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World War II: 1939 1945

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Title: World War II: 1939 1945


1
World War II 1939 -1945
  • Chapters 16-17

2
1.) War approaches
  • During the 30s, Americans watched warily but
    stayed out of European affairs as dictators in
    Germany, Italy, and Japan sought to extend their
    power.
  • But, soon it would be apparent that democracy was
    threatened everywhere.

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2.)Fascism
  • In Italy, Benito Mussolini came to power.
  • He had been wounded in WWI and felt that his
    country had not done well in the treaty.
  • In 1919, he founded the fascist party.
  • Fascism is a political philosophy that values the
    nation or race above the individual. They looked
    back to a nations "glorious past".
  • Mussolini became IL Duce in 1922 - "The leader".
  • Once in power he suspended elections, gave state
    control of the economy, and began building up the
    army and started conquering parts of Africa.

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3.) Nazism
  • Adolf Hitler, an Austrian, rose to power in
    Germany.
  • Also wounded in WWI, he was angry at Germanys
    defeat and humiliation of the terms of the
    Versailles Treaty.
  • He became leader of the Nazi party- National
    Socialist German workers party.
  • His 1st attempt to seize control failed in 1920
    and he spent nine months in jail.
  • Support for him grew as Germans were experiencing
    their own Great Depression.
  • His charismatic speeches brainwashed many people.
  • By 1933, the Nazi party was the largest in the
    country and Hitler was named Chancellor and
    became known as the Fuhrer - the leader.
  • He suspended civil liberties, promoted
    anti-Semitism and preached that the Aryans were
    the "master race."
  • His goal was to restore Germany to its former
    glory.
  • In 1936, he signed a treaty with Italy and they
    became known as the Axis Powers.

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4.) Germany Grows
  • By 1938 Hitler had annexed Austria and part of
    Czechoslovakia. Most of Europe felt that Hitler
    would stop and kept up the policy of
    "appeasement" - keep the peace by giving into
    someones demands.
  • In 1939, he took the rest of Czechoslovakia and
    invaded Poland.
  • The attack on Poland brought an end to peace and
    Europe declared war on Germany.

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5.) Japans Empire
  • Japan wanted power but had no resources being a
    small chain of islands.
  • They resented their dependence on the U.S. for
    natural resources, and poor trade due to high
    tariffs.
  • To decrease dependence they needed more land.
  • In 1931, Japan attacked Manchuria on the
    mainland.
  • By 1937, they had taken Shanghai, Nanjing,
    Beijing, and parts of Southeast Asia.
  • The League of Nations was upset and condemned
    their actions, but Japan continued.
  • In 1940, they signed the Tripartite Pact -
    allying themselves with Germany and Italy.
  • The three invaded Indochina in 1941 which was a
    colony owned by France.

7
6.) Americas Response
  • Most wanted to stay out of it.
  • They wanted to continue the policy of
    isolationism - staying out of the quarrels of
    other nations.
  • The government was pushed into passing a series
    of neutrality acts which withheld weapons and
    loans to warring nations and only made it
    possible to sell goods to these nations if they
    paid in cash and in full.

8
7.) Churchill and Change
  • From 1939 -40, Germany took control of Poland,
    Norway, Denmark, Belgium, Luxembourg, and France.
  • England was now facing the full force of the Axis
    powers.

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8.) Pearl Harbor
  • Japan wanted to knock out the U.S. Pacific
    Fleet before they could begin an all-out military
    conflict.
  • They attacked the Americans at Pearl Harbor,
    Hawaii, on December 7, 1941.
  • Nearly 2,400 people were killed and many boats
    destroyed (except carriers).
  • It was a stunning blow to the Americans, but it
    meant the U.S. could hesitate no longer.
  • Roosevelt called on Congress to declare war on
    Dec. 8 which they did.

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9.) European Front
  • The allies were in deep trouble by the time the
    U.S. entered the war.
  • Roosevelt and Churchill had decided Germany would
    be its primary target, then the Asian front.
  • Germany had control of most of Europe because of
    the "Lightening strikes" - blitzkrieg.
  • This was a series of sudden military attacks by
    land and air.
  • Germanys bombing of European cities took its
    toll.
  • By, 1942, Germany had control of most of the
    Soviet Union, and much of North Africa.

13
10.) Pacific Front
  • Much of the U.S. fleet had been destroyed except
    for its carriers.
  • China had been taken over. India was in a
    weakened state, and Australia was expecting
    attack soon.
  • Guam had been taken and the Philippines (Gen.
    Douglas Macarthur) - but he promised to return.

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11.) Turnaround - 1942
  • Germany had extended itself into Russia, too far
    in fact.
  • The soldiers were not getting adequate supplies,
    and had a hard time dealing with the cold
    winters.
  • The allies began to use radar and sonar more
    effectively to destroy German U-boats.
  • Allies went on the offense in Africa. They were
    attacking the "Soft underbelly" of the enemy
    while Russia still wanted to concentrate on
    European fronts.
  • Churchill did not want to do this until it looked
    like Germany was weakening.
  • From North Africa they went up through Sicily and
    then Italy.

15
12.) Operation Torch
  • The North African campaign began in Nov. of 1942
    and was led by General Dwight D. Eisenhower
    facing off against Field Marshall Erwin Rommel.
  • By May, the Axis powers had to surrender that
    region.
  • Sicily was next in July of 43. With that
    success, the allies rushed the Italian mainland
    and pushed to Rome where Mussolini was forced to
    surrender in September.
  • It was a difficult campaign against the Germans
    who contested every mile of territory.

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13.) Midway
  • Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto wanted to
    attack the U.S. Navy at Midway Island in the
    Pacific to destroy their aircraft carriers so
    they could easily gain control of New Guinea and
    Australia.
  • The U.S. knew the plan though because they had
    been able to break the Japanese military codes.
  • On June 4, 1942, Japan attacked and it did not
    look well for the Americans at first despite the
    early warning. The fighter planes had become
    lost, but at 1025 A.M. They arrived and bombed
    and destroyed 3 of 4 Japanese carriers. The 4th
    was destroyed while trying to escape.
  • This was the last Japanese offensive of the war.

17
14.) Guadalcanal
  • The U.S. was now on the offensive in the Solomon
    Islands which if successful would rid the
    Japanese threat on Australia.
  • The fighting lasted months, but it was secured by
    Feb. of 1943.
  • Now the U.S. could push towards Japan by island
    hopping.
  • Two major battles that occurred along the way
    were on the Islands of Iwo Jima and Okinawa.

18
15.) Victory in Europe
  • The allies were now ready to take on Germany
    itself by crossing the English Channel.
  • First they began with a series of air raids
    attacking military, industrial, and
    transportation facilities.
  • Operation Overlord was aimed at driving out the
    Third Reich from France.
  • The allies planned the largest amphibious
    invasion in U.S. history off the coast of
    Normandy.
  • The Germans had expected the raid to occur in
    Calais.
  • General Dwight Eisenhower landed more than a
    million men and 100,000 tons of supplies before
    the Germans were even aware of what was
    happening.
  • By the end of August, the Allies pushed to Paris
    and liberated France and Belgium.
  • The Germans tried to push the allies back out in
    Belgium in what was known as the Battle of the
    Bulge, but the allies pushed through the German
    lines and the way into Germany was now clear in
    the West.
  • Joseph Stalin was ready to fight from the East.

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16.) The Holocaust
  • The rumors proved true in the last years of the
    war.
  • As soldiers made their way into German occupied
    countries, they discovered Hitlers "final
    solution" - the effort to eliminate all Jews.
  • They found extermination camps in Auschwitz,
    Maidanek, and Treblinka in Poland and Buchenwald
    and Dachua in Germ any.
  • Over 6 million Jews were killed by the Nazis in
    the holocaust - "total destruction by fire."
  • Another 5 million Slavs, Gypsies, communists,
    Jewish sympathizers, homosexuals, and the
    physically and mentally disabled were killed as
    well.
  • The Nazis were practicing genocide - the
    destruction of an entire race in what they deemed
    was ethnic cleansing.
  • Nazi doctors performed cruel experiments on their
    victims as an excuse to torture them.
  • They were told to remove their clothes and report
    to the bath houses which were actually lethal gas
    chambers. Their bodies were searched for hidden
    jewelry and gold teeth and then incinerated in
    large ovens.

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17.) The End of the War in Europe
  • The big three - Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill
    met again early in 1945 to split Germany into
    zones to maintain the peace and to reorganize
    Poland.
  • They also wanted to make decisions about how to
    end the fighting in the Pacific.
  • Hitler had committed suicide on April 30, 1945 in
    a bunker in Berlin. The Third Reich had fallen
    and now "total surrender" went into effect, but
    Japan had yet to give in.
  • The decision was made to drop tons of explosives
    on major Japanese cities when the big three met
    again (Harry S Truman this time because Roosevelt
    had died.)
  • They told Japan to issue a proclamation of
    surrender or face "prompt and utter destruction."

25
18.) Technology
  • New technology made WWII unlike any other war.
  • There had been major advances in sonar, radar,
    aircraft, and of course bombs.

26
19.) The Manhattan Project
  • In 1939, Albert Einstein wrote a letter to
    Roosevelt stating he was experimenting with
    splitting the atom. He said that the amount of
    energy this would release would cause an
    extremely destructive force and the Germans were
    experimenting with it as well.
  • Fearing the Germans would get this new technology
    first Roosevelt funded his research on splitting
    the uranium atom at a cost of 2 billion dollars
    120,000 people and 37 sites in the U.S. and
    Canada.
  • It took three years.
  • The scientists created a new element - plutonium
    and tested it on July 16, 1945 in the desert at
    Alamogordo, New Mexico. The first detonated
    atomic bomb left a huge crater in the earths
    surface and shattered windows 125 miles away.

27
  • Gadget July 16, 1945 Alamogordo
  • Little Boy August 6, 1945 Hiroshima
  • Fat Man August 9, 1945 Nagasaki
  • Bomb No. 4 unused
  • Average cost per atomic device/bomb
  • 5 billion

28
20.) Dropping the Bomb
  • Once it was ready, the Americans had to decide
    if, when, and where they would use it.
  • The pacific battle was still going on. They
    could have continued fighting, but that would
    have meant more allied casualties and the war
    would drag on.
  • The U.S. also felt that dropping the bomb would
    be a show of power to anyone (Russians) who might
    want to take on the U.S. later.
  • The allies agreed unanimously to use it.
  • On Aug. 6, 1945, a sole American plane dropped
    "Little Boy", a uranium bomb, on the Japanese
    city of Hiroshima.
  • 70,000 died within a few hours, and 70,000 others
    were seriously injured and critical.
  • Three days later, "Fat Man", a plutonium bomb,
    was dropped on the city of Nagasaki killing
    40,000 people, and injuring an equal number.
  • It was a terrifying experience for those who saw
    the blast and survived.
  • A ball of blindingly intense light was followed
    by total darkness. Screams of pain could be
    heard across the city. A black cloud of dust
    shot up into the sky turning day into night and
    formed a mushroom cloud over the city.
  • The bombs ignited fires all over the cities as
    buildings and wires crumbled to the ground.
    People suffered excruciating burns and died
    within a few days.
  • The hot radioactive winds burned peoples clothes
    right off their bodies. Some people had the
    designs of their kimonos scorched into their
    flesh.
  • For many years people continued to die of
    radiation poisoning.
  • Children who saw the blasts from schoolyards were
    horribly disfigured, blinded, and became social
    outcasts.
  • On September 2, 1945, the still shocked and dazed
    Japanese unconditionally surrendered. The war
    was over.

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  • Joe Rosenthal's Pulitzer Prize winning photograph
    stands as one of the greatest images of World War
    II. In this photograph, Rosenthal captured the
    great American flag raising at Iwo Jima in 1945.

33
21.) The Soldiers' Experience
  • 15 million Americans went overseas and just
    struggled to stay alive.
  • American soldiers, known as GIs, and the Marines
    experienced the really horrible conditions.
  • Filth, spoiled and rotten food, the cold, the
    heat, sleeping on the ground without blankets,
    terror, and constant fear, sniper fire, mortar
    fire, machine gun fire, friends dying beside
    them, and constant air raids.

34
22.) Women in the Armed Forces
  • They served in all areas except combat.
  • Over 300,000 women served as typists, clerks,
    control tower operators, radio operators,
    parachute riggers, mechanics, pilots, and in the
    gunneries.

35
23.) African Americans
  • Their participation as soldiers really helped to
    win the war although they were still not allowed
    to join the air force, marines, and could only
    work in the kitchens in the navy.
  • The Red Cross also separated the blood donated
    into black and white categories.
  • The All-African American 92nd Infantry Division,
    known as the "Buffaloes", fought in the bloody
    Italian campaigns of 1943-44.
  • The 333rd Field Artillery Battalion served with
    General Patton and helped to liberate France.
  • The infantry allowed them to serve side-by-side
    in combat in mixed units.
  • In 1945, the Marines allowed the first blacks to
    enlist and the navy as well.

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24.) Other Minority Groups
  • Mexican Americans - made up a quarter of all
    combat troops, 17 earned the Congressional Medal
    of Honor.
  • Native Americans - although they were denied the
    right to vote in 3 states, 25,000 were drafted to
    serve in all branches of the army.
  • Japanese Americans - many in the states forced to
    live in internment camps. Others joined the war
    effort. The 442nd Regimental Combat Team became
    the most decorated unit in the war for their
    efforts in Italy in taking almost 10,000
    casualties.

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25.) End of Depression
  • Millions of workers streamed back into the
    factories to produce airplanes, tanks, and guns.
    The paycheck was very welcome.
  • Consumers now had money to buy appliances and
    luxury items, so even more factories opened to
    meet these needs.

39
26.) Everyone Chips In at Home
  • Roosevelt had to convince business owners not to
    produce luxury goods, but to continue or convert
    to war goods if the war was to be won. Henry
    Ford built a factory to make bombs on assembly
    lines that employed 42,000 people.
  • The government established the cost-plus system -
    the government paid all production costs of goods
    produced for war, plus allowed the company to
    declare part of it as profit.
  • "A dollar year men" were executives who
    volunteered to work for government agencies.
  • Coca-Cola gave discounts to soldiers charging 5
    cents a bottle no matter where they were.
  • Most unions agreed to refrain from striking and
    employers from practicing lockouts during the
    war. This helped but there were still some wild
    cat strikes not endorsed by the unions.
  • The government was willing to spend whatever it
    took to help causing the GNP to double. Thus,
    they raised taxes, launched bond drives and
    borrowed money to meet the costs.
  • By 1945, Americans had produced 100,000 tanks and
    armored cars, 300,000 airplanes, 15 million guns.
    And 41 billion rounds of ammunition.

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27.) Daily Life on the Home front
  • The mood on the home front was one of cooperation
    and optimism.
  • Most supported the war effort and were willing to
    help in any way they could including living with
    shortages and rationing things like zippers
    (metal needed in guns), rubber for toys and
    ladies undergarments needed for uniforms.
  • To save cloth, factories made clothes without
    pockets, suits without vests, and no cuffs on
    pants. Skirts became shorter and narrower and
    womens bathing suits became two pieces exposing
    the midriff.
  • Foods were limited such as sugar, meat and
    coffee.
  • People were making good wages and had money to
    burn. They spent it on books, records and going
    to the movies.
  • The all-American sport of baseball replaced men
    with women as the men had gone off to the war.

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28.) Women and the War
  • During the war, women of all ages went to work,
    but were strongly encouraged to leave their jobs
    once the war was over and the men returned.
  • The worked primarily in the manufacturing
    industry.
  • They still faced discrimination in the work force
    especially African American women receiving less
    pay for the same work.

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29.) The Struggle for Justice at Home
  • The war really helped to stimulate the movement
    for equal right for African Americans.
  • The Jim Crow Laws were still in effect, however,
    especially in the south.
  • The Double V campaign was launched by African
    Americans at home, V for victory against the axis
    powers, and V for victory in the struggle for
    equality at home
  • They also fought for equality using sit-ins which
    paved the way for the civil rights era later.
  • Mexican Americans and Native Americans who had
    also battled discrimination were able to enter
    the work force in greater numbers during the war.
  • In fact Mexican's were recruited to work as farm
    laborers - braceros - but continued to endure
    horrible working conditions, and lower wages
    which led to a terrible riot in 1943 in Los
    Angeles.
  • The Zoot Suit Riots was one such riot where
    sailors in L.A. and residents of Mexican descent
    clashed. The name zoot suit came from a popular
    style of clothing -baggy pants and long jacket-
    Mexican Americans wore. The sailors roamed the
    streets looking for people in such clothing and
    attacked and humiliated them.

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30.) The Japanese
  • They were perhaps treated the worst. Many
    Japanese Americans were rounded up and forced to
    live in internment camps during the war as they
    were not trusted after Pearl Harbor.
  • Executive Order 9066 signed by Roosevelt in
    February of 1942 removed all Japanese Americans
    from the west Coast, and they were not released
    until 1945.
  • Many found no homes to return to as they had been
    seized. This injustice was not recognized until
    Ronald Reagan awarded each surviving internee a
    tax-free payment of 20,000.
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