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WWI

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Title: WWI


1
WWI
  • 1914 - 1920

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Panama Canal 1904 -1914
  • France starts building in 1880s
  • They give up due to Yellow Fever deaths
  • Walter Reed and Carlos Juan Finlay worked to find
    a cure for Yellow Fever
  • U.S. in 1902 buys the building rights from France
  • 1903 Columbian government would not allow U.S. to
    build canal
  • Rebellion breaks out and Roosevelt helps
  • After the revolution we gain land from a fee
    Panama.

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Causes
  • Imperialism the policy of extending a nations
    authority over other countries by economic,
    political, or military means.
  • Nationalism a devotion to the interests and
    culture of ones nation
  • Militarism the development of armed forces and
    their use as a tool of diplomacy

7
Alliances
  • Triple Alliance or Central Powers Germany,
    Ottoman Empire, Austria-Hungary, later Italy.
  • Triple Entente or Allied Powers Britain, France,
    Russia U.S. will Join Later
  • Formed to hopefully stop war

8
Naval Race
  • Germany starts to build a navy to challenge the
    U.K.s.

9
Death of a Leader
  • Archduke Franz Ferdinand
  • Heir to the Austria- Hungary throne
  • Assassinated June 28, 1914

10
  • Gavrilo Princip shot and killed Ferdinand and his
    wife in the city of Sarajevo.
  • Member of Black Hand
  • Supplied by Serbian Government
  • Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia

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Balkin Crisis
  • Austro-Hungarians are slowly annexing Serbian
    territory
  • Serbia breaks free from Austro-Hungarian rule.
    Russia supports Serbia.
  • Germany declares war on Russia and France,
    Russias ally

13
Germanys 1st move
  • Schlieffen Plan This plan would allow Germany
    to wage a two front war against France and Russia
    at the same time.

14
1st Battle of the Marne
  • 2 million men both French and German fought along
    the Marne River in France
  • 125 mile long fight
  • 250,000 lives lost
  • French win pushing the Germans 40 miles away from
    Paris
  • This helped buy the Russians time to mobilize

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War at a stalemate
  • Trench Warfare series of pathways dug into the
    ground.
  • 7 ft deep 6 ft wide.
  • Germans first used this and they would dig-in on
    higher ground making the Allies dig in on lower
    ground.
  • Lower ground was very wet and turned into mud
    holes.

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Chemical Warfare
  • 1915 Germans use gas to attack troops.
  • Tear Gas Blinded people
  • Chlorine was a green color and had a smell to
    it
  • Mustard Gas colorless and odorless
  • Caused skin irritation and if inhaled it killed
    you.
  • Seen as the most inhumane weapon

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Machine Guns
  • Machine Gun
  • Could kill as many as 15,000 a day
  • Most effective weapon of WWI

24
Tanks
  • 1916 tanks are invented and used in battle
  • British introduced them
  • First tanks were not great but they proved
    effective in getting through barbed-wire.

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Airplanes
  • Airplanes first used in battle but at first only
    used to spy on enemy.
  • Next they were used to drop small bombs
  • Arial fights called Dog Fights. Planes were
    equipped with a machine gun.

Eddie Rickenbacker
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Lusitania
  • May 7, 1915 German U-Boat sinks the Lusitania a
  • British Passenger Ship. No warning was given.
  • 1,198 die 128 were Americans.

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British Blockade
  • British Navy stops all ships in the Atlantic for
    contraband to Germany.
  • Germany builds U-Boats and starts Unrestricted
    Submarine-Warfare to sink all ships around
    Britain.

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New Legislation
  • Sussex French passenger ship was torpedoed by
    the Germans.
  • Wilson warned the Germans and they signed the
    Sussex Pledge.
  • Pledge states that Germans will warn ships before
    torpedoing them.
  • Germans dont warn ships.

33
U.S. Path to war.
  • Arthur Zimmermann German Ambassador to Mexico.
  • Zimmerman Note
  • Wanted Mexico to Ally with Germany incase U.S.
    entered war.
  • Mexico would get back lost territory in Texas,
    New Mexico, and Arizona.
  • Mexico Says No

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Zimmerman Note/telegram
35
Russian power
  • Czar Nicholas II gives up power because of an
    uprising.
  • People want food and heating fuel
  • New leadership takes form and Russias support
    lessons in war

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New Leadership in Russia
  • Bolsheviks a communists group that took control
    of Russia
  • Vladimir Ilich Lenin was the leader of the group
    and became the leader of Russia

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U.S. Goes to war.
  • German U-Boats sink 3 merchant ships
  • President Wilson gets approval from Congress
  • April 6th, 1917 U.S. goes to war for the Allied
    powers

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Raising an Army
  • Selective Service Act men between 21 and 30
    registered for draft
  • Most willingly joined
  • U.S. Soldiers become known as doughboys
  • Some were conscientious objectors or members of
    certain religious groups that could not fight in
    war because of their religious beliefs

39
Going to Europe
  • 1st round formed the American Expeditionary
    Forces led by General John J. Pershing.
  • Sent by convoy systems troop-transport ships
    are surrounded by destroyers or cruisers for
    protection.
  • Once in Europe they went to training camps for 12
    months

40
Women in WWI
  • U.S. Army Signal Corps recruited French-Speaking
    American women to serve as switchboard operators
    or Hello Girls
  • 20,000 Nurses
  • Yoemen Navy enlists women for 1st time. Served
    in secretarial and clerical positions

41
Women work for war
  • 1 million women entered work force
  • Left work once men returned from war
  • Influenza epidemic starts in 1918 - 1919 killing
    675,000 Americans.
  • Worst epidemic ever in U.S. History

42
Funding the War
  • Liberty Bonds like a savings bond and a form of
    loan to the federal government.
  • War Revenue Act of 1917 increased taxes to the
    rich as much as 77
  • 20 billion barrowed from Americans through
    Liberty bonds

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Regulating Industry
  • War Industries Board authority to regulate all
    materials needed in war effort. Headed by Bernard
    Baruch
  • Lever Food and Fuel Control Act government
    could set prices and production control for food
    and fuel. Headed by Harry Garfield

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Food Administration
  • Food Administration increase crop production
    and decrease food consumption. Headed by Herbert
    Hoover
  • Victory Gardens
  • Hooverize conserve food
  • Limited alcohol consumption
  • Volstead Act enforced the 18th amendment

47
Getting public support
  • Committee on Public Information create
    propaganda posters, newspaper stories, speeches,
    and other materials designed to influence
    peoples opinions
  • Headed by George Creel
  • People started removing anything German from
    American way of life.

48
Dealing with Strikes
  • 1919 there were 6,000 strikes because of
    underpay, bad conditions, and long hours.
  • National War Labor Board created to handle
    disputes between workers and managers. Less than
    a year handled 1,200 cases involving 700,000
    workers

49
Laws
  • Espionage Act punished people for aiding the
    enemy or refusing military duty.
  • Sedition Act made it illegal to criticize the
    government, the flag, or the military in any way.
  • Schenck v. U.S. speech can be limited when it
    poses a clear and present danger

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War Ends
  • July 15, 1918 the 2nd Battle of the Marne
  • Germans use all resources
  • U.S. blew up every bridge the Germans had built
  • August 3rd, 1918 German give up after 150,000
    casualties
  • Battle of the Argonne Forrest finished the German
    offensive and they soon surrender.

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War Ends continued
  • Germany had no economy, and civilians were
    staging food riots
  • November Austria-Hungary signed peace agreement
  • November 11th, 1918 Germany agrees to armistice

53
Wilsons 14 points
  • 1-4 called for open diplomacy, freedom of the
    seas, removal of trade barriers, and reduction of
    military arms
  • 5 fair ways to resolve disputes over colonies
  • 6-13 self-determination or the right of people
    to decide their own political status
  • 14 Creation of the League Of Nations or a
    organized group of countries that would settle
    disputes, protect democracy, and prevent wars

54
Paris Peace Conference
  • U.S. Woodrow Wilson
  • U.K British Prime Minister David Lloyd George
  • France French Premier George Clemenceau
  • Italy Italian Prime Minister Vittorio Orlando
  • Called the Big Four
  • Germany, Austria-Hungary and other not invited

55
Treaty of Versailles
  • Germany had to disarm its military forces and
    shrink them
  • Germany shrinks in size, and gives up its
    colonies to League of Nations
  • Reparations or war damages paid to all nations
    hurt by Germany
  • 9 new nations created
  • War-Guilt Clause Germany took sole
    responsibility for war
  • Germany signs Treaty on June 28, 1919

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U.S. problems ratifying treaty
  • Senators divided into 3 groups
  • Reservationists lead by Henry Cabot Lodge had a
    problem with the design of the League of Nations
  • U.S. rejects the treaty and does not join the
    League of Nations
  • U.S. signs 3 separate treaties with Austria,
    Germany, and Hungary

57
Impact
  • 14 million dead
  • 7 million men permanently disabled
  • 280 billion in total cost
  • Overthrow of the monarchies in Russia,
    Austria-Hungary, and the Ottoman empire
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