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The Great War

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The Great War 1914-1918 Cost of war Financially, the economies of Europe were ruined The U.S emerged as a major world power The war left thousands of soldiers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Great War


1
The Great War
  • 1914-1918

2
The Fatal Shot June 28, 1914
  • Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated in
    Sarajevo, Bosnia
  • Bosnia had been part of Austria-Hungary since
    1908, but it was claimed by neighboring Serbia
  • Austria-Hungary blamed Serbia for the
    assassination and declared war on July 28

3
The Fatal Shot June 28, 1914
  • Russia supported Serbia
  • Germany supported Austria-Hungary
  • France supported Russia
  • On Aug. 4th, Germany invaded neutral Belgium on
    its way to France
  • Britain had guaranteed to Defend Belgiums
    neutrality, so declared war on Germany

4
Troops off to war
5
War on two fronts?
  • Concern over a two front war led the German chief
    of staff, Field Marshall Count Alfred von
    Schlieffen to develop a bold plan to knock out
    France swiftly before turning full German might
    against the Russians.

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War on two fronts?
  • Schlieffen Plan required invasion of neutral
    Belgium and the German army to sweep north and
    west of Paris
  • German commander Moltke modified the plan by
    heading east of Paris. His right flank was
    exposed to the French and British armies

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Battle of the Marne Sept. 1914
  • On September 6, 1914, the German army was
    attacked by the French, which successfully forced
    a wedge in the German line, forcing the Germans
    to divide into two forces.
  • With the German offensive slowed the gap between
    the German forces soon filled with French and
    British troops, in an attempt to weaken the
    already divided German army.
  • German forces battled against the allied forces
    for three days, and were close to beating the
    French, before, out of desperation, the French 
    conscripted taxis, and reserves were raced to the
    battle, via taxis.

10
Battle of the Marne Sept. 1914
  • Finally, on Sept. 9th , 1914, the Germans began
    the retreat.
  • The British and French forces were now able to
    advance to the Marne, and although they faced
    little more opposition, the advance was slow,
    only gaining about 12 miles at first.
  • This slow advance allowed the German forces to
    reunite, and make a stand against the allied
    attack. Unfortunately, for the Germans, this
    failed, and by Sept.10th 1914, the fighting of
    the first battle at the Marne was over, and the
    French managed to regain lost territory.

11
Battle of the Marne
  • The allies suffered 262,733 casualties
  • The Germans, an estimated 250,000 casualties.

12
Battle of the Marne
13
Trench Warfare
  • By the end of 1914, the huge effort had exhausted
    both sides. The Schlieffen Plan had failed, and
    Germany was now committed to fighting a two-front
    war with France and Britain in the west and
    Russia in the East.
  • Consequently, German forces dug in for the winter
    where they had halted and invited the French and
    British to eject them from the areas in France
    and Belgium that they had captured.

14
Trench Warfare
  • The British and French, meanwhile, lacked the
    resources to mount large scale offensives, so
    they dug in and prepared for offensives in 1915.
  • Gradually a 400 mile line of static trench
    defenses snaked its way from the North Sea,
    across Belgium and northern France to the Swiss
    border.
  • Thus began a bloody siege warfare that was to
    cost millions of lives before the Germans were
    finally forced to surrender in November 1918.

15
Trench Warfare
  • A stalemate occurred mainly because powerful
    long-range artillery weapons and rapid-fire
    machine guns made it dangerous for soldiers to
    fight in open ground.

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18
Christmas Truce of 1914
  • Soldiers on both sides sung carols to each other.
    The following day troops along 2/3 of the
    Western front observed the truce.
  • All firing stopped!
  • Soldiers crossed in no mans land to exchange
    greetings, etc.

19
Christmas Truce of 1914
  • Both sides were warned that any repeat
    performance would end in their deaths!
  • Was the truce as nothing more than a 'blip' a
    temporary lull induced by the season of goodwill,
    but willingly exploited by both sides to better
    their defenses and eye out one another's
    positions?
  • OR, was the Truce was an effort by normal men to
    bring about an end to the slaughter?

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22
Communication and supplies
  • The main form of transportation was the horse,
    although mechanized vehicles were used as well
  • The Germans used railroads to move men and
    supplies up front
  • Front-line troops were kept in close contact with
    headquarters by phone

23
Communication and supplies
  • Carrier pigeons and dogs were used too!

24
Observation and patrol
  • Nighttime patrols
  • Aerial reconnaissance
  • Observation
  • turrets and periscopes

25
Over the Top!
  • Bombardment with artillery
  • Then, over the top this is when the infantry
    climbed out of the trenches and advanced towards
    enemy lines
  • Gun emplacements and barbed wire remained after
    the bombardments and machine guns were highly
    mobile pieces of weaponry

26
War in the Air
  • Remember when the war broke out in 1914, the
    history of powered flight was barely 10 years
    old.
  • The first war planes flew as reconnaissance
    craft, looking at enemy lines or helping to
    direct artillery with greater precision

27
War in the Air
  • Enemy pilots tried to shoot them down, leading to
    dogfights in the sky
  • By the end of the war, the role of military
    aircraft had changed from being a minor help to
    the ground into a major force to be reckoned with
    in the sky

28
ACE
  • Frank Luke, called the most spectacular U.S. air
    fighter of World War I, who shot down 18
    airplanes and balloons in his short military
    career

29
Manfred von Richthofen
  • The Red Baron
  • World War I flying ace who downed 80 Australian,
    British, French and Canadian planes before being
    shot down himself

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Zeppelin
  • In the spring of 1915, the first German airship
    appeared in Britains sky, causing enormous panic
  • Airships could fly higher than planes, so it was
    hard to shoot them down
  • They were used for bombing raids until high
    flying aircraft and the use of incendiary bullets
    took care of these airships

32
Unterseeboot
  • Both sides avoided naval battles
  • The only major sea battle was Jutland in 1916
  • The main fight took place under the sea, as
    German U-Boats waged a damaging war against the
    Allies

33
Gallipoli
  • British, Australian and New Zealand troops landed
    at Gallipoli in April 1915
  • The landings were a success, but the casualty
    rate was high and the Allies were unable to move
    far from the beaches due to Turkish resistance

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35
Battle of Verdun
  • February 21, 1916 Germany launched a massive
    attack against the French city of Verdun
  • The Germans engaged in an eight-hour artillery
    bombardment and then advanced
  • 400,000 French and 336,831 German causalities

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38
Battle of Verdun
  • What a bloodbath, what horrid images, what a
    slaughter. I just cannot find words to express
    my feelings.
  • Hell cannot be this dreadful
  • -Albert Joubaire, French soldier

39
Gas Attack
  • On the afternoon of April 22, 1915, French troops
    near the Belgium town of Ypres noticed a
    greenish-yellow cloud moving toward them from the
    German front.
  • The cloud was chlorine gas
  • This was the first time it was used effectively
    in war

40
Gas Attack
  • The first clouds of gas were released by
    canisters and blown by the wind toward the enemy
    (if the wind changed, you were in trouble!)
  • More effective were gas-filled shells
  • About 1,200,000 soldiers were gassed, about
    91,198 died terrible deaths

41
Gas Attack
  • The first effects were felt on the face and eyes,
    then the throat
  • Some soldiers died quickly and others wee blinded
    for life or suffered skin blisters
  • Mustard Gas (Yperite) was first used by the
    German Army in 1917. It was one of the most
    lethal of all the poisonous chemicals Once in the
    soil, mustard gas remained active for several
    weeks.

42
Gas Attack
  • By the middle of the war, both sides wore
    protective gear face masks, goggles and
    respirators

43
Mustard Gas
  • The skin of victims of mustard gas blistered, the
    eyes became very sore and they began to vomit.
    Mustard gas caused internal and external bleeding
    and attacked the bronchial tubes, stripping off
    the mucous membrane. This was extremely painful
    and most soldiers had to be strapped to their
    beds. It usually took a person four or five weeks
    to die of mustard gas poisoning.

44
One nurse, Vera Brittain, wrote
  • "I wish those people who talk about going on with
    this war whatever it costs could see the soldiers
    suffering from mustard gas poisoning. Great
    mustard-coloured blisters, blind eyes, all sticky
    and stuck together, always fighting for breath,
    with voices a mere whisper, saying that their
    throats are closing and they know they will
    choke."

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46
Gas Attack
47
Under enemy lines
  • Trenches were difficult to overcome, so engineers
    found ways to undermine them.
  • The British recruited coal miners, as did the
    Germans, and both excavated tunnels and mines
    deep under enemy lines and packed them with
    explosives
  • The opposing miners sometimes met and fought
    underground

48
The Eastern Front
  • Both the Austro-Hungarian and Russian armies were
    badly led and ill-equipped, and both suffered
    huge losses.
  • In 1915 alone, Russia lost over 2 million men, of
    whom 1 million were taken prisoner
  • By 1916, the German were in full control of the
    Eastern Front
  • Russians were demoralized and this, in part, led
    to the Russian Revolution in 1917.

49
The Italian Front
  • On May 23, 1915, Italy joined the war on the side
    of the Allies
  • The Italian army was ill-prepared and
    under-equipped for the war
  • All but 20 miles of the 400 mile Italian border
    with Austria-Hungary lay in the Alps

50
A World War
  • German colonies in Africa were overrun by French,
    British and South African soldiers
  • German colonies in China and the Pacific were
    overrun by Japanese, British, Australian, and New
    Zealand forces

51
War in the desert
  • British and Indian troops invaded Mesopotamia in
    1914 and secured Baghdad in 1917
  • A large British force captured Palestine and
    Syria
  • In Arabia, Bedouin soldiers under T.E. Lawrence
    rose in revolt against the Turkish rulers and
    campaigned for a independent Arab state

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53
Espionage
  • Code-breaking and cryptology was very important
    as both sides sent and received coded messages by
    radio and telegraph
  • Zimmerman note was deciphered by British
    intelligence in transit from Berlin to
    Washington, leading to U.S. entry in April 1917.

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55
Tank Warfare
  • The British-invented tank first saw action in
    1916, but they were not reliable
  • IN Nov. 1917 at Cambrai, the German defenses were
    so strong that an artillery bombardment would
    have destroyed the ground and made it impossible
    for infantry to cross.
  • Fleets of tanks flattened the barbed wire and
    acted as shields for the advancing infantry

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57
German A7V tank
58
U.S. enters the war
  • The U.S. remained neutral in 1914 remember that
    the U.S. was deeply divided aout the war since
    recently arrived immigrants from Europe were
    strongly in favor of their respective homelands
  • When German U-boats started sinking American
    ships, public opinion turned against Germany

59
Lusitania
60
U.S. enters the war
  • In Feb. 1917 Germany decided to attack all
    foreign cargo ships to try to reduce supplies to
    Britain
  • Germany also tried to divert U.S. attention from
    Europe by encouraging its neighbor, Mexico, to
    invade
  • This latter action caused President Wilson to
    declare war on Germany

61
1918
  • In early 1918, the war looked to be favoring
    Germany (they no longer had to fight on the
    eastern front since Russia had left the war
  • The German ports had been blockaded and their
    railway networks were collapsing and food was
    short
  • By early Nov. 1918, the Germans stood alone
    against the Allies since Austria-Hungary and
    Turkey had lost

62
1918
  • At 11am on the 11th day of the 11th month of
    1918, the more than four years of war ended.
  • Germany asked for an armistice (cease-fire) to
    discuss a peace treaty
  • The Allies wanted to make sure Germany would
    never go to war again
  • Redrew Europe map and forced Germany to pay
    damages

63
Versailles
  • The negotiations were dominated by French premier
    Clemenceau, British PM George, Italian premier
    Orlando and U.S. president Wilson.
  • The Big Four wrote the treaty
  • Terms of treaty set stage for a second battle

64
Cost of war
  • More than 65 million fought, of whom more than
    half were killed or injured
  • 8 million killed
  • 2 million died of illness/disease
  • 21.2 million wounded
  • 7.8 million taken prisoner or missing (POW-MIA)
  • 6.6 million civilians killed
  • -total 45.6 million casualties

65
Cost of war
  • With the exception of the U.S., there was barely
    a family that had not lost at least one son,
    brother, father.
  • Entire towns and villages were wiped off the map
  • Fertile farmland was turned into deathly bogland

66
Cost of war
  • Financially, the economies of Europe were ruined
  • The U.S emerged as a major world power
  • The war left thousands of soldiers disfigured and
    disabled some soldiers stayed in nursing homes
    the rest of their lives due to shell shock and
    disability

67
Flanders Fields, Belgium
68
Battle of the Somme
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