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Miscellaneous Topics from WWI

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Title: Miscellaneous Topics from WWI


1
Miscellaneous Topics from WWI
Before
After
2
Miscellaneous Topics from WWI
  • Michael Gabriel Captain, Espionage
  • Teagan Miller Corporal, Women in the War
  • Adrian Tostado Sergeant, Rationing
  • Jake Howell Lieutenant, African Americans
  • Dan Gaide Private, Genocide

3
Black Tom Incident
  • Believed German set off ammunition rounds
  • Ammunition was for the allies
  • Factories with contract were attacked
  • Over 2 million pound of ammunitions
  • Island was named for the fishermen that lived
    there
  • One of the guards set off the fire alarm

4
Mata Hari
  • Born on 1876
  • Was an exotic dancer in Paris
  • Double agent with France and Germany
  • Court marshaled by the French government
  • Killed by a French firing squad

5
Positive Espionage
  • Involves the accusation of intelligence
  • Collection, translation, maps, photographs,
    codes, and ciphers
  • Positive effects- Germans defeated two Russian
    Generals
  • Not really apparent in World War 1

6
Negative intelligence
  • The manipulation of information of broadcast
  • Propaganda, counter espionage, codes and
    ciphers, and forgery
  • Swayed Americans opinion about war
  • British defeated Germans in Battle of Jutland

7
Allied psychology of WW1
  • World War One modern psychology
  • Used radio and printing press
  • Used airplanes and special artillery rounds
  • The allies used hand grenades and leaflet mortars
  • The used special leaflet balloons to get special
    info to allies

8
African American Soldiers
  • Segregated Units
  • 171 African American troops were awarded the
    French Legion of Honor
  • Received Officers training in Des Moines, Iowa
  • Discrimination

9
369th Infantry Narration
  • In these woods, at the head of this
  • company, Captain Boutte, and the other line
  • officers fought tenaciously, heroically- so
    heroically that the Major commanding stated to me
    that the world had never produced gamer fighters
    than the colored men who made up his battalion of
    the 369th Infantry
  • -Emmett J. Scott
  • Scotts official narration of the American Negro
    in WWI .

10
African American Soldiers
  • Grandfather Clause kept African Americans from
    voting
  • Segregated Housing
  • Scottsboro, Alabama nine African American boys,
    accused of raping two white females
  • Harlem Renaissance

11
African-American Soldiers
  • African American Bands
  • The most famous African American band was in the
    369th Infantry
  • The band leaders name was named James Reese
    Europe
  • A vaudeville star named Noble Sissle was in
    Europes band

12
African American Soldiers
  • The 369th Infantry, also known as the Harlem
    Hellfighters
  • They were attacked because of racial
    discrimination during a parade in Spartanburg,
    South Carolina
  • Sgt. Henry Johnson was the first to receive the
    Croix de Guerre, followed by the entire regiment
  • Awarded Croix de Guerre by French

13
African American Soldiers
  • Spanish Flu- an epidemic that killed millions of
    people during 1918-1919
  • Herbert Wright- upset musician, went insane and
    stabbed James Reese Europe
  • 370th Infantry- an All black regiment from
    Illinois that received medals
  • Rhine River and the Harlem Hellfighters- were the
    first Allied Regiment to reach the Rhine River

14
Genocide
  • Genocide- killing members of a group, by
    forcibly transferring children, or causing
    serious physical or mental harm
  • First Turkish invasions- two million Armenians
    were killed
  • Armenia absorbed into the Ottoman Empire
  • Turks seized control of the government
  • Anti Armenian raids

15
Genocide
  • The difference between Turks and Armenians
  • Armenians were very educated professional and
    wealthy
  • Turks were less wealthy often illiterate and
    worked on farms
  • WWI breaks out Turks sided with the Central
    Powers
  • Turks seize all Armenian weapons.
  • Armenian soldiers turned into slaves
  • Elimination of Armenians

16
Genocide
  • Arrests of Armenians
  • Taken from their towns to the outskirts of their
    town and shot to death
  • Armenian women, children,
  • and the elderly taken on death marches
  • Homes and villages left behind

17
Genocide
  • Armenian Children taken in by Turks
  • Children spared from death marches
  • Raids and stealing from the caravans encouraged
  • Death march routes covered hundreds of miles and
    lasted hundreds of days

18
Genocide
  • The death march toll 75 percent of the Armenians
    on the marches died
  • Countryside scattered with corpses
  • Turkey issued warning from Allied powers
  • Russia attacks Eastern front

19
Genocide
  • "All truth passes through three stages First,
    it is ridiculed Second, it is violently
    opposed andThird, it is accepted as
    self-evident." Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

20
Woman
  • Navy recruited 13,000 women
  • First women to get rank
  • Served in hospitals over seas
  • Nurses served in Belgium, Italy, and England
  • 3 nurses awarded distinguished service medal
  • Highest noncombat award

21
  • Nurses wounded and buried far from home
  • 23 years before woman considered part of
    military
  • Women in navy were called yeoman
  • Women sang songs during this time
  • One called THE CALL
  • Woman commonly used in propaganda posters

22
  • Woman referred to as yeomettes by the men
  • Banner reads While the boys were away we worked
    for victory
  • Woman demanded respect from the men

23
  • No woman/nurses served in the army
  • Oleda Christides was and unsung woman
  • Unsung woman not in text
  • Woman only wanted by navy

24
THE CALL
  • Who's for the trench Are you, my laddie?Who'll
    follow French Will you, my laddie?Who's
    fretting to begin,Who's going out to win?And
    who wants to save his skin Do you, my laddie?
  • Who's for the khaki suit Are you, my
    laddie?Who longs to charge and shoot Do you,
    my laddie?Who's keen on getting fit,Who means
    to show his grit,And who'd rather wait a bit
    Would you, my laddie?
  • Who'll earn the Empire's thanks Will you, my
    laddie?Who'll swell the victor's ranks Will
    you, my laddie?When that procession
    comes,Banners and rolling drums Who'll stand
    and bite his thumbs Will you, my laddie?

25
Preserving Supplies in World War One
  • Supplies were preserved and held onto for as long
    as possible
  • To hold onto supplies, the war needed to keep
    going
  • Keeping the war going was bad, but it helped
    business owners sell their products
  • Rationing was introduced to the U.S. by Britain
  • Food rationing was how it started so the British
    could stop food shortages

26
The Home front and Liberty Bonds
  • The home front never actually holds battles in
    its country
  • The home front is the country opposing the
    country that the actual war is held
  • Liberty bonds are investments by the public into
    a war for their country
  • It works by the person who invested the money
    getting their money back whenever they want plus
    interest that the government pays
  • Although the government ends up paying more
    money, they need these bonds because it gives
    them instant money for war

27
Food in the Trenches
  • There was very little food for soldiers in the
    trenches of the war
  • Britain's had 300,000 field workers making food
    and sending it to the soldiers fighting against
    the French
  • Food in the trenches usually included this daily
  • 20 ounces of bread, 16 ounces of flour instead
    of above, 3 ounces of cheese, 5/8 ounces of tea,
    4 ounces of jam, ½ ounce of salt, 1/36 ounce of
    pepper, 1/20 ounce of mustard, 8 ounces of fresh
    vegetables, 1/10 gill lime if vegetables not
    issued, ½ gill of rum, maximum of 20 ounces of
    tobacco, 1/3 chocolate optional, 4 ounces of
    oatmeal instead of bread, 1 pint of porter
    instead of rum, 4 ounces of dried fruit instead
    of jam, 4 ounces of butter/margarine, and 2
    ounces of dried vegetables.

28
Weapons and Artillery
  • The weapons that were used for the war were
    machine guns, tanks, new planes, poison gas,
    zeppelin, rifles, torpedoes, and artillery guns.
  • Bayonets were issued for soldiers rifles
  • Machine guns were used on flat surfaces and had
    the power of about 100 regular guns. They were
    used when big fire power.
  • Germans used a poisonous gas usually mustard gas
    which suffocated their enemy to death
  • The Zeppelin and airplanes were new ways to hurt
    the opponent by aerial attacks
  • Tanks were new found ways to destroy the opponent
    because they are so big and they have the power
    of machine guns

29
Poem By Wilfred Owen
  • Mental Cases
  • Who are these? Why sit they here in
    twilight?Wherefore rock they, purgatorial
    shadows,Drooping tongues from jaws that slob
    their relish,Baring teeth that leer like skulls'
    teeth wicked?Stroke on stroke of pain, - but
    what slow panic, (5)Gouged these chasms round
    their fretted sockets?Ever from their hair and
    through their hands' palmsMisery swelters.
    Surely we have perishedSleeping, and walk hell
    but who these hellish?
  • These are men whose minds the Dead have
    ravished. (10)Memory fingers in their hair of
    murders,Multitudinous murders they once
    witnessed.Wading sloughs of flesh these helpless
    wander,Treading blood from lungs that had loved
    laughter.Always they must see these things and
    hear them, (15)Batter of guns and shatter of
    flying muscles,Carnage incomparable, and human
    squanderRucked too thick for these men's
    extrication.
  • Therefore still their eyeballs shrink
    tormentedBack into their brains, because on
    their sense (20)Sunlight seems a blood-smear
    night comes blood-blackDawn breaks open like a
    wound that bleeds afresh. Thus their heads wear
    this hilarious, hideous,Awful falseness of
    set-smiling corpses. Thus their hands are
    plucking at each other (25)Picking at the
    rope-knouts of their scourgingSnatching after
    us who smote them, brother,Pawing us who dealt
    them war and madness

30
Bibliography
  • African American Odyssey . Library of Congress.
    22 Feb. 2006 lthttp//memory.loc.gov/ammem/aaohtml/
    exhibit/aopart7.htmlgt.
  • African American Soldiers from WWI-WWII. 22 Feb.
    2006 lthttp//www.redstone.army.mil/history/integra
    te/CHRON3.htmlgt. African American Soldiers.
    NARA. 22 Feb. 2006 lthttp//www.archives.gov/educat
    ion/index.htmlgt.
  • Barber, Lincoln. World War 1 The Westen Front.
    London Hodder Wayland, 2003.
  • Bosco, Peter. America at War World War 1. New
    York Library of Congress Cataloging, 1991.
  • Wukovits, John. Strategic Battles. San Diego
    Lucent Books Inc., 2002.
  • Carroll, Andrew. War Letters. 1st ed. New York
    Scribner, 2001.
  • Duffy, Michael . Mata Hari . 27 Dec 2001. 15 Feb.
    2006 lthttp//www.firstworldwar.com/bio/matahari.ht
    mgt.
  • Gavur, . "The First Genocide of the 20th
    Century." www.ArmenianGenocide.com. 2000.
  • Karnoutos , Carmela . Black Tom explosion. 21
    Feb. 2006 lthttp//www.njcu.edu/programs/jchistory/
    Pages/B_Pages/Black_Tom_Explosion.htmgt.
  • Smith , Thomas . "World War One Espionage ."
    World war one espionage . 11 Dec 2001. 16 Feb.
    2006 lthttp//resc.net/ww1esp/ww1esp.pdfgt.
  • The First Genocide of the 20th Century. 18 Feb.
    2006 lthttp//www.armeniangenocide.com/forum/showth
    read.php?t901gt.
  • Wilson, Barara. WWI Thirty thousand woman were
    there. 22 Feb. 2006 lthttp//userpages.aug.com/capt
    barb/femvets4.htmlgt.
  • Iavarone, M. (1996). Retrieved Feb. 23, 2006,
    from World War One- Trenches On the Web Web site
    www.worldwar1.com.
  • Duffy, M. (2000). Retrieved Feb. 23, 2006, from A
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  • www.firstworldwar.com/. World War One . 22 Feb.
    2006 http//www.psywarrior.com/WWIAllies.html
  • Barber, N. (2004). World war 1 the western
    front. 1st ed. North Mankato, Min Smart Apple
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