objective: students will continue their study of world war i by reviewing trench warfare and how the...

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Objective: Students will continue their study of World War I by reviewing trench warfare and how the U.S. entered World War I Drill: Where were you on January 27 th 2007?

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Page 1: Objective: Students will continue their study of World War I by reviewing trench warfare and how the U.S. entered World War I Drill: Where were you on

Objective: Students will continue their study of World War I by reviewing trench warfare and how the U.S. entered World War I

Drill: Where were you on January 27th 2007?

Page 2: Objective: Students will continue their study of World War I by reviewing trench warfare and how the U.S. entered World War I Drill: Where were you on

V. THE WAR AND THE ARMISTICE: 1918

A. The Final German Effort 1.March - July - create pockets in allied lines 800,000

casualties for French and British

Page 3: Objective: Students will continue their study of World War I by reviewing trench warfare and how the U.S. entered World War I Drill: Where were you on

2. American troops led by John J. Pershing tilt the balance in the second Battle of the Marne

3. Pershing’s army undertook the Meuse-Argonne offensive, from Sept. 26 to Nov. 11, 1918.

Page 4: Objective: Students will continue their study of World War I by reviewing trench warfare and how the U.S. entered World War I Drill: Where were you on

B. Armistice

1. September 29, 1918: German army informs the government that the war is lost and demands an armistice

2. Armistice accepted on

November 1, 1918

Page 5: Objective: Students will continue their study of World War I by reviewing trench warfare and how the U.S. entered World War I Drill: Where were you on

C. Events in America

1. Women

a. to release men for military service many women took jobs

b. by the end of the war, little opposition remained to granting women political rights

Page 6: Objective: Students will continue their study of World War I by reviewing trench warfare and how the U.S. entered World War I Drill: Where were you on

2. African-Americans

a. Thousands of African Americans in the South migrated north to work in war-related factories b. Significant sociological significance: Race riots occurred in 26 cities

Page 7: Objective: Students will continue their study of World War I by reviewing trench warfare and how the U.S. entered World War I Drill: Where were you on

3. Domestic policies

a. Selective Service Act- starts the draft, requiring all men 18-45 to register.

b. Creel Committee – Committee of Public Information (CPI)- Creel typified American war mobilization which relied more on aroused passion and voluntary compliance than on formal laws.

Page 8: Objective: Students will continue their study of World War I by reviewing trench warfare and how the U.S. entered World War I Drill: Where were you on

c. Liberty Bonds-sold by the United States government to fund the war.

Page 9: Objective: Students will continue their study of World War I by reviewing trench warfare and how the U.S. entered World War I Drill: Where were you on

d. Limits of Civil Liberties:

i. Espionage Act of 1917 & Sedition Act of 1918 - Provided fines & imprisonment for people aiding the enemy, forbade any criticism of the gov’t, flag, or uniform and expanded mail exclusion.

ii. Targeted anti-war Socialists

Eugene V. Debs convicted

under the Espionage Act in

1918.

Page 10: Objective: Students will continue their study of World War I by reviewing trench warfare and how the U.S. entered World War I Drill: Where were you on

iii. Schenck v. U.S. (1919) a. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., stated Congress could limit free speech when words represented a "clear and present danger... "A person could not cry "fire" in an empty theater."