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World War II

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Title: World War II


1
World War II The War Begins
2
World War II Begins
  • Hitler Makes his Move
  • A. Anschluss Illegal unification of Austria
    and Germany.
  • 1. Hitler claimed the Austrian Germans wished
    to be united under his leadership.

3
(No Transcript)
4
  • Czechoslovakia
  • Hitler Announces War is Near
  • Munich Pact Agreement between Hitler and
    leaders of England and France
  • Gave Hitler control of German speaking lands of
    western Czech called the Sudentenland
  • Hitler promised that would be the end of his
    demands and that peace would remain.
  • British Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain
    returned to England as a hero proclaiming that
    peace in our time has been preserved.

5
  • d. Hitler liedtold them what they wanted to
    hear until he
  • could prepare
    his armies for attack.
  • e. March 1938 Hitler seized the remainder
    of Czech and
  • set his eyes on
    a division of Poland with the Soviet Union.
  • Munich Pact Video (125)

6
  • Hitlers Plans for Poland
  • 1. Hitler and Joseph Stalin met and signed a
    SECRET
  • nonagression pact.
  • 2. Pact included plans to divide up control of
    Poland and allowing Russia to expand into eastern
    Europe.
  • 3. Poland was completely dominated within 3
    weeks.

7
  • Germany Invades Poland September 1, 1939
  • 1. Germans invades in the west
  • 2. U.S.S.R. invades in the east.
  • 3. England and France declare war on Germany
    and begin
  • mobilizing their military for a
    fight.
  • Germany Invades Poland (249)

8
Phony War
  • D. Both sides waited until Spring to make any
    major
  • movements
    towards all out war.
  • E. Phony War Period of deceptive inactivity
    between the
  • Germans and
    France/England.
  • F. Nothing was really happening and people had
    no reason to think
  • this war was going to be exactly like
    WWI
  • Ie..digging in, battling in trench lines etc..
  • G. Both sides were preparing for a war of
    unheard of proportion

9
  • By 1940 Germany had 1558 Bomber Planes that they
    would use on the Allied Forces.
  • German Junkers Ju 87, Stuka, dive-bomber that was
    produced in 1935. This was a 2 man ground attack
    bomber.

10
  • Germany had produced 1290 fighter planes by 1940.
  • Messerschmitt Bf109 was one of the first true
    fighter planes of WWII. This plane was a staple
    of the German Luftwaffe that was never completely
    replaced.

11
  • Germany unleashed their full armored divisions
    Blitzkreig attacks
  • April 1940 Invaded Norway and Denmark (58)
  • May 1940 Invaded the Netherlands, Belgium, and
    Luxembourg (143)
  • Late May 1940 Germans broke through into
    northern France and cut off British and French
    forces.
  • England was forced to undertake and massive
    emergency evacuation of all British forces from
    Dunkirk, France as the German Army was closing
    in. Operation Dynamo .

12
III. France Surrenders
  • Germans Capture Paris June 14, 1940.
  • 1. After the evacuation of British and French
    forces at Dunkirk, there was nothing left to stop
    the Nazis from seizing control of Paris.

13
  1. Once Paris is captured the French government,
    while in disarray, surrenders to the Germans.
  2. The Nazis set up a puppet government in southern
    France that was operated by the Nazis.
  3. French General, Charles DeGaulle, set up a
    government in exhile in England where they
    operated throughout the war.
  4. From here until D-Day the only fighting against
    the Nazis in France was undertaken by an
    underground French Resistance of citizens who
    attacked Nazi troops, supplies, railroads, and
    any other targets they could to attempt to weaken
    the German control of their home.

14
IV. Battle of Britain
  • Luftwaffe German Air Force
  • 1. Staged daily bombing raids Vs British
    airfields and cities.
  • 2. The goal was destroy the British morale and
    will to fight while paving
  • the way for a ground invasion of
    German soldiers.
  • 3. Lasted from July to October 1940.
  • 4. Land invasion forces waited on landing
    barges along the
  • French coast for the Luftwaffe to
    win air superiority.
  • 5. The British Royal Air Force, although greatly
    outnumbered,
  • drove the Luftwaffe from the daytime
    skies over England.
  • 6. The British Royal Navy, with growing
    American support, fought
  • valiantly to keep the North
    Atlantic open for trade amidst German
  • submarine efforts to block the
    traffic of all goods to the English.

15
  • Battle of Britain (139)
  • Development of Radar (58)
  • 7. British tenacity forced Hitler to abandon, at
    a heavy cost, the Battle of Britain and turn his
    focus elsewhere.

16
V. Battle for N. Africa
  • General Erwin Rommel (The Desert Fox)
  • 1. Sent by Hitler to N. Africa to save the
    Italians who were being
  • soundly defeated by the British at
    nearly every battle.
  • 2. Northern Africa was important to the overall
    Nazi plan because
  • victory would give them control of
    the Suez Canal and access
  • to the Mediterranean Sea.
  • Battle of El Alamein
  • 1. Became the decisive last stand of both the
    German and
  • Allied forces in N. Africa. Both
    sides knew that a victory here
  • could very well lead to overall
    victory.

17
  • General Rommels famous desert fighting force,
    the Afrika Corps HAD to win control of the Suez
    Canal.
  • British General, Bernard Monty Montgomery was
    dispatched by Churchill to win.
  • Rommels battle plans were compromised allowing
    Monty full access to their plans and supply
    routes which were sabotaged.
  • Short on supplies, Rommel rushed in to attack.
  • Rommels Panzer tank divisions walked into a trap
    and many were destroyed by land mines the British
    had set up.
  • 300 U.S. Sherman tanks arrived in time to support
    Montys battle.
  • Germany Allies
  • 110,000 Men 200,000 Men
  • 500 Panzer 4 Tanks 1000 Tanks

18
British Sherman Vs German Panzer 4
19
  • In battle the Sherman did well against the Panzer
    4.  The Sherman was faster then the Panzer 4 and
    could out maneuver it.  The early versions of the
    Panzer 4 with its low velocity gun was cut to
    pieces by Sherman in North Africa.  By The time
    of the Normandy invasion the up gunned Panzer 4
    was a close match to the Sherman.

20
  • The fighting was intense and on more than 1
    occasion Rommel was saved by sandstorms that
    either hid his tanks or caused the British to
    become disorganized
  • Allies were eventually victorious mainly due to a
    tremendous advantage in numbers of men and tanks.
  • By November 1942, Rommel knew that victory was
    lost
  • Hitler ordered a fight to the last man, but
    Rommel retreated to save his men.
  • Casualties German Italian 25,000
    Allied 13,000 (British, Australian , New
    Zealanders)

21
  • Battle of Alamein (151)

22
VI. U.S. Enters the War
  • A. Pearl Harbor
  • 1. December 7, 1941
  • 2. Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor Naval Station
    in Hawaii
  • 3. Attacked was designed to teach the Americans
    a lesson for
  • getting involved in their affairs
    in the S. Pacific.
  • 4. The goal was to cripple the U.S. Pacific
    fleet so that they could
  • not interfere with Japanese
    expansion.
  • 5. Admiral Yamamoto was in charge of the
    planning of the attack.
  • Was familiar with the U.S. culture and life
    due to his
  • education there.
  • Was afraid that the Pearl Harbor attack would
    awaken a sleeping
  • giant.
  • Was eventually killed by Harrison HS grad
    Buddy Hein in a
  • air attack.

23
  • Much of the U.S. Pacific fleet was destroyed or
    crippled. The U.S. had no defense of their own
    west coast.
  • President Roosevelt had no choice but to ask
    Congress for a declaration of war.
  • Pearl Harbor (426)
  • www.socialstudiesforkids.com/articles/pearlharbora
    ttack1.htm

24
B. Pacific Losses
  1. U.S. positions in the S. Pacific were easily
    overrun by advancing Japanese forces.
  2. U.S. military went through a complete
    organizational change to facilitate success in
    the war.
  3. The U.S. Army had to completely re-tool their
    military divisions, command, weaponry to
    compete with the advanced military of the
    Japanese.
  4. There was great pressure placed on the U.S.
    industry to provide the military tools that were
    ordered.

25
C. American Industry
  1. Had to support all of the Allies if victory was
    to be achieved.
  2. England needed larger amounts of ammunition and
    equipment.
  3. Tens of thousands of vehicles and other equipment
    must be provided.
  4. Eventually the U.S. played a significant role in
    mechanizing the Soviet Army.

26
D. Americans Join the Allied Attack
  • 1. July 4, 1942 U.S. Air Force joins the R.A.F.
    in attacks against German positions.

27
E. Priority of the European Theatre
  1. Winning the war in Europe was the 1st priority
  2. Stalin pressured the Allied leaders to open an
    invasion in northern France to take pressure off
    of his armies in eastern Europe.
  3. England wanted to invade the Axis powers from the
    southern portion of Europe ------ N. Africa and
    Italyand the Mediterranean Sea area.
  4. Churchill hoped to pressure the U.S. and France
    to help support English victories in N. Africa.
  5. The U.S. favored an invasion of N. France.
  6. The U.S. finally gave in to Churchill and began
    staging amphibious landings (35) in N. Africa by
    the end of 1942.
  7. U.S. troops would be working..almost as if under
    British Command.

28
F. Dwight D. Eisenhower
  1. Sent by Roosevelt to lead U.S. forces in N.
    Africa.
  2. U.S. forces landed in Morocco
  3. Helped to move to Tunisia to trap Rommel after
    the El Alamein battle
  4. Fighting in Tunisia lasted through the winter and
    into April
  5. 275,000 German P.O.W. captured.
  6. U.S. learned tremendous lessons about their
    inadequate training and artillery power.

29
G. Italian Campaign
  • Sicily, a large Italian island, would be the next
    target of the Allies.
  • July 9, 1943
  • Bernard Montgomery led the British forces
  • George S. Patton led the Allied attack. Pattons
    primary jobs were to secure airfields under
    German control and provide cover for the British
    attacks.
  • Allied attacks were stalled initially when German
    armor attacked the Americans on the beaches.
  • British also stalled while trying to attack the
    Sicilian capital of Messina.
  • Patton organized a series of amphibious attacks
    to outflank German positions outside of Messina.
  • Aug 17th, the Germans abandoned Sicily as the
    Allies arrived in the Sicilian capital.
  • Sicilian Invasion (121)

30
H. Italian Surrender
  1. Late July 1943
  2. Italian High Command with the support of King
    Emmanuel held secret meetings with Allied Command
    to negotiate a surrender of Italy.
  3. Hitler guessed that he had lost control of the
    Italian military sent massive amounts of forces
    into Northern Italy to reassert control.
  4. Germany disarmed the Italian Army and took
    control of their defensive positions.
  5. The Allies fought into the mountains of Italy
    into October 1943.
  6. The Germans had the advantage of fighting from
    heavily fortified mountain positions.
  7. Every Allied attack was driven back by the
    Germans from the mountains.
  8. In May of 1944 the Germans began to wilt under
    the pressure of Allied bomber attacks.
  9. 2 days before D-Day, the Allies marched into Rome.
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