Transcript File
Chapter 12:
America and World War II
1941 - 1945
Section 1: Mobilizing for War
Industry:
Because FDR had already partially mobilized
the economy... it was easier to truly mobilize
the country, economy, and military quickly
FDR gave incentives to industry
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No more bidding for contracts
NOW- cost-plus contracts
Pay production cost + % of costs as profit
•
More you make, faster you make it → more profit you get
$$$ Expensive system, BUT got jeeps and tanks
out quickly because of transformation of auto
industry
Auto industry manufacture 1/3 of military equip. during
war
Financing the War
Reconstruction Finance Corporation
• Loans to companies to help them convert to
producing war goods
• War Production Board (WPB)
Set priorities and production goals for raw
materials and supplies
Supervised production of $185 billion in
military weapons and supplies in 3 years;
dysfunctional
Office of War Mobilization (OWM) handled
disputes
Military Mobilization
Selective Service
and Training Act
(June 1940)
• Peacetime draft
Draftees
outnumbered
supplies and
facilities
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q78COT
wT7nE
Double V Campaign
”Double V” for African Americans
• Victory in War, Victory over Segregation (at home)
and Racism abroad (remember Jesse Owens?)
In segregated units, often w/ white cmdrs
• Separated for everything
• Often given non-combat jobs
Pittsburgh Courier “Double V” campaign
99th Pursuit Squadron- Tuskegee Airman
• They were sent into combat, as were other Af. Amer.
units later in the war
1943-military bases integrated
1948-military fully integrated
Women in the War
Women join the military!
Often administrative and clerical jobs
• *to release a man for combat
WAAC's (auxiliary corps) → later WAC's (army)
WAVE's (Navy)- WASP's (Air)
Could move planes across Atlantic, nurses,
transport, lab techs + more
Section 2:
The Early Battles: Japan
Right after attacking Pearl Harbor,
Japan attacked airfields in
Philippines.
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2 days later J. landed.
Amer. and Filipinos outnumbered.
MacArthur forced to retreat (he left!).
Bataan Death March- 65 miles.
78,000 marched.
24,000 died.
May 1942-Philippines fell.
The Early Battles: Japan
Doolittle’s Raid- April 18, 1942
• Bombs fell on Japan
• B- 25s had to land in China
• Japan changed strategy
•
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gaDBEE2fe0k&feature=related
Problem for Japan: We had broken
Japanese code! Key to our successes!
• Get control of S. coast of New Guinea.
• Cut off Amer. supply lines to Australia
• 3 carriers assigned to the mission
Pacific Theatre
Battle of the Coral Sea (1st battle in
history fought entirely from aircraft
carriers.)
• Lexington sank
• Yorktown crippled
• But Japan called off landing on New
Guinea.
• Early May, 1942
Pacific Theatre
Japanese Plan: Take Midway Island
• Last Amer. base in No. Pacific
• West of Hawaii.
• Lure Amer. to attack and then annihilate them
• All other carriers sent to Midway.
Battle of Midway
• U.S. was waiting.
• 1st Wave - J. attacked island.
Ak- ak guns ready. 38 planes down.
• 2nd wave - U.S. countered.
Planes caught J. w/ fuel, bombs exposed on board.
Sank 3 carriers w/in minutes
*Major turning point
June 1942
• J. Navy lost 4 of its largest carriers, stopped J. advance in
Pacific
• 362 Amer.; 3,057 J. dead
In Europe
Vs. Germany:
• Stalin wanted a western front, but Churchill
and FDR decided to attack the periphery
instead
• → Invade Morocco and Algeria (Africa!)
• U.S./Brit. plan: Morocco, why?
1. Give troops experience
2. Help Brits. hold on to Suez Canal (vital for
supplies and materials)
African Front
Germans under Rommel (the
Desert Fox)
Brilliant strategist, although...
forced to retreat
• U.S. under Patton- also brilliant
Problems/Challenges w/ Desert
Warfare
• hot and dry, sandstorms,
• when wet → impassable,
• high visibility, tanks made huge
dust clouds
• critters
Nov. 1942-
• U.S. Captured Casablanca,
Algiers
• went E. into Tunisia;
• Brit. went W. into Libya.
Plan: Trap Rommel
1st U.S. Battle vs. German Forces
Battle of Kasserine
Pass
• 7,000 casualties;
lost 200 tanks
But, U.S. and Brit.
persisted.
May 13, 1943
Last Ger. forces in
Africa surrendered
Battle of the Atlantic
German subs picking
on cargo ships
• Oil and gas hit hard,
rationed
→ long oil pipeline built
• Convoy systemimproved success
• Built lots of ships to
replace losses
Stalingrad
Ger. vs. USSR:
Stalingrad
Hitler felt only way to defeat USSR was
by hitting their economy
• May 1942- ordered army to
Capture oil fields, industries and
farmlands in S. Russia and Ukraine
Attack Stalingrad- major RR, Volga
R.
Entered Stalingrad in Mid- Sept.
Had to hold ground at all costs. Lost
thousands fighting house to house
Nov- Soviet reinforcements arrived.
• Trapped 250,000 Gers.
• Battle end in Jan.
• 91,000 Ger. surrendered, but only
5,000 of them survived Gulags, etc.
*Turning point- Put Germans the
defensive.
Section 3:
Life on the Home Front
For Women:
“Rosie the Riveter”
Women now did traditionally
male manufacturing jobs
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”I can make money.”
”I can do things I never thought I
could do.”
→ permanently changed
workplace
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HofnGQwPgqs&list=PL8dPuuaLjXtMwme
pBjTSG593eG7ObzO7s
Home Front: Hispanics
1942-1964 Bracero Program
• farmers in SW had labor shortage
• 1942-Bracero Program brought Mex.
farm-workers in to help w/harvest
• 200,000 came 1st year.
Zoot Suit Riots
• pg. 590,
• → excessive material in the clothing
= “unpatriotic”
• rumors of attacks → sailors and
soldiers attacked Mex. Amer.
neighborhoods and zoot suits
outlawed in LA
•
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDEfhS-r_68
Home Front: African Americans
A. Philip Randolph
threatened a march on D.C.
to demand jobs for African
Americans
→ FDR issued Exec. Order
8802 = “No racial
discrimination in workplace”
but...still- last hired, first
fired
severe housing
discrimination
Great Migration resumed
Home Front: For Everyone
War created new jobs
Doubled avg. family income
Migration
Prices rose, short supply
Rationing → meat, sugar, gas, rubber, etc.
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Blue and Red coupons
Victory gardens
Recycling
Collection of vital items
Blackouts
War bonds, e-bonds
In Oregon:
http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2015/03/vanport_survivors_are_dying_ha.html#incart_2box
Japanese-American Relocation
West Coast problems- fear/ suspicion of
Japanese Americans
FDR caved in to pressure- Executive
order 9066, removed all JapaneseAmer. on West Coast to internment
camps
10 of them: CA, AZ, UT, ID, WY, CO, AR
Conditions in the Camps
Lived in horse barns,
cramped conditions
Food lines -”foreign”
food ignorance/ignoring
customs
Lost houses,
businesses, etc. in
home cities
Korematsu vs. United States
Went to Sup. Ct.
Relocation was
constitutional b/c
it was based on
“military
urgency”- not
race
Racism Everywhere!
Italian and German
immigrants also
harassed, lost jobs,
had curfews, police
searches, forced
relocation,
internment
Propaganda
The Other Side of the Story…
But many minorities served in military
• All-Japanese 100th Battalion- integrated
into the 442nd Regimental Combat Team
(most highly decorated unit in WWII)
Navajo Code Talkers
Mex-Americans fought in all theatres
Section 4:
Pushing the Axis Back
Tehran Conference
• Iran
• Late 1943
Plans:
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Invade France
Break up Ger. after war
USSR help vs. Japan
UN for after war
Strategy for the Pacific
• 1.Island hopping to
Japan
• 2. MacArthur's troops go
thru Solomon Islands,
capture N Coast of New
Guinea, retake Phil.s
Island Hopping Problems
Ctrl
Pacific
Problem- many islands are coral reef
atolls. Makes amphibious landing
difficult and dangerous
• Boats get struck, soldiers wade to
shore.
• Ex.- Tarawa Atoll, Central Pacific
under Nimitz
Amphibious landing
At least 20 ships ran aground
1,000 died (5,000 landed).
Amphibious Assault Vehicles
Success w/ LVT- a
boat w/ tank tracks
“The Alligator”amphibious
tractor- amphtrac
Several different
models
Then Kwajalein
Atoll
• Landing with all
amphtracs - much
better
Ctrl
Marianas
Pacific
Gained Marshall Islands, then onto
the
Marianas
• U.S. invaded Saipan, Tinian, Guam
• June - Aug. 1944
• We controlled; used as bases for B-29’s
in order to launch bombing runs on
Japan
Southwestern Pacific
SW Pacific under MacArthur
Guadalcanal -Aug. '42- early '43Rabawl- Japanese Base
Hollandia - on N. coast of New
Guinea
Morotai - last stop before Phil.s
Leyte Gulf
Philippines
We goofed!
Largest naval battle in history
3-4 days
Oct. 1944
1st Kamikaze attacks
“Divine winds”
March 1945: MacArthur
captured Manila.
• Guerrilla warfare til end of
war.
I told you
I would
return!
SW
Pacific
Casablanca Conference
Jan, '43
FDR and Churchill
• Decide upon “Sicily and
bombing of Germany”
as strategy to hopefully
end the war
Next Phase in War: Europe
On Germany
• Step up bombing of strategic points (military,
industrial, economic system)
• → oil shortage, wrecked RR system, destroyed
aircraft factories, allied total control of air
(before D-Day) on “the soft underbelly”invading Sicily
In approx. 1 month, w/ Patton and tanks
from West; Montgomery, from South:
Ger. surr.
Attack on Sicily = crisis in Italy.
• King had Mussolini arrested; negotiated w/
Allies for surrender.
• Ger. fight but Italy fell- May 2, 1945, hard to
keep control
Operation Overlord
Eisenhower in ctrl.
Invade at Normandy, France
D-Day- June 6th, 1944
In favor- Low tide at dawn, moonlight,
break in weather, sm. window of
opportunity
Timing is bad- heavy cloud cover, strong
winds, high waves
7,000 ships, 100,000 troops, 23,000
paratroopers, 13,000 aircraft, 11,912 tons
of explosives
Beaches
Utah – went rather smoothly, sandy
beach which made German defenses
weaker; there was a wall on the beach;
23,000 landed
Omaha – 34,000 + were to land, BUT
decimated (cliffs, misinformation about
who was there)
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Amer, Brit, France (naval support)
10 ships sunk before arriving
Lost 50+ tanks before nightfall
Losses: 1200 German; 9,387 (+1557 MIA) by
nightfall
Gold – 25,000 landed; pushed Nazis back
6 miles by nightfall
Sword – British Infantry Division; 29,000
men, 223 tanks; German defense was
weak; Panzers counter-attacked
Juno – 359 Allies died; Canadians and
UK.
U.S., Brit, Canadian forces suffered high
casualties, but invasion successful!
Allowed ground and air presence in
France; went inland from there.
Section 5:
The War Ends
We advanced in France, but tough
going!
French Resistance:
• Staged a rebellion in Paris
• Acts of sabotage on
German holdings in Fr.
Railroads
Factories
• Collected intelligence
Battle of the Bulge
We won!
• 100,000 German
casualties
• Lost tanks, aircraft
Germans left with
little to prevent allies
from entering
Germany
Dec. 16, 1944 –
Jan. 16, 1945
American
Hero:
http://www.youtube.c
om/watch?v=ZX2PbzV
1go8
Nuts!
Soviets Pester Germany
USSR picked on
German troops in
Soviet Union
• Drove Germany
back across Poland
• U.S. and USSR
troops squeezed
German troops in
Germany
FDR Dies
April 12th, 1945
Truman sworn in
• VE Day within a
month
• Fight with Japan,
however, only
intensifying
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Objoad6rG6U
&list=PL8dPuuaLjXtMwmepBjTSG593eG7ObzO7s
Hitler Commits Suicide
Suicide on April 30th/ May 1st
Successor tried to surrender
to U.S., Gr. Brit.
Eisenhower replied
“Unconditional Surrender”
May 7th, 1945: Surrender
May 8th, 1945: VE Day
(Victory in Europe Day)
To End the War with Japan
Bombing Japan, but
not accurate enough
to cause enough
damage.
Need a closer base =
Iwo Jima
• Nasty topography
• Japanese had great
defenses
• 6,800 Marines died
• 19 February–26 March
1945
• “Operation
Detachment “
Napalm Bombs on Tokyo
Napalm bombs
on Tokyo
• 80,000 died;
250,000 bldgs.
Destroyed
• By June of 1945,
6 most
important
industrial cities
been
firebombed;
• 67 cities hit by
end of war
Okinawa
Belief…Japan won’t
surrender until it is
invaded.
U.S. goes for Okinawa
• 1 April – 21 June 1945
Japan had fortified
mountains
• 12,000 Americans died
by June 22, 1945
Casualties and losses
U.S.
12,513 killed
38,916 wounded,
33,096 noncombat losses
Japan
About 95,000+
killed
7,400–10,755
captured
Estimated 42,000–150,000 civilians
killed
Emperor Hirohito
Wanted to
surrender
Unconditional
surrender would
include removal of
Emperor
“No.”
Several cabinet
members resigned.
How To End the War???
YES?
NO?
VJ Day
August 15th, 1945
Japan surrendered
Building a New World
Immediately after the war…
• Help Japan clean up
MacArthur put in charge
United Nations
• Plans made before war was over
• 39 countries made plans
General Assembly: every member nation has 1
vote
Security Council: 11 member (now 15)
5 permanent: Gr. Brit., France, China, USSR, US
Veto power
• April 25, 1945: 50 countries got together,
write charter, vote on budget
Nuremberg Trials
International Military Tribunal (IMT)
Nuremberg (Germany)
• Put Nazi leaders on trial for war crimes
• 22 leaders in first round:
3 acquitted
7 prison sentence
12 death by hanging
• 24 more executed
• 107 more in prison
Tokyo Trials
25 Japanese
leaders charged
• NOT the emperor
• 18 in prison
• Rest hanged
Test!
The usual
Essays:
• Zoot suiters: What? Why anger so many
Americans?
• Different points of view/debate over use
of atomic bomb. Why did Truman finally
decide to use it?