Transcript D – Day

World War II
By Jordan Eudy
Causes of US entering WWII
Military Support of
Allies -Neutrality
Act and Lend-Lease
allow US to supply
Britain with war
goods
German Sub
Attacks on US
naval destroyers
while escorting
British ships
Japanese
Imperialism –
US economic
sanctions
against Japan
to protest
aggression
December 7, 1941
Japan attacks Pearl
Harbor
US Enters WWII
December 8, 1941
Allies v. Axis Powers
► Allies
 Great Britain
 France
 Soviet Union (after
6/1941)
 U.S. (after 12/1941)
 Plus many smaller
European nations
► Axis
Powers
 Germany
 Italy
 Japan
Pearl Harbor
►
Japan was working on expanding empire
throughout the Pacific
► The
U.S. had a trade embargo on Japan to
try and deter Japan from invading countries
► U.S.
was able to intercept and break Japan's
secret codes
► Intercepted
the code about Pearl Harbor sent the message on a slower telegram (by
accident) to warn U.S. Navy about attack
Pearl Harbor Continued
It was a Sunday morning - U.S. military was taken off
guard
2 full blown attacks on Pearl Harbor December 7,
1941
Impact/Damage on U.S.
►
►
►
o
o
o
2,400 U.S. military and civilians lost their lives
1,178 U.S. military and civilians wounded
18 ships and 350 planes sunk or damaged
Pearl Harbor Continued
► Japan
viewed as a stunning victory
► December
Japan
► December
8, 1941, U.S. declares war on
11, 1941, Germany and Italy
declare war on U.S.
Battle of the Atlantic
►
1939 – 1945 (Jan. 1942 – July 1943 were decisive)
►
German U-Boats were sinking unprotected U.S. and other Allies'
merchant ships
►
Allies began using convoys to protect ships
 Convoys or (Liberty ship) were much like U-boats, but cheaper and harder
to sink
 The United States began building ships through the automobile factories.
►
The Allies also used a sonar system to detect German U-Boats
►
The Germans were very successful in the beginning, but by mid 1943, the Allies had the upper hand
Battles of the Pacific
► Going
against the Japanese
► Working to stop Japanese’s stratagies if
island hopping.
► After Pearl Harbor, Japanese Americans
were sent to Japanese American Relocation
camps, which after the War came back and
said it was in violation of Civil Liberties.
Mobilizing America to War
► Converting
the Economy
 Churchill quote on America after Pearl Harbor
bombing… “Once the fire is lighted under it
there is no limit to the power it can generate.”
 Industrial output outsourced twice as much as
German workers and five times more than
Japanese workers.
Roosevelt’s Incentive
► Government
signed COST-PLUS contractsgovernment agreed to pay a company
whatever it cost to make a product plus a
guaranteed percentage of the costs as
profit
► Reconstruction Finance Corporation
(RFC)- allowed the opportunity to make
loans to companies to help them cover the
cost of converting to war production.
Transforming Industry
► Automobile
Industry-
 Jeeps, Tanks, Trucks, artillery, riffles, mines,
helmets, pontoon bridges, cooking pots, and
other war needs.
Ship Yards-Liberty Ship
Building an Army
► Selective
Service and Training Act (first
peacetime draft in history)
► G.I’s “Government Issue”, brought by the
government issued uniforms, boots, exc.
Hints the nickname “G.I”
► Basic Training
 Segregated (Tuskegee Airmen)
 Women in the military in 1942, Women’s Army
Auxiliary Corps (WAAC)  (WAC) and were in
the Navy, Coast Guard, marines, army, nurses
Americans entrance into war
► Poorly




Trained
No military experience
Officers had never seen combat
Not organized, yet performed well in combat
“They walk like free men.”
 Developing the Navajo Code Talkers
►Navajos
were used to come in and help transfer
codes that couldn’t be transferred and were easier to
relay then the long messages they had.
SKIP TO SLIDE 47
PROJECT BEGINS HERE
"The Battle of the Atlantic was the only thing that really
frightened me" - Winston Churchill.
Battle of Stalingrad
(June 1941 – January 31, 1943)
► Germans
violated nonaggression pact with
Soviet Union and attacked
► Hitler
hoped to captured Soviet oil fields
► Germans
city)
► Winter
nearly won (controlled 9/10 of the
of 1943 hit
Battle of Stalingrad cont…
► Hitler
forced Germans to stay put
► Soviets
used to their advantage and won
► Soviets
lost 1,100,000 people in this battle
► Turning
► From
point in WWII
that point on, Soviet army began to move
westward towards Germany
Normandy Invasion (D-Day)
► June
6, 1944
► During
this time, Soviet Union was pushing into Poland
and Allies were pushing North in Italy
► Generals
Dwight D. Eisenhower and George Patton
influential in leading attack
►3
million ally troops to attack
Normandy Invasion cont.
D – Day







60 mile stretch of beach
156,000 troops
4,000 landing craft
600 warships
11,000 planes
Largest land-sea-air operation in history
Omaha beach known as one of the most
brutal areas
►
The D-Day Museum in Portsmouth, England claims a total of
2,500 Allied troops died, while German forces suffered between
4,000 and 9,000 total casualties on D-Day.
►
The Heritage Foundation in the U.S. claims 4,900 U.S. dead on
D-Day
►
The U.S. Army Center of Military History cites a total casualty
figure for U.S. forces at 6,036. This number combines dead and
wounded in the D-Day battles
►
John Keegan, American Historian and Author believes that
2,500 Americans died along with 3,000 British and Canadian
troops on D-Day
►
By the end of the of the entire Normandy Campaign, nearly
425,000 Allied and German troops were killed, wounded, or
missing.
Normandy Invasion cont.
The battle continues
►
W/in 1 month, a million more troops
►
September 1944, France was freed from
Nazi control
Battle of the Bulge
► December
► German
front)
16, 1944
tanks broke through American lines (80 mile
► Fought
in Belgium - Germany was trying to capture
Antwerp
► Very
brutal war - one of the most extensive of U.S.
military (120 American GIs captured and mowed down
by SS machine guns and pistols)
Battle of the Bulge Cont.
► Germans
were winning in the beginning
► 120,000 Germans
died (also lost 600 tanks and
guns and 1,600 planes – leading to defeat))
► 80,000 Americans
► Americans
died
won, but were close to losing
Battle of the Coral Sea
► Prior
to this battle, the Japanese were winning every
battle and taking over the Pacific
► May
1942 - U.S. and Australia stopped Japan from
invading
► Japan
won the actual battle, but the allies were able to
stop Japan invasion for the first time
► U.S.
was beginning to use the Island Hopping technique
to weaken Japan’s forces
Battle of Midway
► June
1942
► Admiral
Chester Nimitz intercepted Japanese code
► U.S.
launched surprise attack on Japan at Pacific
island called Midway
► U.S.
was successful in the Battle of Midway
Battle of Midway
► The
Japanese lost 4 carriers, a heavy
cruiser, 3 destroyers, some 275 planes, at
least 4,800 men, and suffered heavy
damage among the remaining vessels of
their fleet.
► American
losses included 1 carrier, the
Yorktown, a destroyer, about 150 planes,
and 307 men
Iwo Jima
► Island
in the Pacific that was critical for
U.S. win
► March 1945
► 27,000 Japanese held Iwo Jima
► U.S. won
 26,800 Japanese troops died
 6,000 U.S. Marines died
Battle of Okinawa
► June
22, 1945
► Japan’s
► Japan
used 1,900 Kamikaze attacks
► 110,000
► 7,600
► U.S.
last defensive stronghold
Japanese troops died
- 12,500 U.S U.S. troops died
won
SKIP TO SLIDE 47
PROJECT Ends HERE
Yalta Conference
► Took
over
place February 1945 before WWII was
► Roosevelt,
Stalin and Churchill met in Yalta
in the Soviet Union to discuss post WWII
► Set
up United Nations
Yalta – “The Big 3”
April 12, 1945
► At
the beginning of his 4th Term, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt passes away
► The
U.S. went through a major grieving
period
► Harry
S. Truman, as Vice-President, takes
the role as President
The end of Hitler
► April
30, 1945 Hitler
and Eva Braun commit
suicide (gun shot and
cyanide)
► Bodies
► Cover
burned in street
of Time
magazine May 7, 1945
V-E Day
► May
8, 1945
► General
Reich
► V-E
► 1st
Eisenhower accepted a surrender by the Third
day = Victory in Europe day
part of War was over
Potsdam
► July
– August 1945
► Truman,
(Churchill and then Clement Atlee)
and Stalin met in Potsdam, Germany
► Drew
up a blueprint to disarm Germany and
eliminate the Nazi regime
Potsdam Continued
► Divided
Germany into 4 sections (occupied by
France, Britain, U.S. and Soviet Union)
► Berlin
to be divided up in East (or Soviet Germany)
► Set
up the Nuremberg Trials to persecute Nazi
leaders
► Japan
must “unconditionally surrender”
Potsdam, Germany
Nuremberg Trials
► International
tribunal court tried Nazi
officials
► Over 23 nations tried Nazi war criminals in
Nuremberg, Germany
► 12 of the 22 defendants were sentenced to
death
► 200 other officials were found guilty, but
give lesser sentences
Manhattan Project
► 200,000
Japanese died due to the Atomic bombs
dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
► Hiroshima
 August 6, 1945
 “Little Boy”
 In 43 seconds, the city collapsed to dust
► Nagasaki
 August 9, 1945
 “Fat Man”
 Leveled half of the city
V-J Day
► August
15, 1945: Japan offers unconditional
surrender
► September
2, 1945: V-J Day = Victory in
Japan Day (Formal surrender)
U.S. Occupation of Japan
► Similar
trials held for Japanese war criminals
►7
out of 28 leaders were found guilty and
sentenced to death (including Tojo)
► U.S.
occupied Japan for 6 years under the
direction of General Douglas MacArthur
 Called for a New Constitution (w/ free elections
and women suffrage)
 Introduced a free market economy
Holocaust
What is the Holocaust
Holocaust
►Holocaust-
The Systemic
Murder of 11 Million people
across Europe, more than half
of whom were Jews
What is Hitler’s Final Solution
Hitler’s final Solution
►Final
Solution-(Genocide) the
deliberate and systematic killing
of an entire population
What is Hitler’s Master Race
► Aryan
or master Race,
Blonde Hair, Blue Eyes,
this race is superior
and must be
preserved. All other
races were deemed
inferior and
condemned Jews and
others to slavery
Aryan Race-Master Race
►Germany’s
master race
philosophy
Why did the Germans persecute
these groups: Jews
► Hitler
needed a
scapegoat to blame
problems in Europe on,
He chose the Jews► Anti Semitism(hatred of the Jews)had existed in Europe
for some time-Hitler
blamed Jews for
failures.
Why did Germans persecute these
groups: Gypsies & Freemasons
►Gypsies-were
believed to be
inferior, by the Nazi's.
►Freemasons-were charged by
the Nazis as being supporters of
the Jewish Conspiracy to rule
the world
Why did Germans persecute these
groups: Mentally Deficient/ill
►Forced
sterilizations-a person was
diagnosed with feeblemindness,
Operation T4-the killing of patients in
hospitals and institutions. Operation
14f13-psychiatrists were sent to
camps, and ordered to weed out those
too week to work. Unfit to be part of
the master race.
Concentration Camps
►A
place where prisoners were
mistreated, subjected to medical
experiments, died from disease,
starvation, overwork, or were
executed as unfit for working.
Extermination Camps
► These
camps main function after the order
of the “Final Solution”; was to kill as many
people as possible, as quickly as possible.
Within 24 hours of arrival, prisoners would
have been killed.
Kristallnacht
► Night
of Broken Glass-November 9-10,
1938.
► Nazi storm troopers attacked Jewish
businesses, homes, and synagogues across
Germany.
► Hundreds of windows were smashed.
► Broken glass was every where, Jewws were
blamed.
6 Extermination Camps/Poland
► Camp:
► 1)
Auschwitz-Birkenau
► 2) Treblinka
► 3) Belzic
► 4) Sobibor
► 5) Chelmno
► 6)Majdanek
Killed:
1,100,000
700,000
434,500
167,000
152,000
78,000
Operation Reinhard
►Codename
Polish Jews
for extermination of the