except
  • Russia) met in Paris (Jan.
  • 1919)
  • C. Believed each Central
  • Power should have a
  • separate peace treaty

16
  • IV. Versailles Treaty with Germany
  • The official signing June 28, 1919
  • Required Germany to accept
  • all blame (guilty of starting the war)
  • 2. Germany must pay 33 billion (cost of war 400
    bil.)

17
  • 3. Germany lost territory- returned
    Alsace-Lorraine to France, lost all colonies
  • 4. Overall, the Treaty of Versailles dismantled
    the great empires of pre-WWI days.
  • Disarmed Germany

18
V. Wilsons 14 Points
  • the U.S. Peace Plan,
  • which expressed the
  • aims of the Allies and
  • called for world peace

19
A. The 14 Points General Plans
  • 1. No secret treaties
  • 2. Freedom of the seas for all nations
  • 3. Removal of all economic barriers.
  • 4. Reduction of all national armaments (military
    supply)

20
  • 5. Fair adjustments of all colonial claims
  • s 6-13 - points dealt w/ specific countries
  • 14. Establishment of a general association of
    nations (League of Nations)

21
B. The 14th Point- League of Nations
  • 1. It became part of the Versailles Treaty
  • a. Two main aims of the League
  • 1. promote international cooperation
  • 2. peacefully settle disputes and
    reduce armaments.
  • b. The League was to include all
    independent, sovereign nations

22
  • C. The U.S. did not join the League of Nations
  • 1. Wilson refused to compromise
  • treaty failed to pass the senate- the US did
    not join
  • 2. Many republican Senators were
  • concerned that the League would drag
  • the U.S. into world affairs
  • 3. Overall, the US wanted to return to a policy
    of isolationism

23
How might WWI have affected future international
affairs?
The treaty of Versailles left Germany bitter and
may have led to the future conflicts we know are
just around the bend!!!
24
  • The 6 Effects of WWI
  • US Entry into the war in 1917
  • Widespread death and destruction in Europe
  • Treaty of Versailles
  • League of Nations
  • Break-up of German and Austro-Hungarian Empires
  • Creation of several new nations

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26
End of World War I and Woodrow Wilsons
Presidency
  • 1918 - 1921

27
  • When we last discussed Wilson, the Fourteen
    Points Plan was issued, the Versailles Peace
    treaty was in the process of ratification and
    Wilson headed back to the United States

28
President Wilson's Voyage from France to the
U.S., June-July 1919
29
Ratification of the Versailles Treaty
  • I. Republican Controlled Congress
  • a. Congress was angry at Wilson for traveling
    to Europe to help with the peace treaty
  • b. Wilson did not include Republicans in his
    peace delegation

30
  • c. Henry Cabot Lodge (R) selected as the new
    chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
    Committee
  • d. Wilson and Cabot did not like each other!

Henry Cabot Lodge 1850-1924
31
American Defeat of the League of Nations
  • II. Irreconcilables
  • a. Group of Republican Senators (39) announced
    they would not approve the League of Nations in
    the existing form (major critics of Article X)
  • b. Irreconcilables wanted Wilson to
    compromise

32
  • c. Wilson returned to Europe to finalize the
    treaty- found problems waiting in Europe
  • d. July, 1919 Lodge realized there was no hope
    of defeating the treaty but wanted to
    Americanize the treaty

33
  • e. In 1919, while Woodrow Wilson and Congress
    battled over the Versailles Treaty the strong
    U.S. war economy came to a sudden stop

34
  • f. Post WWI U.S. Economy
  • i. demobilization transition from wartime to
    peacetime production levels
  • ii. 4.5 million soldiers returned to the U.S.
    forcing women and African-Americans out of work

35
  • iii. brief economic boom- Americans spent what
    they saved during the war
  • iv. recession of 1920-1921 by 1921 5 million
    workers were unemployed
  • v. farm crisis European war markets did not
    exist causing prices to fall dramatically

36
  • g. Wilson began a presidential tour in
    September of 1919 to gain support for the
    ratification of the treaty and the League of
    Nations
  • h. September 25, 1919 Wilson gave a final
    speech pleading for the League of Nations,
    collapsed that evening

37
  • i. Wilson suffered a stroke which paralyzed one
    side of his body
  • j. Wilson did not meet with his cabinet for 7 ½
    months
  • k. Lodge Reservationists came up with a plan to
    attach to the treaty which would reserve the
    constitutional war declaring power to Congress

38
Why did the Treaty of Versailles Fail in the
United States?
  • 1. Lodge-Wilson feud
  • 2. Traditionalism
  • 3. Isolationism
  • 4. Disillusionment
  • 5. Partisanship between the Republicans and
    Democrat
  • 6. Wilson
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