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Preparations for War 1940-1941

Preparations for War 1940-1941

Selective Service Draft

Conversion of industries from peace time to war time, War Production Board;

Impact on economy?

Employment of Women, African Americans, Bracersos in war time industry

Creation of OSRD to push development of new technologies to be used on and off the battlefield

Establishment of established price freezes throughout industry

Rationing;

Fixed allotments of goods for home use and military use

http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/war/wwtwo/nazi_propaganda_gallery_01.shtml

NAZI 1932 CAMPAIGN

POSTER

1. The “Double V” slogan was the slogan of what group of Americans?

2. The N_____ was the term for Japanese-Americans born in the USA.

3. The “Zoot-Suit” riots refers to ethnic violence against what group of Americans.

4. Who ran against FDR in 1944?

5. Hitler’s last great counter-offensive was the __________.

1. The US, the UK, and the USSR were called the __________ Powers.

2. The leader of the Japanese government and military during WWII was Hideki ___________.

3. Famous American General of the Third Army, who used brilliant tactics during Operation Overlord.

4. The German’s last major counter-offensive of WWII ___________________.

5. V-E Day stands for _______________ .

1. Germany, Italy and Japan were called the ___________ Powers.

2. The US relaxed the Neutrality Acts and passed the _________ - __________ Act to allow it to give supplies to Britain and Russia.

3. The commander of all allied forces in Europe was ________________.

4. The code name for June 6, 1944.

5. _________________ becomes US Vice President in 1944.

America at War: 1941-1945

FDR’s STRATEGY:

1. Attack Germany first: save USSR and UK

2. Attack Japan second: give ground in Pacific

PROBLEM: Will America arm itself (and its Allies) in time?

CONCERN: Were totalitarian warriors better than citizen-soldiers?

WWII: European TheatreACT I

1942 & 1943: War in the AtlanticAllied Convoys v. “Wolf pack” of German U-Boats

1942: Allies turn the tideHalt Germans at El Alemein and Stalingrad

11/1942-5/1943: North Africa CampaignKasserine Pass, Rommel & Patton, Big Red 1

6/1943: Invasion of ItalySurrender of Italy, Mussolini exec., Anzio, Monte Cassino & Gothic Line

http://www.cia.gov/cia/information/artifacts/enigma.htm

ENIGMA ENCODING MACHINE

During World War II, the Germans used the Enigma, an

electromechanical cipher machine, to develop nearly

unbreakable codes for sending messages. The Enigma's

settings offered 150,000,000,000,000,000,000

possible solutions, yet the Allies were eventually able to

crack its code.

Liberty ShipsUS was able to produce 140 of these

ships A MONTH!!!• By the end of the

war, a ship was able to be built in 5 days

• PROBLEM: initially 30% of the early liberty ships “fractured” at sea

http://www.mech.uwa.edu.au/DANotes/fracture/maritime/maritime.html

Map: The Allies on the Offensive in Europe, 1942-1945

The Allies on the Offensive in Europe, 1942-1945The United States pursued a "Europe first" policy: first defeat Germany, then focus on Japan. American military efforts began in North Africa in late 1942 and ended in Germany in 1945 on May 8 (V-E Day).

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Battle of StalingradOperation Barbarossa:

330,000 Germans invade, only 91,000 survive/POWs

Soviets suffer 1,250,000 military and civilian casualties.

SIGNIFICANCE: Turning point of war on Eastern Front

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WWII: European TheatreACT II

6/6/1944: D-Day – NormandyAllies, Patton, Liberation of Paris, Soviet Advance

12/16/1944: Battle of the BulgeGerman Counter-Offensive, Siege of Bastogne

4/1945: The Bitter EndSoviet and American forces meet at ElbeBerlin Falls, Hitler commits suicideFDR dies, Truman now President

5/8/1945: V-E Day

Operation Overlord: D-Day June 6, 19443 million allied soldiers, 4,600 vessels

Beachheads: UTAH, OMAHA / GOLD, JUNO, SWORD

Eisenhower at D-DayCommander-in-Chief of the Allied Expeditionary Force General Dwight D. ("Ike") Eisenhower gives the order of the day to U.S. paratroopers in England on the eve of D-day. (National Archives)

Eisenhower at D-Day

Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

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Battle of the Bulge

http://www.captain-america.us/ww2-wallpaper.htm

http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/reference/bulge/SC197832.jpg

Liberation of the Death Camps

http://encyclopedia.laborlawtalk.com/wiki/images/thumb/6/6f/250px-NaziConcentrationCamp.gif

V-E DayVictory in Europe Day

May 8, 1945

http://www.captain-america.us/ww2-wallpaper.htm

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