chapter 26 - Cengage Learning
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Transcript chapter 26 - Cengage Learning
CHAPTER 26
The Second World War,
1940 - 1945
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War in Europe
Hitler-Stalin Pact (1939)
Germany blitzkriegs Poland in September 1939
Britain and France declare war on Germany
Germany invades Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg
France falls June 22, 1940
Dunkirk flotilla
Winston Churchill
FDR wins third term as president
Wendell Wilkie
The End of Neutrality
Lend-Lease program begins in 1941
USS Reuben James
Germany breaks pact, invades Russia, June 1941
Churchill and FDR sign Atlantic Charter
Japanese aggression in Pacific escalates
Gunboat Panay
Pearl Harbor
18 warships, 300 planes, and 2,400 Americans lost
U.S. suffers early defeats while gearing up for war
Japanese took Guam, Wake Island, and Philippines
Douglas MacArthur
The Homefront
War ends Depression
Americans go to work in defense industries
War Production Board
Revenue Act of 1942
17 million new jobs created during war
Americans were “making do” now that “We’re all
in this together”
Rationing leads to shortages
Baseball became part of war effort
Opportunity and Discrimination
Women and minorities fill traditional men’s roles
and new work roles
6 million women took defense jobs
“Rosie the Riveter” becomes American icon
“Double-V Campaign” is adopted by blacks
Fair Employment Practices Committee
Executive Order #8802 bars discrimination in
federal jobs, but discrimination continues
Japanese-American internment
Executive Order 9066
Hirabayashi v. United States
Japanese American Relocation
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The Grand Alliance
Russian army fights virtually alone against Germany
Stalingrad
Western Allies concentrate on North Africa and Italy
Mussolini killed in April, 1945
Tehran Conference
Normandy invasion begins in June 1944
3 million men in Operation Overlord
Omaha Beach
Paris liberated in August, 1944
Germans counter-attack in Battle of the Bulge
The Grand Alliance (cont.’d)
Allies converge on Berlin
Discovered extermination camps
6 million Jews and 4 million others killed
Dachau and Auschwitz
War Refuge Board
Hitler committed suicide in his Berlin Bunker, April
20, 1945
War in Europe ends May 7, 1945
Allied Military Strategy in North Africa, Italy, and France
Allied
Advances and
the Collapse
of German
Power
The Pacific War
Battle of Coral Sea halts Japanese invasion of
Australia
Battle of Midway U.S. forces retake territory
America remains on offensive for rest of war
Leapfrogging across Pacific islands
Guadalcanal secured February 1943
Retook Gilberts, Marshals, Guam, Tinian, Saipan, and
Marianas
Philippines liberated October 1944
Battle of Leyte Gulf
Brutal fighting on Iwo Jima and Okinawa
Japanese Expansion and Early Battles in the Pacific
Pacific
Theater
Offensive
Strategy
and Final
Assault
Against
Japan
A Change in Leadership
Roosevelt meets with Churchill and Stalin at Yalta
Plan for post-war Germany
FDR dies April 12, 1945, of severe stroke, is
replaced by Harry Truman
Truman learns of Manhattan Project
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Enola Gay and Bock’s Car
Atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Japanese surrendered September 2, 1945 aboard USS
Missouri
Discussion Questions
What were the major events in Europe between
1933 and 1939 that led to war?
How did FDR mobilize the U.S. economy to
support the war effort?
Examine the Allied strategy for winning the war.
How was it implemented? What were the major
problems?
How did the U.S. and its allies defeat the
Japanese in the Pacific? How was this war
different than the war in Europe?