17-2 Notes - TeacherWeb
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Transcript 17-2 Notes - TeacherWeb
Chapter 17:
The U.S. in WWII
Section 2:
The War for Europe
and North Africa
Standards
11.7
Students analyze America's
participation in World War II.
.2
Explain U.S. and Allied wartime
strategy, including the major battles of
Midway, Normandy, Iwo Jima, Okinawa,
and the Battle of the Bulge.
Objectives
Following
lecture and reading of
this section, students will be able
to:
1. Summarize
the war.
2. Identify
the Allies’ plans for winning
events in the war in Europe.
3. Describe
the liberation of Europe.
The U.S. & Britain Align
War Plans- U.S. & Britain join in alliance
Churchill
convinced FDR to go after Hitler first,
then Japan
Britain
We
still in danger of falling to Hitler
needed them to stay in the war
The Battle of the Atlantic
Hitler
ordered U-boat (submarine) attacks against
supply ships to Britain
Wolf
packs destroyed hundreds of ships in 1942
Allies
organized convoys of cargo ships with escort
destroyers with sonar; planes with radar
Construction
of Liberty ships (cargo carriers) increased
Important Reasons for Alliance
FDR always considered Hitler to be the
#1 threat
1.
Hitler pushed for world domination
Stalin, and USSR, who were now allies
needed help from us.
2.
We did not want to allow the USSR to fail they
were keeping Hitler occupied with war
The U.S. needed Britain and USSR in
order to defeat Japan, and for the moment
they were busy with Hitler.
3.
Once Hitler is out those who we are helping
would help us.
The Battle of Stalingrad
Hitler wanted to capture Caucasus oil fields and
destroy Stalingrad
Stalingrad
was strategically located on the Volga R.
Germany
could choke out most of Russia by controlling
the flow of supplies on the river (Mississippi R.)
After
a long struggle, the Soviets defeated the
Germans in bitter winter campaign
Deaths:
Germans
The
230,000
Soviets1,100,000
Battle of Stalingrad was the turning point
The
Soviet army began to move towards Germany
The North African Front
Stalin
wanted some aid by the other allies
Stalin
suggested the U.S. & Britain invade to
Germany’s west (France) to force Hitler to
send troops there
The
U.S. & British decided to begin the
campaign in North Africa
Commanded
by General Dwight Eisenhower
General Erwin Rommel (“Desert Fox”) led
Afrika Korps (Nazis) and surrendered in May
1943
The Italian Campaign
From
North Africa, the Allies went
northeast toward Italy
Allies
decided to only accept the unconditional
surrender of the Axis Powers
Sicily
captured (summer 1943)
Mussolini
forced to resign
Hitler re-installs Mussolini as leader
1944
Allies win “Bloody Anzio”
Germans
continue strong resistance
Heroes in Combat
African
Americans
Tuskegee
Airmen
Buffalo Soldiers
Highly
decorated- lots of medals for heroism
Mexican-Americans
17
received congressional medal of honor
Japanese-Americans
442nd
Regimental Combat Team
Most
decorated unit in U.S. history
D-Day (Page 575)
The
first day of the Allied invasion of
Europe
Allies
set up phantom army
Sent
fake radio messages to fool Germans
Real attack cam 150 miles away from the fake
attack
Eisenhower
directed Allied invasion of
Normandy on D-Day June 6, 1944
Very
difficult fighting
Germans held the high ground but lost it
2 Fronts in Western Europe
USSR
North Africa
Paratroopers
Paratroopers
WWII, Sept 1944
USSR
France
Italy
North Africa
Great
Britain
France
Great Britain
Great Britain
France
Normandy, France
World War II Europe, 1942
Axis Powers
Finland
Allied Powers
Neutral
USSR
Britain
Germany
Poland
Occupied
USSR
Occupied
France
Vichy
France
Italy
Turkey
North Africa
Syria
WWII, Early 1943
Axis Powers
Allied Powers
Neutral
North Africa
WWII, 1942-1943
Axis Powers
Allied Powers
Neutral
After the
Battle of
Stalingrad
Germany
North Africa
1944
USSR
WWII, July 1943
Axis Powers
Allied Powers
Neutral
USSR
Italy
North Africa
Great
Britain
France
Normandy, France
WWII, Sept 1944
Axis Powers
Allied Powers
Neutral
D-Day
Invasion
Germany
France
Italy
North Africa
USSR
Yalta
Conference
Yalta Conference
Harry S. Truman
WWII, Sept 1944
Axis Powers
Allied Powers
Neutral
D-Day
Invasion
Germany
France
Italy
North Africa
USSR
The Allies Gain Ground
General
Omar Bradley bombed to create
gap in enemy defense line
General George Patton led the Third Army
They
reached Paris in August
Taking back of Paris was a big step
The
tide of the war had now turned
FDR
was reelected for his 4th term with
running mate Harry S. Truman
Don’t
change horses mid-race
The Battle of the Bulge
October 1944, Allies capture first German town,
Aachen
Hitler
had to do something
In December, German tank divisions drove 60
miles into Allied area
Battle
of the Bulge—Germans pushed back allies
Formed
The
a bulge in the allied lines
last German offensive
A
desperate attempt by Hitler to regain control of the
war
Too many losses to Nazis in this battle to continue
Liberation of the Death Camps
Allies
move in on Germany
Soviets
from the east arrive in Poland and
liberate concentration camps
Soviets
found:
Starving
prisoners
Corpses
Evidence
Americans
of killing
eventually find similar conditions
in other camps all over Germany
Unconditional Surrender
April 1945 Soviet army stormed Berlin
Hitler committed suicide
Shot himself
Eisenhower (& allies) accepted unconditional
surrender of Germany
May 8, 1945, V-E Day
Orders his body burned
Victory in Europe Day
FDR died April 12, 1945
Vice President Harry S. Truman became president
Had to deal with Japan and aftermath of war
WWII, 1942
Axis Powers
Germany
Italy
Albania
Greece
Yugoslavia
Parts of N. Africa
Japan
Bulgaria
Hungary
1/3 of China
Islands in Pacific
French Indochina
Thailand
Great Britain
Austria
Czech
Poland
Norway
Denmark
Netherlands
Belgium
France
Finland
1/3 of Russia
Romania
Allied Powers
Egypt
Canada
Australia
India
New Zealand
South Africa
Fiji
¾ of USSR
¾ of China
Iran
United States
Mexico
Cuba
Haiti
Brazil
Costa Rica
Dominican Republic
El Salvador
Guatemala
Honduras
Nicaragua
Panama & Peru