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The World Goes To War...Again. How The Treaty of Versailles and The Great Depression led the world back to war. World War I Ends and The League of Nations. The world had been at war for years fighting a war that most countries thought would be over by Christmas 13 million soldiers are dead
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The World Goes To War...Again How The Treaty of Versailles and The Great Depression led the world back to war
World War I Ends and The League of Nations • The world had been at war for years fighting a war that most countries thought would be over by Christmas • 13 million soldiers are dead • 20 million would live with their wounds for the rest of their lives • Tens of million civilian casualties • England and France are the victors and impose the Treaty of Versailles on Germany and Austria-Hungary
World War I and the League of Nations • Germany is forced to admit war guilt and has their Empire gutted • Austria-Hungary is broken up into two different countries • Italy is present at The Treaty of Versailles and were denied what they wanted • Russia revolts against the Czar and adopts a Communist System led by Vladimir Lenin • United States tries to remain isolated from the rest of the world and their congress refuses to sign on to the League of Nations
Map of EUROPE BEFORE WORLD WAR I Map of EUROPE After WORLD WAR I
The Creation of The League of Nations • After World War One, no country wanted to ever go to war again • They decided to form a League of Nations to solve the world’s problems before they resulted in war • They sought to solve international incidents through diplomacy • A dispute between Woodrow Wilson and the US Senate meant the United States didn’t join the League of Nations • During the 1920s, the League managed to solve many disputes between nations but it eventually lost credibility
The European Post War Political Climate • In post-war Europe, most countries lost faith in the monarchs who led them into the bloody conflict of World War One • Under the leadership of President Wilson of the USA, the diplomats at the Treaty of Versailles tried to set up democratic governments in the new countries created • Since voters had never gotten to choose their leaders, they had difficulty electing effective politicians
The European Post War Political Climate • The Great Depression caused huge political protests in stable democracies such as USA, Canada and Great Britain, in unsettled countries it was disastrous • People wanted a solution to their hopeless situation • They were ready to follow any leader that promised them quick fixes • They wanted to believe their country was great • They wanted someone else to blame for all their problems • Dictators used this to take over and persuade people into following them
Great Britain Between the wars • Women gained the limited right to vote in 1918 and full right to vote by 1928 • The working class unionised during the 1920s and this led to much labour unrest including an unsuccessful General Strike in 1926 • Through the 1930s there was high unemployment • In 1936, King Edward abdicated the thrown so he could marry Wallace Simpson (an American divorcee) • His brother became King George VI (father of Queen Elizabeth II) • The British wanted to maintain world peace at all costs and would rather negotiate with dictators than fight with them
France Between The Wars • Right wing coalitions dominated the French Political life in the 1920s • They were also hit by The Great Depression • There were many violent political protests and demonstrations • In 1934, the Communists, Socialists and Radicals joined together to form an anti-fascist alliance called the Popular Front • They were elected in 1936 and brought in many social reforms such as 40 hour work week, collective bargaining and paid holidays • They were worried about Hitler’s aggression but favoured appeasement over war • Built the Maginot Line to protect themselves
The Soviet Union Between The Wars • In 1917, after more than a decade of civil unrest, Vladimir Lenin lead the Bolsheviks to overthrow the Russian Czar Nicholas II • The Bolsheviks launched a series of reforms aimed at changing the Soviet Union into a Communist Country (no rich or poor) • Lenin died in 1924 before accomplishing his goals
The Soviet Union Between The Wars • Joseph Stalin was Lenin’s successor. He was a ruthless dictator • Launched a series of “Five Year Plans” to transform Russian Society • He used terror, secret police, the army, and labour camps called ‘Gulags’ to change Russia into an industrial giant • Millions of Soviet citizens died under Stalin’s rule
ItalyBetween The Wars • Benito Mussolini formed the Fascist Party to fight Communism and Democratic Socialism • His followers were known as the “blackshirts” • They broke up trade union meetings and communist rallies with clubs and fists • Used a campaign of terror against their opponents
ItalyBetween The Wars • Widespread poverty and unemployment in Italy after the war • Workers called for a General Strike in 1922 • Mussolini declared that if the government didn’t stop the strike, the “Blackshirts” would • The King of Italy had Mussolini form a government in which he appointed himself dictator • He made opposition parties illegal
The Rise of Fascism Elsewhere in The World - Japan • A group of military leaders took control of the army hoping to create an Empire • Supported by businessmen who wanted more raw materials for their industry • Took control of the government by the 1930s with leader Hideki Tojo
The Rise of Fascism Elsewhere in The World - Spain • In 1936, General Francisco Franco led a military coupe against the elected government • Franco’s goal was to rid Spain of Communists • Supported by the army, rich land owners, the Catholic Church and the Spanish Fascist Party • Civil war lasted until 1939 and Franco was victorious
Canadian Politics in the Late 1930s • R.B. Bennett’s Conservative and William Lyon Mackenzie King’s Liberal parties traded off power in Canada in the 1920s and 1930s • R.B. Bennett was in power until 1921 • Mackenzie King was in power 1921-1930 • R.B. Bennett returned to power from 1930-1935 • Mackenzie Kings Liberals would now rule until 1957
The 1935 Federal Election • R.B. Bennett proposed an 8 hour work day, a minimum wage, unemployment insurance and price controls • Mackenzie King was against government intervention in the economy and campaigned on the platform “King of Chaos” • Many Canadians thought the Conservatives had not acted fast enough and that the current proposal was an election ploy or “too little too late” • Mackenzie King and the Liberals were swept into power in a landslide since the voters were tired of Bennett
Canada Emerges From The Great Depression • During the Great Depression the provinces were responsible for unemployment relief but only the Federal Government was able to collect the taxes to pay for it • In 1937, Mackenzie King set up the Rowell-Sirios Commission to examine the relationship between the federal and provincial governments and reform the tax system • The results of the Commission were; • Equalization payments to the less wealthy provinces • The Federal Government assumes responsibility for relief payments • The Report was not released until after 1940 when World War II had already pulled us out of the Great Depression