chapter 15 - Pearson Education
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Transcript chapter 15 - Pearson Education
1937-1945
CHAPTER
23
Global Conflict: World
War II
CREATED EQUAL
JONES WOOD MAY BORSTELMANN RUIZ
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“…a day that will live in infamy.”
Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1941
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TIMELINE
1937
1938
1939
1941
Japan attacks China’s five northern provinces
December: Japanese warplanes sink U.S. Panay
March: Hitler annexes Austria
September: Hitler occupies Sudetenland
September: the Munich Accords
March: Hitler takes the rest of Czechoslovakia and threatens Poland
August: Hitler and Stalin sign non-aggression pact and invade Poland
September: Britain and France declare war on Germany
Congress passes 3rd Neutrality Act
June: Executive Order 8802
December 7: Pearl Harbor naval base attacked by Japanese bombers
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TIMELINE
1942
1943
February: War Relocation Authority
Office of War Information
U.S. government officials learn of Nazi efforts to exterminate Jews
Operation Torch
June: Adm. Nimitz wins at Midway
August: Battle of Stalingrad begins
January: Battle of Stalingrad ends
United Mine Workers strike
Smith-Connally Act
May: Axis soldiers in north Africa surrender
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TIMELINE
1944
1945
Allied soldiers reach Rome
February: Adm. Nimitz secures the Marshall Islands and the
Marianas
June: D-Day
June: Attack on Saipan
April: Hitler commits suicide
April: FDR dies of cerebral hemorrhage
May: Victory in Europe
Allied victories in Iwo Jima and Okinawa
July: Truman, Stalin, Churchill demand unconditional surrender at
Potsdam, Germany
July: first test of atomic bomb
August: Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombed with nuclear weapons
September: Japanese surrender
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GLOBAL CONFLICT:
WORLD WAR II Overview
Mobilizing for War
Pearl Harbor: The United States Enters
the War
The Home Front
Race and War
Total War
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MOBILIZING FOR WAR
The Rise of Fascism
Aggression in Europe and Asia
The Great Debate: Americans Contemplate War
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The Rise of Fascism
Mussolini’s “March on Rome” in 1922
Hitler’s “Beer Hall” putsch in 1923
Hitler’s Mein Kampf condemned Versailles Treaty
and proposed Final Solution for European Jewry
Hitler became Chancellor of Germany in 1933
Upon President of Germany’s death, Hitler became
the Fuhrer of the Third Reich
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Aggression in Europe
Hitler marched into Rhineland
March 1938: Hitler annexed Austria
September 1938: Hitler demanded Sudentenland from
Czechoslovakia
September 29, 1938: Hitler met with Mussolini,
Daladier, Chamberlain in the Munich Conference
March 1939: Hitler took the rest of Czechoslovakia
August 1939: Hitler and Stalin signd pact of nonaggression and agreed to divide Poland. September 1,
Hitler invaded Poland.
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Aggression in Asia
1931: Japanese military staged coup and took over
foreign policy
1932: Japanese troops occupied Manchuria in China
1937: Japan attacked China’s five northern
provinces
December, 1937: Japan sunk American gunboat on
Yangtze River, but apologized
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The Great Debate:
Americans Contemplate War
The “cash and carry” Neutrality Act
The Committee to Defend America by Aiding the
Allies: advocated helping England by all means
short of war
The America First Committee: isolationists
seeking protection behind the oceans
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PEARL HARBOR: THE UNITED
STATES ENTERS THE WAR
December 7, 1941
Japanese American Relocation
Foreign Nationals in the United States
Wartime Migrations
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December 7, 1941
7:55am: Japanese bombers attacked U.S. naval
base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
The surprise attack killed more than 2,000 U.S.
soldiers and destroyed most of the U.S. Pacific
fleet, and half of the U.S. Far East Air Force.
Congress immediately declared war against
Japan.
3 days later, Germany and Italy declared war on
the United States.
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Japanese American
Relocation
More than 100,000 Japanese Americans
rounded up and placed in internment camps
Executive Order of internment and War
Relocation Authority
1943: some leave to attend colleges, take
service jobs, or serve in the military
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Foreign Nationals in
the United States
German and Italian nationals subjected to
new regulations
Smith Act of 1940
All foreign-born residents registered and
fingerprinted, as well as broader grounds for
deportation
Prompted by the war, a large number of
immigrants became American citizens.
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Wartime Migrations
African Americans migrated to northern
cities to work in war industry plants
Mexicans imported to work in the
agricultural and seasonal jobs
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THE HOME FRONT
Building Morale
Home Front Workers, Rosie
the Riveter, and Victory Girls
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Building Morale
Office of War Information
Movies
Radio programs
Publications
Posters
Encouraging work in war industries and
preserving the “American way of Life”
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Home Front Workers, Rosie the
Riveter, and Victory Girls
New employment opportunities for women
and disabled
Rosie the Riveter, symbol of women war workers
Wages climb
Unions include women and minorities as
members
Victory Girls: a fling with a soldier is a
patriotic duty
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RACE AND WAR
The Holocaust
Racial Tensions at Home
Fighting for the “Double V”
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The Holocaust
6 million Jews are killed, along with
homosexuals, disabled, and Gypsies (or Romani)
American knowledge of Jewish persecution
began in 1930s
Word of extermination camps in 1941
Anti-Semitism grew in the United States
Denmark defied Nazis; Dominican Republic
took in Jewish refugees
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Racial Tensions at Home
Randolph, President of the Brotherhood of
Sleeping Car Porters, suggested march to
Washington to protest discriminatory hiring
practices in defense industry
Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802
banning discrimination in defense
industries
Fair Employment Practices Commission
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Fighting for the “Double V”
African Americans enthusiastically enlisted in
the armed services
Navajo “Code Talkers”
By 1945, one-third of all able-bodied Native
Americans served during the war
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TOTAL WAR
The War in Europe
The War in the Pacific
The End of the War
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The War in Europe
Allies attacked through “the soft underbelly of Europe”
May, 1943: Germans driven from Africa
Eastern front: Battle of Stalingrad. Soviets pushed Germans
back in February, 1943
Summer of 1943: Allies seized Sicily
September 1943: Mussolini surrendered
1943: Germany covered with bombs: heavy loss of German lives
June, 1944: Operation Overlord (D-Day invasion)
Allies at German border by September
May, 1945: Germany surrendered
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World
War II
in
Europe
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The War in the Pacific
Philippines fell to Japanese in May, 1942
May, 1942: U.S. victory at Battle of the Coral Sea
August, 1942: Guadalcanal battle began
General MacArthur “leapfrogs” around southern Pacific
Admiral Nimitz moved across the Central Pacific
Late 1944: U.S. captured Mariana Islands and began
bombing Japan
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World
War II
in the
Pacific
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The End of the War
The Manhattan Project
July 26, 1945: Truman and Churchill and the
Potsdam Declaration
August 6, 1945: Atom bomb on Hiroshima:
80,000 people died immediately
August 8, 1945: Atom bomb dropped on
Nagasaki
September 2, 1945: Japan surrendered
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