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World War II

World War II. 1939-1945. Causes in Europe. Territorial expansion by the nations of Germany and Italy Both nations were ruled by Fascist dictators Adolf Hitler in Germany Benito Mussolini in Italy Italy had taken over Ethiopia and Albania

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World War II

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  1. World War II 1939-1945

  2. Causes in Europe • Territorial expansion by the nations of Germany and Italy • Both nations were ruled by Fascist dictators • Adolf Hitler in Germany • Benito Mussolini in Italy • Italy had taken over Ethiopia and Albania • Germany had violated the Treaty of Versailles by building up its military and creating an air force • Germany had taken over an area next to France called the Rhineland, Austria, and was planning a move on neighboring Czechoslovakia • In September, 1938, Hitler demanded the right to annex the Sudetenland, the western border region of Czechoslovakia, next to Germany, where 3.5 million Germans lived.

  3. Causes in Europe • To avoid a war over Czechoslovakia, the British and French prime ministers met with Hitler at the MUNICH CONFERENCE (Sept. 29-30, 1938) and followed a policy of APPEASEMENT—giving in to Hitler’s demands. Hitler was to be given the Sudetenland, and he pledged to claim no more land in Czechoslovakia or anywhere else. • The British and French were relieved to have avoided war, but Hitler will soon prove he cannot be trusted • In less than 6 months, Hitler invaded the rest of Czechoslovakia • In August 1939, Hitler signed a non-aggression pact with the Soviet Union, in which the countries agreed to split the country of Poland between them.

  4. Causes in Europe • Hitler then became more forceful in his demands for land from Poland. • Alarmed by Hitler’s demands, Great Britain agreed to aid Poland if Germany attacked. • On September 1, 1939, Germany invaded an unsuspecting and unprepared Poland, BEGINNING WORLD WAR II

  5. Causes in Asia • Territorial expansion by Japan, which needed land and resources for its growing population and industry • Japan was controlled by the Japanese military, which favored expansion. • Japan had invaded and controlled much of neighboring China by 1938. • Japan was also establishing military bases in French Indochina (now Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos) • To protect Japanese expansion, the US placed an embargo on scrap metal, oil, and aviation fuel to Japan—these were items desperately needed by the Japanese military. • Meanwhile, the Japanese were planning a surprise attack on our major Pacific naval base at PEARL HARBOR in Hawaii. • The surprise attack took place on DECEMBER 7, 1941, AND BROUGHT THE US INTO WORL WAR II • The attack sank or damaged 8 battleships, destroyed almost 200 airplanes, and killed or wounded over 3,000 military personnel.

  6. Axis Powers--Opponents • Germany • Italy • Japan • The so-called Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis

  7. Allied Powers--Allies • Great Britain • France • Soviet Union • United States

  8. Homefront

  9. Women • More than 200,000 women served in the military • As men went to war, women took their places in offices and factories—this provided women with job opportunities in new areas.

  10. Rationing • Limited the use of certain important foods and materials by civilians—first priority for these items was given to military • People could not purchase certain items without a government-issued coupon

  11. War Bonds • Sold to help pay for war • Movie stars and entertainers help to sell war bonds • Government also raised taxes to finance war.

  12. Japanese Internment • The attack on Pearl Harbor led to suspicion and dislike of Japanese immigrants • Under the authority of Executive Order 9066, signed by FDR on Feb. 19, 1942, the military forced 110,000 Japanese-Americans from their homes and placed them in interment camps on federal lands. • Much of the land was in desert or swamp areas with primitive housing • 2/3 of those interned were American citizens

  13. Tuskegee Airmen • Trained at Tuskegee Institute in Alabama • First black combat unit in the Army Air Corps • Flew over 500 missions over France, Germany, North Africa, and Eastern Europe • The unit earned the Distinguished Flying Cross for their heroism

  14. Wartime National Leaders • President Franklin D. Roosevelt—US • President Harry S. Truman—US—after FDR’s death in 1945 • Prime Minister Winston Churchill—Great Britain • Communist Dictator Joseph Stalin—Soviet Union • Nazi Dictator Adolf Hitler—Germany • Fascist Dictator Benito Musso—Italy • Emperor Hirohito—Japan • Prime Minister General Tojo Hideki—Japan • General Charles de Gaulle—leader of French forces-in-exile (Free France) after France surrendered to Germany

  15. Turning Point Battles/Allied Victories • MIDWAY (June, 1942)—US sinks 4 Japanese aircraft carriers and destroys 253 Japanese planes; first major battle fought by planes launched from aircraft carriers; first US victory in Pacific; Japanese navy never recovered from these losses. • STALINGRAD (Fall 1942-January 1943)—Germans attacked and surrounded key city of Stalingrad in Soviet Union; Soviet army launched a counterattack and eventually forced German army to surrender. • North Africa—EL ALAMEIN (November 1942)—British troops defeat Germans. • OPERATION OVERLORD—INVASION OF NORMANDY, FRANCE (June 6, 1944) better known as D-DAY

  16. US Military Leaders • General Dwight D. Eisenhower—will eventually become commander-in-chief of all Allied Forces in Europe and will head up D-Day invasion. • General George Patton—famous American tank commander in Europe. • General Douglas MacArthur—Allied commander-in-chief in Pacific area.

  17. Key Pacific Battles • Guadalcanal—1943 • General MacArthur’s return to the Philippines—Oct. 1944 • Iwo Jima—Feb. 1945; 25,000 American casualties • Okinawa—April to June 1945; American ships were attacked by KAMIKAZES (Japanese suicide pilots); over 2,000 kamikaze attacks on landing fleet.

  18. Atomic Bomb • Manhattan Project—the top secret project to develop an atomic weapon begun by President Roosevelt. • After FDR’s death, President Truman decided to drop atomic bombs on Japan rather than risk the estimated 1 million US causalities that were predicted in an invasion of the Japanese homeland. • On August 6, 1945, the B-29 bomber ENOLA GAY dropped an atomic bomb on the Japanese city of HIROSHIMA • On August 9, 1945, the Japanese city of NAGASAKI was bombed.

  19. Victory • V-E Day (Victory in Europe Day)—May 8, 1945 • V-J Day (Victory in Japan Day)—August 15, 1945

  20. Holocaust • This refers to Hitler’s attempt to kill the Jews • 6 million European Jews died in Hitler’s network of concentration camps and death camps. • Many died in gas chambers and had their bodies cremated. • The most famous death/extermination camp was at Auschwitz in Poland • Over 2 million Jews were killed there • 6 million other people whom Hitler and the Nazis considered inferior were also killed • Gypsies • Slavs • Prostitutes • Handicapped (mentally and physically) • Terminally Ill • The Old • Homosexuals • Political Protestors

  21. New Weapons/Technology of World War II • Aircraft Carrier • Parachutes • Atomic Bombs • Long-range bombing by airplane • Radar • Amphibious landings—from boats onto land (Pacific island landings and D-Day landing) • Antibiotics—to prevent infections • Jet planes • Rockets

  22. United Nations • Its purpose was similar to the League of Nations founded after WWI—to be a peacekeeping organization, settling disputes among nations peacefully • The US did join the UN • Its headquarters is in New York, New York

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