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A Review of World War I

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Title: A Review of World War I


1
A Review of World War I
  • Part 1 War Breaks Out in Europe

2
I. The Start of WWI
  • A.  Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria
  • visits Sarajevo on a Serbian national
  • holiday.
  • 1. June 28, 1914 was Serbias
    Independence Day.
  • 2. The day was also a day of mourning to
  • commemorate a military defeat
    centuries before.
  • B. Ferdinand and his wife are shot and
  • killed by a Serbian nationalist/patriot
    .
  • C. One month later, Austria declared war on
  • Serbia. One by one, the nations of
    Europe
  • chose sides and the Great War (WWI)
  • began.

3
II. Causes of World War I
  • A.  Imperialism -
  • 1. Britain, France, Germany and Italy
    competed for colonies in Asia and
    Africa.
  • 2.  Germany was jealous of the other
  • imperialist nations because
    it did
  • not have as many colonies.
  • Germany felt it deserved
    more.

4
  • B. Nationalism -
  • 1. European nations wanted to prove that
    their individual nation was the best.
  • 2. They felt that their countrys interests
    were far more important than the others.
    This created arrogance!
  • Militarism This is the belief that a nation
    needs a large military force. European nations
    were building up their armies and navies during
    peacetime to show their power to the world.

5
  • D. Alliances In 1914, a tangled network of
    competing alliances bound European nations
    together. An attack on one nation forced its
    allies to come to its aid. A small conflict
    could become a larger war.
  • European nations had divided into 2
    opposing alliances
  • The Central Powers Austria-Hungary, Germany,
    Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire.
  • The Allied Powers (the Allies) Serbia,
    Russia, France, Great Britain, Italy, and seven
    other countries.

6
III. New Methods of Warfare
  • A.  Trench Warfare (troops huddled in rat
    infested trenches and fired artillery and
    machine guns at one another cost
    thousands of lives with little gain)
  • B.  New Technologies
  • 1. Tanks (a British invention)
  • 2. Poison gas (burned and blinded
    soldiers)
  • 3. U-boats or submarines (guns
    torpedoes to block
    trade sank over 11 million tons
    of Allied shipping)
  • 4. Airplanes (first major combat
    used - Manfred von Richthofen (the Red
    Barron) shot down over 80 planes (5
    Ace)
  • 5. Machine gun (fired 600 bullets a
    minute)

7
IV. The US Switches from Neutrality to an Ally
Power.
  • A.    The Germans sink the Lusitania, killing
    1,198
  • people including 128 Americans.
  • 1.  It was a British passenger
    ship.
  • 2.  The event turned many
    Americans
  • against the Germans.
  • B. Zimmermann Telegram -
  • 1. A telegram written by a German
    foreign
  • minister (Arthur Zimmermann)
    that was
  • intercepted by the British.
  • 2.  Germany was trying to persuade
    Mexico to join
  • the Central Powers. Germany
    promised to help
  • Mexico get back the colonies it
    lost to the US
  • in the Mexican-American War.
    (Texas, New
  • Mexico and Arizona)
  • 3. This news made Americans furious.

8
A Review of World War I continued . . .
  • Part 2 America Joins the Fight

9
I. The Draft Begins
  • A. The draft started so that the
  • government could fulfill its need for
  • troops. (The US had less than 200,000
    soldiers.)
  • B. In May 1917, Congress passed the
  • Selective Services Act, which
  • required all males between the ages
  • of 21 and 30 to sign up for military
  • service. By the end of 1918, nearly 3
  • million men had been drafted.

10
II. The U.S. Enters the War
  • A. By the time the first American troops arrived
    in
  • June 1917, the Allies had been at war
    for
  • almost three years.
  • B. The troops helped shift the balance in favor
    of
  • the allies by giving the other Ally
    countries a
  • morale boost.
  • C. Americans were proud of the contribution
    their
  • troops made to the war effort.
  • (About 2 million American soldiers
    went to France. Around
  • 400,000 African-Americans also
    served in the armed forces and
  • it was the first time in US
    history that women served in the
  • military.)

11
III. Armistice Day
  • A. On November 11, 1918 at 11am (the
  • 11th hour of the 11th day of the
    11th month)
  • the Germans agreed to an armistice
  • or an end to fighting. (Armistice
    Day)
  • B. About 8.5 million soldiers (5 million
  • Allied/3.5 million Central Powers)
    died
  • in the war and about 21 million were
  • wounded.

12
A Review of World War I Continued . . .
  • Part 3 Life on the Home Front

13
I. The Wartime Economy
  • A. War bonds were low interest loans by
  • civilians to the government, meant to
    be repaid in a number of years.
  • B. The war brought more government
  • control of the economy. To produce
  • such needed war supplies, President
  • Wilson set up the War Industries
  • Board.

14
II. Propaganda
  • A. Propaganda - opinions that are
  • expressed for the purpose of
  • influencing the actions of the people.
  • B. Patriotic propaganda did much to win
  • support for the war however its anti-
  • German/anti-foreign focus also fueled
  • prejudice. Suddenly people distrusted
  • anything German.

15
III. Influenza Epidemic
  • A. After the war, in the year 1918, a
  • deadly flu epidemic swept the globe.
  • B. The epidemic started in an army
  • training camp in Kansas and spread
  • rapidly through the air.
  • C. The flu killed more than 20 million
  • people on six continents by the time
  • it disappeared in 1919.

16
A Review of World War I The Dramatic
Conclusion!
  • Part 4 The Legacy of the Great War

17
I. Wilsons Fourteen Points
  • On January 8, 1918, President Wilson outlined his
    vision for the postwar world in a plan known as
    the Fourteen Points.
  • The Fourteen Points were a list of specific
    proposals for postwar peace.
  • Key goals of the Fourteen Points
  • End secret alliances
  • Encourage free shipping
  • Remove barriers to trade
  • Reduce armies and navies
  • Resolve colonial claims
  • Support the right of people to choose their
    own government
  • Settle border disputes
  • Establish the League of Nations

18
II. Treaty of Versailles
  • A. Conditions of the Treaty
  • 1. Germany had to pay 33 billion in
    reparations
  • in order to pay for the
    destruction that it
  • caused during the war.
  • 2. Germany had to admit its guilt for
    causing the
  • war.
  • 3. Large empires like Austria-Hungary and the
  • Ottoman Empire were divided up.
  • 4. The League of Nations was created.

19
  • B. Aftermath of the Treaty
  • 1. Due to stress, Woodrow Wilson suffers a
    stroke in
  • September 1919. (In 21 days, he
    traveled almost
  • 10,000 miles and gave over 30
    speeches.)
  • 2. The Senate refuses to approve the League
    of
  • Nations treaty.
  • 3. League of Nations is formed without the
    US.
  • C. Results of the Treaty
  • 1. It failed to make Europe safer without
    the US in
  • the League of Nations.
  • 2. Germans grew resentful because of
    admitting
  • guilt and paying reparations.
  • 3. Germany goes through a Depression.

20
German Economic Problems After WWI
  • In January 1921, German currency was worth 64
    marks to the dollar.
  • By November 1923, one dollar was worth
    4,200,000,000,000 marks.
  • Price of a Loaf of Bread 1918 just over
    half a mark
  • 1922 163 marks/loaf
  • 1923 (Nov) 201,000
  • million marks/loaf
  • Treaty of Versailles
  • (limitations)
  • Type Amount Allowed
  • Planes 0
  • Warships 6
  • Soldiers 100,000
  • Conscription Banned
  • (involuntary labor demanded by an established
    authority)
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