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Unit 11 Chapters 34-36

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Unit 11. Chapters 34-36. F.D.R- the Great Depression and WWII. The New Deal ... Massive spending on equipment, supplies for WW II end Depression ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Unit 11 Chapters 34-36


1
Unit 11Chapters 34-36
  • F.D.R- the Great Depression and WWII

2
The New Deal
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt sitting in
the Oval Office.
3
Electing Franklin Delano Roosevelt
  • Reform-minded projects friendliness, confidence
  • Democrats overwhelmingly win Presidency, Senate,
    and House
  • With Brain Trust, FDR formulates policies to
    alleviate problems
  • New Deal relief for needy, economic recovery,
    financial reform

4
The Hundred Days
  • FDR launches Hundred Days passes over 15 major
    New Deal laws
  • Emergency Banking Relief Act permits Treasury
    Dept. to inspect banks
  • - decides which are insolvent, sound, or need
    loans
  • - public confidence in banks revived
  • An Important Fireside Chat
  • FDR gives fireside chats radio talks explaining
    New Deal measures
  • First chat discusses need for public support of
    government, banks

5
Regulating Banking and Finance
  • Glass-Steagall Act establishes Federal Deposit
    Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
  • Federal Securities Act companies must give all
    information on stocks
  • Securities and Exchange Commission created to
    regulate stock market
  • 21st Amendment repeals prohibition by end of 1933

6
Other Alphabet Legislations
  • Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)
  • Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
  • Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
  • Public Works Administration (PWA)
  • Civil Works Administration (CWA)
  • National Recovery Administration (NRA)
  • Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
  • Federal Emergency Relief Administration

7
Opposition to the New Deal
  • Deficit spending spending more money than
    government takes in
  • - funds New Deal
  • Liberals New Deal does not do enough to help
    poor, fix economy
  • Conservatives New Deal used to control business,
    socialize economy

8
Court Packing Scheme
  • FDRs biggest political LOSS!!!!!!
  • Frustrated w/ conservative judges That are OLD
    tries to convince Congress to allow him to
    appoint judges to help judges over 70
  • Many see this as an attempt at a dictatorship
  • Own party declines to pass legislation.
  • Suddenly court becomes open to reform, others
    retire, and others die legally allowing FDR to
    appoint 7 new Judges

9
The Second Hundred Days
  • Reelecting FDR
  • 1936, Democrats win presidency, large majorities
    in both houses
  • First time most African Americans vote Democratic
  • First time labor unions support presidential
    candidate
  • Elect popular First Lady as well Eleanor
    Roosevelt

10
More Alphabet Soup and Acts
  • 1936 Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act
    replaces AAA
  • Works Progress Administration(WPA)
  • National Youth Administration (NYA)
  • National Labor Relations Act
  • - protects right to join unions, collective
    bargaining
  • - prohibits unfair labor practices
  • National Labor Relations Board hears testimony
    about labor practices
  • Holds elections to determine if workers want
    unions
  • Fair Labor Standards Act sets maximum hours,
    minimum wage

11
The Grand Daddy
  • The Social Security Act
  • 1935, Social Security Act creates Social Security
    system provides
  • - insurance for retirees 65 or older
  • - unemployment compensation
  • - aid to disabled, families with children

12
Women and African- Americans Make their Mark
  • Frances Perkins, secretary of labor, is first
    female cabinet member
  • FDR also appoints 2 women as diplomats, 1 as
    federal judge
  • Educator Mary McLeod Bethune heads Division of
    Negro Affairs of NYA
  • Helps organize Black Cabinet of
    African-American advisers
  • FDR appoints more than 100 African Americans to
    government

13
The President Fails to Support Civil Rights
  • FDR afraid of upsetting white Southern Democratic
    voters
  • Refuses to approve antilynching law, end to poll
    tax
  • New Deal agencies discriminate against African
    Americans
  • - pay them lower wages, favor whites
  • Blacks still support FDR because overall life
    improves during his watch

14
FDR Wins in 1936
  • Pro-labor legislation leads unions to donate
    money for FDR reelection
  • Political organizations in large Northern cities
    support FDR
  • Urban, religious, ethnic groups also support FDR
  • - FDR appoints officials of urban- immigrant
    background

15
Culture in the 1930s
  • Movies are a Hit
  • About 65 of population goes to movies once a
    week
  • Films offer escape from reality show wealth,
    romance, fun
  • Gone With the Wind perhaps most famous
  • film of era
  • Musicalslive action or animatedway to forget
    problems
  • Comedies, realistic gangster movies especially
    popular
  • Several films present New Deal policies in
    positive light

16
Radio Entertains
  • 90 of households have a radio families listen
    together every day
  • Dramas, variety shows play in evening
  • Orson Welles actor, director, producer, writer
  • Soap operas for homemakers broadcast in middle of
    day
  • Childrens shows after school hours
  • Immediate news coverage becomes customary

17
Diverse Writers Depict American Life
  • Federal Writers Project supports many who become
    major writers
  • Richard Wright, African-American author, writes
    Native Son
  • John Steinbeck writes The Grapes of Wrath about
    Dust Bowl migrants
  • Some writers examine difficulty of life in 1930s
  • Others show dignity of ordinary people, values of
    small-town life

18
Supporters and Critics of the New Deal
  • Conservatives think FDR made federal government
    too large
  • - stifled free enterprise, individual
    initiative
  • Liberals didnt do enough to socialize economy,
    end inequalities
  • Supporters did help country recover from
    economic difficulties

19
The Impact of the New Deal
  • FDR expands power of federal government,
    president
  • New Deal does not end Depression does reduce
    suffering, give hope
  • Federal government goes into debt to create jobs,
    give aid
  • Massive spending on equipment, supplies for WW II
    end Depression

20
Enduring Reforms Made to the Following
  • Banking and Finance
  • Social Security
  • The Rural Scene
  • The Environment

21
World War Looms
Adolf Hitler speaking over the radio microphone
(May 9, 1934).
22
Failures of the World War I Peace Settlement
  • Treaty of Versailles causes anger, resentment in
    Europe
  • Germany resents blame for war, loss of colonies,
    border territories
  • Russia resents loss of lands used to create
    other nations
  • New democracies flounder under social, economic
    problems
  • Dictators rise driven by nationalism, desire for
    more territory

23
Joseph Stalin transforms the Soviet Union
  • 1922 V. I. Lenin establishes Soviet Union after
    civil war
  • 1924 Joseph Stalin takes over
  • - replaces private farms with collectives
  • - creates second largest industrial power
    famines kill millions
  • - purges anyone who threatens his power
    8 13 million killed
  • Totalitarian government exerts almost complete
    control over people

24
The Rise of Fascism
  • Fascism stresses nationalism, needs of state
    above individual
  • Benito Mussolini plays on fears of economic
    collapse, communism
  • Adolf Hitler leader of National Socialist German
    Workers Party (NAZIS)
  • Mein Kampfbasic beliefs of Nazism, based on
    extreme nationalism
  • Wants to unite German-speaking people, enforce
    racial purification
  • Dismantles democratic Weimar Republic
    establishes Third Reich

25
Militarists Gain Control in Japan
  • 1931, Nationalist military leaders seize
    Manchuria
  • League of Nations condemns action Japan quits
    League
  • Militarists take control of Japanese government

26
Aggression in Europe and Africa
  • 1933, Hitler quits League 1935, begins military
    buildup
  • Sends troops into Rhineland, League does nothing
    to stop him
  • 1935, League fails to stop Mussolinis invasion
    of Ethiopia

27
Civil War Breaks Out in Spain
  • 1936, General Francisco Franco rebels against
    Spanish republic
  • - Spanish Civil War begins
  • Hitler, Mussolini back Franco Stalin aids
    opposition
  • Western democracies remain neutral
  • War leads to Rome-Berlin Axisalliance between
    Italy and Germany
  • 1939, Franco wins war, becomes fascist dictator

28
Americans Cling to Isolationism
  • Public is outraged at profits of banks, arms
    dealers during WW I
  • Americans become isolationists FDR backs away
    from foreign policy
  • 1935 Neutrality Acts try to keep U.S. out of
    future wars
  • - outlaws arms sales, loans to nations at war

29
Neutrality Breaks Down
  • 1937 Japan launches new attack on China FDR
    sends aid to China
  • FDR wants to isolate aggressor nations to stop
    war
  • 1939, FDR persuades Congress to pass
    cash-and-carry provision
  • Argues will help France, Britain defeat Hitler,
    keep U.S. out of war
  • FDR tells nation if Britain falls, Axis powers
    free to conquer world
  • - U.S. must become arsenal of democracy
  • By late 1940, Britain has no more cash to buy
    U.S. arms
  • 1941 Lend-Lease Act U.S. to lend or lease
    supplies for defense
  • Shoot on Sight

30
Events that lead to WAR in Eur.
  • 1938, German troops march into Austria unopposed,
    union complete
  • 1938, Prime Ministers Daladier, Neville
    Chamberlain meet with Hitler
  • Sign Munich Agreement, hand Sudetenland over to
    Germany
  • Winston Churchill condemns appeasement policy,
    warns war will follow
  • Appeasementgiving up principles to pacify an
    aggressor
  • Stalin, Hitler sign nonaggression pactwill not
    attack each other
  • Sept. 1939, Hitler overruns Poland in blitzkrieg,
    lightning war

31
  • Holocaust
  • Genicide

32
FDR Plans for War
  • FDR, Churchill issue Atlantic Charterjoint
    declaration of war aims
  • Alliesnations that fight Axis powers 26 nations
    sign Declaration

33
The Attack on Pearl Harbor
  • December 7, 1941 Japanese attack Pearl Harbor
  • 2,403 Americans killed 1,178 wounded
  • Over 300 aircraft, 21 ships destroyed or damaged
  • Congress approves FDRs request for declaration
    of war against Japan
  • Germany, Italy declare war on U.S.
  • U.S. unprepared to fight in both Atlantic,
    Pacific Oceans

34
Mobilizing for Defense
  • Selective Service and the GI
  • After Pearl Harbor, 5 million men volunteer for
    military service
  • 10 million more drafted to meet needs of
    two-front war
  • Includes women and minorities in great numbers

35
The Industrial Response
  • Factories convert from civilian to war production
  • Shipyards, defense plants expand, new ones built
  • Produce ships, arms rapidly
  • - use prefabricated parts
  • - people work at record speeds
  • Nearly 18 million workers in war industries 6
    million are women
  • Over 2 million minorities hired face strong
    discrimination at first
  • Organizes march on D.C. FDR executive order
    forbids discrimination

36
Mobilization of Scientists
  • Office of Scientific Research and Development
    technology, medicine
  • Manhattan Project develops atomic bomb
  • J. Robert Oppenheimer is research director
  • July 1945, atomic bomb tested in New Mexico
    desert
  • President Truman orders military to drop 2 atomic
    bombs on Japan

37
The Federal Government Takes Control
  • Economic Controls
  • Office of Price Administration (OPA) freezes
    prices, fights inflation
  • Higher taxes, purchase of war bonds lower demand
    for scarce goods
  • War Production Board (WPB) says which companies
    convert production
  • - allocates raw materials
  • - organizes collection of recyclable
    materials
  • Rationing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

38
Steps towards V Victory in Europe
  • Battle of Atlantic
  • Battle of Stalingrad
  • North Africa
  • Italian Campaign
  • D-Day
  • Battle of Bulge
  • Battle of Berlin
  • V-E Day

39
Roosevelts Death
  • FDR dies April 12 Vice President Harry S. Truman
    becomes president
  • May 8, 1945, V-E Day Victory in Europe Day

40
Steps that lead to V-J Day
  • Doolittles Raid
  • Battle of the Coral Sea
  • The Battle of Midway
  • Iwo Jima
  • The Battle for Okinawa
  • Hiroshima and Nagasaki
  • September 2, 1945 Japan surrenders

41
The Yalta Conference
  • February 1945, FDR, Churchill, Stalin meet in
    Yalta
  • - discuss post-war world
  • FDR, Churchill concession temporarily divide
    Germany into 4 parts
  • Stalin promises free elections in Eastern Europe
    will fight Japan
  • FDR gets support for conference to establish
    United Nations

42
The War Trials
  • Nuremberg trials 24 Nazi leaders tried,
    sentenced
  • - charged with crimes against humanity,
    against the peace, war crimes
  • Establish principle that people responsible for
    own actions in war
  • Over 1,100 Japanese tried, sentenced

43
The Home Front
  • Economic Gains
  • Defense industries boom, unemployment falls to
    1.2 in 1944
  • - average pay rises 10 during war
  • Farmers prosper from rising crop prices, increase
    in production
  • - many pay off mortgages
  • Percentage of women in work force rises to 35

44
  • Social Adjustments
  • Families adjust to fathers in military mothers
    rear children alone
  • Families must get to know each other again after
    fathers return
  • Many couples rush to marry before husband goes
    overseas
  • 1944 GI Bill of Rights or Servicemens
    Readjustment Act
  • - pays education loan guarantees for homes,
    new businesses
  • War triggers mass migrations to towns with
    defense industries

45
Internment of Japanese Americans
  • Japanese Americans Placed in Internment
  • Camps
  • Hawaii governor forced to order internment
    (confinement) of Japanese
  • 1942 FDR signs removal of Japanese Americans in
    four states
  • U.S. Army forces 110,000 Japanese Americans into
    prison camps
  • 1944 Korematsu v. United StatesCourt rules in
    favor of internment
  • After war, Japanese American Citizens League
    pushes for compensation
  • 1988, Congress grants 20,000 to everyone sent to
    relocation camp

46
  • Next on the Agenda Post War America and the Cold
    War
  • We are close to the finish line GET focused
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