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WORLD WAR I Chapter 9 1914-1918 “THE WAR TO END ALL WARS”

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WORLD WAR I

Chapter 91914-1918“THE WAR TO END ALL WARS”

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World War I in Strategic Overview

The year opened with the Central Powers and the Allies at approximately equalstrength. The manpower drain in France was serious. Britain was on the verge ofinstituting compulsory military service to fill its expanding armies. Unrest inIreland was approaching rebellion. Russia, with more than sufficient manpower,hoped for time to reorganize and supply it. Germany now sought a decision onthe western front because, as Falkenhayn told the emperor, France would be“bled white” in attempting to prevent a German victory. In an Allied conferenceat Chantilly, France in December 1915, French Catalan general Joseph Joffresucceeded in obtaining agreement from Britain, Russia, Italy, and Romania thatcoordinated offensives would be launched on the western, eastern, and Italianfronts, probably about June, when Russia would be ready.

The Allied situation at the beginning of 1918 was grim. The major Alliedoffensives of 1917 had failed. Russia had collapsed, and Italy was on the verge ofcollapse. The German U-boat campaign still threatened the maritime supply routefrom the United States. Many months would pass before American soldiers couldbolster depleted Allied manpower. Both Britain and France were on the defensive.

The Central Powers had not been successful. They were being strangled by the

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World War I in Strategic Overview (cont’d)

Allied naval blockade which was starving millions of German and Austrian civilians.Austria was at the end of its resources; Turkey and Bulgaria were wobbling; theburden of the war fell more and more heavily on Germany. Hindenburg andLudendorff had established a virtual military dictatorship in Germany andexercised almost as much authority over the subservient governments of Austria,Bulgaria, and Turkey. The war was virtually a stalemate until the U. S. enteredthe war militarily.

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Statistics

World War One included:

3 Continents

31 Countries

65 Million Soldiers

37 Million Casualties

91,198 Deaths by Gas

6,395 Allied and Neutral Ships Lost

$186.3 Billion Financial Losses

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Causes of WWI

Some Causes May Include: Industrial Revolution Militarism

Glorified war Prepare for war

Nationalism Serbia

Imperialism Fierce competition- colonies, markets, resources

Secret Alliances split the continent Triple Alliance (Central Powers)

Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and Turkey Triple Entente (The Allies)

Serbia, Russia, France, Great Britain, US, ...

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Armenian GenocideThe first significant genocide of the 20th century was directed against theArmenian residents of Asia Minor by the Turkish government. It is the same oldfeud of Muslims slaughtering Christians or vice versa. This deliberate slaughterbegan on 24 Apr 1915, under the cover of World War I. 24 Apr is stillcommemorated by Armenians around the world as Martyr’s Day. The numberskilled are uncertain. The lowest estimate is 800,000 and the highest more than 2million. The Turkish government has consistently denied that this event everoccurred, but what happened has been carefully documented by outsiders.

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Immediate Cause

Assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand

by Gavrilo Princip, June 28th, 1914.

Archduke Ferdinand

First BombGunshotsGav. Princip

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Countries InvolvedThe Allies (Formerly known as

the Triple Entente)

•Austria-Hungary•Germany•Ottoman Empire •Bulgaria

Countries that only cut off trade

•Bolivia•Ecuador•Peru•Uruguay

•Serbia•Russia•France•Belgium•Great Britain•Liberia•Japan•Montenegro•Italy •San Marino•Portugal •Romania

•Greece•China•U.S.•Cuba•Nicaragua•Brazil•Siam•Costa Rica•Guatemala•Haiti•Honduras

That ShouldAdd Up To 31 Countries

Central Powers (Formerly known as the Triple Alliance)

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Goals

Hold back the Germans

Prolong the War (until better technology)

Have a Naval Blockade in place

Concentrate on the Western Front

Conquer France

Avoid Two-Front War

Use Unrestricted Submarine Warfare (naval subs could attack non-naval vessels)

Triple Entente Triple Alliance

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Inevitability of war

28 Jun 1914 Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria assassinated

5 Jul 1914 Germany issues Austria-Hungary a “blank check” pledging military

assistance if Austria-Hungary goes to war against Russia

23 Jul 1914 Austria issues Serbia an ultimatum

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EscalationAfter the Archduke was killed, a series of events was

set in motion, to change the world.

1. Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia.

2. Russia mobilized to aid Serbia.

3. Germany aids Austria-Hungary, declares war on Russia.

4. France mobilizes to aid Russia.

5. Germany declares war on France.

6. Germany invades Belgium.

7. UK declares war on Germany.

8. OE mobilizes to aid Germany and Austria-Hungary.

9. Italy joins France, UK, and Russia.

10. Bulgaria joins Ottoman Empire, Germany, and Austria-Hungary.

11. US joins Italy, France, UK, and Russia

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The inevitability of war

28 Jul 1914 Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia

29 Jul 1914 Russia orders full mobilization of its troops

1 Aug 1914 Germany declares war on Russia

2 Aug 1914 Germany demands Belgium declare access to German troops

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“Belgium is a country, not a road”

King Albert I of Belgium denied permission

2 Aug 1914 Germany declared war on France Why???

The Schlieffen Plan!

4 Aug 1914 Great Britain declared war on Germany for violating Belgian neutrality

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Reasons for World War I FrayerModel

World War I

Reasons for it to occur Leaders and Alliances

Goals Statistics

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Reasons for World War I Quiz1. What was the European situation for World War I

prior to the entry of the U.S. in 1918?

2. Give one statistic and one cause for World War I.3. The Armenian Genocide had what estimates for

casualties?

4. What was the immediate cause of WWI?

5. Give one goal each for the Triple Entente and Triple Alliance.

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War DeclaredAustria- Hungary now decided to use the assassination as an excuse to settle itsquarrel with Serbia. It was backed by Germany. On 23 Jul 1914, Austriapresented a warlike ultimatum to Serbia, allowing only 48 hours for an answer.Serbia suggested that some of Austria’s demands be referred to the otherEuropean powers. Austria refused. On 28 Jul, it declared war on Serbia.

All the nations in Europe had been expecting war. For many years, rival groupsof nations had been making treaties and alliances. Europe had been divided intotwo camps. Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy were members of the TripleAlliance, or Central Powers. Russia, France, and England formed the rival TripleEntente Powers. Later, they were called the Allies. The Balkan States sided withSerbia and the Allies. Serbia’s enemies were on the side of the Central Powers.These alliances were brought in to action 28 Jul 1914 by Austria’s declaration ofwar. Within a week, all of Europe was at war.

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1914 – 1915 Illusions and Stalemate

Many Europeans were excited about war

“Defend yourself against the aggressors”

Domestic differences were put aside

War would be over in a few weeks

Ignored the length and brutality of the American War between the States

(prototype to World War I)

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Major Countries of the British Empire, 1914

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1914 – 1915 Illusions and Stalemate

Belief that modern industrial war could not be conducted for more than a few months

“Home by Christmas”

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1914 – 1915 Illusions and Stalemate

“Fatal attraction of war”

Exhilarating release from every day life

A glorious adventure

War would rid the nations of selfishness

Spark a national re-birth based on heroism

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Fighting Fronts The Western Front

was between France and Germany

The Italian Front was between Austria-Hungary and Italy

The Eastern Front was between Russia and Germany

Germany wanted to avoid fighting on more than one front.

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The Schlieffen Plan’s Destructive Nature

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The Schlieffen Plan

Invade western frontfirst

After defeating France concentrate on the Eastern front

Avoid fighting a 2 front war

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The Schlieffen Plan’s Destructive Nature

Germany made vast encircling movement through Belgium to enter Paris

Underestimated speed of the British mobilization

Quickly sent troops to France

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The Schlieffen Plan’s Destructive Nature

6-10 Sep 1914

Battle of Marne

Stopped the Germans but French troops were exhausted

Both sides dug trenches for shelter

STALEMATE

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The German Invasion of BelgiumGermany’s violation of neutrality which involved the passing of troopsthrough Belgium on their way to France, became for the Allies a symbolof barbarity and militarism run amok and a reminder of the need to wipeautocracy from the face of the earth. Germany’s violation of Belgianneutrality was certainly an outrage, but obviously not the greatestatrocity in the history of mankind. The Germans had made the samerequest of the Belgians that they had of Luxembourg, which theyaccepted without difficulty: they wanted safe passage for Germantroops, and agreed to compensate Belgians for any damage or anyvictuals consumed along the way.Allied governments won an important public relations victory in Americawith propaganda alleging widespread atrocities committed by Germansoldiers against Belgian civilians. Children with their hands cut off,babies tossed from bayonet to bayonet, nuns raped, corpses made intomargarine—these were just some of the gruesome tales coming out ofwar-torn Europe. Americans on the scene, however, could not verifythese stories. American reporters who had followed the German armyinsisted that they had seen nothing at all that would lend credence tothe lurid tales making their way to the United States. Clarence Darrow,the lawyer who would become known for his work in the Scopes trial of

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1925, offered to pay $1,000 (roughly $20,000 in 2011 dollars) toanyone who could show him a Belgian boy whose hands had been cutoff by a German soldier. No one took him up on it. (After the war, itwas well established that the Belgian atrocities were largely fabricated,but the lies did their damage.Although Americans still favored staying out of the war, many hadabsorbed the message of Allied propaganda that Germany was evilincarnate and needed to be crushed for the sake of civilization.

The German Invasion of Belgium (cont’d)

Punch or The London Charivari—12 Aug 1914

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Wilson’s Propaganda for the War Effort

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Starving Civilians Is Against the LawThe British were involved in a real atrocity of their own: a deliberate attempt tostarve the Germans with a naval blockade. The British hunger blockade ofGermany violated the generally accepted norms of international law codified inseveral key international agreements of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

The British established a distant blockade which is illegal. This type of blockade asopposed to a close blockade declares large areas of sea off-limits, and the Britishmined the North Sea making it perilous even for neutral ships. Where the Britishhad the right to a close blockade of search and seizure, they replaced it with theillegal of distant blockade of explode and sink.

Food intended for civilian use was not considered contraband by any countryexcept Britain. But the relatively mild international response to Britain’s conduct,the British government concluded that “the neutral powers seem to satisfythemselves with theoretical protest.” It was in that spirit that the Germansexpected their submarine policy to be accepted as well—but in the case ofPresident Wilson at least, they were in for a surprise.

Wilson refused to draw any connections between the German warning ofsubmarine warfare and the British hunger blockade of Germany. His sympathieswere always with the British. So pro-British was the American administration thaton one occasion, American ambassador to Great Britain Walter Hines Page read an

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Starving Civilians Is Against the Law (cont’d)

American dispatch to British officials and then sat down to help them devise a replyto his own government! German misdeeds on the high seas, on the other hand,received immediate condemnation from Washington.

The British steamship Falaba incident was the British government’s fault eventhough the British spun the propaganda in their favor. The reality was that theFalaba was carrying 13 tons of ammunition and was given three warnings before itwas sunk. According to British propaganda, there was no warning shot and then110 people were killed which included an American.

Wilson’s double standard lay in the fact that he allowed U.S. citizens to travel onarmed belligerent ships as peaceful vessels. The persistent refusal of Wilson tosee the relation between British irregularities and the German submarine warfare isprobably the crux of the American involvement. According to Churchill, “It is mostimportant to attract neutral shipping to our shores in the hope especially ofembroiling the U.S. with Germany. . . . If some of it gets into trouble, better still.”

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LusitaniaAlthough it did not bring the U.S. immediately into the war, the sinking ofthe Lusitania in May 1915 was among the most dramatic events from theAmerican point of view prior to U.S. entry. This British cruise liner wasperhaps the most famous ship in the world. The German government hadpublished warnings in major newspapers not to book passage on theLusitania. The morning it was to set sail, Count Johann von Bernstorffhad issued an alert that British vessels were “liable to destruction,” andcautioned that travelers sailing in the war zone “on ships of Great Britainand her allies do so at their own risk.”Passengers by and large ignored the warning. It was inconceivable tothem that a ship with the speed of the Lusitania was in any danger, andthose who inquired about potential risks were told not to worry and thatthe ship would be escorted by a British naval convoy through the warzone.The passengers thought there would be ample time for the evacuation ofthe ship if hit by a torpedo since the Titanic stayed afloat for some twoand a half hours. But the torpedo that hit the Lusitania did anunexpected amount of damage, and it remains something of a mystery tothis day but was probably attributed to the 5,000 cases of munitions onboard for the British.Some 1,195 of the ship’s 1,959 passengers perished, including 124 of the159 Americans on board. There is little sense in whitewashing the

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Lusitania (cont’d)German attack on the Lusitania, but at the same time the Cunard Lineand the British government were highly reckless of selling people passagethrough a declared war zone.American newspapers chose to avoid war over this incident as did Wilsonhimself. However, he wished to draft a stern note to Berlin, warning theGermans of serious consequences should this kind of submarine warfarecontinue. Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan feared the potentialconsequences of so stern a message. Bryan was practically alone in theWilson administration in attempting to balance the scales of the twosides. Bryan reminded Wilson of the ammunition on board and anagreement accepted by Germany but rejected by Britain that would endthe submarine warfare in exchange for the elimination of the starvationblockade. He addressed Wilson’s double standard head on: “Why beshocked by the drowning of a few people, if there is to be no objection tostarving a nation?” Wilson sent the note anyway. Convinced that he waspart of an administration that was bent on war, Bryan resigned.

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The Early Phases of WWI Graphic Organizer

Propaganda

Illusions Fighting Fronts

Plan

The Beginning

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The Early Phases of WWI Quiz

1. What was the beginning point of WWI?

2. Give two illusions of WWI?

3. Give one of the fighting fronts?

4. What was the Germans plan to avoid a two front war?

5. Give one of the Allies examples of propaganda.

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New Weapons and Strategies

Submarines

SteelShips

Chemical Warfare-Mustard Gas

Tanks

BlimpsDirigibles

Long Range Artillery

Airplanes

Hand Grenades

Flame Throwers

New weapons crippled the “frozen front”

Machine guns

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The changes of war

Airplanes

Dog fights in the air

Bombing inaccurate

Romanticized the battlefields

Paris and London bombed

Pilots fired pistols and threw hand grenades

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Unterseeboot

At the beginning of World War I, Germany challenged British seapower with alarge ocean-going submarine fleet. For greater endurance at sea, the Germansused diesel engines for surface cruising and equipped their U-boats (short forUnterseeboot, under sea boat) with at least one medium-caliber deck gun. LaterU-boats were also equipped to lay underwater minefields.

Allied vessels had no reliable way of detecting submarines underwater, and by1918 U-boats had sunk more than 11 million tons of shipping. Had Germany beenable to employ submarines in greater numbers, Great Britain might easily havelost the war.

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The Trench System

Front line

Communication trench

Support trenches

No Man’s Land

Barbed wire

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Myth

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Reality

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The Trenches

Trenches dug from English Channel to Switzerland

6,250 miles

6 to 8 feet deep

Immobilized both sides for 4 years

More ways to build from a French hand book.

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The Trenches

How to build them

Sleeping where?

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Soldiers fought from within the trenches

It was usually tight quarters

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Trenches were used by both the Allies and the Central Powers

An aerial photograph of the trenches First line of defense

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In the trenches

Not all trenches were deep.

Many nations fought together

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Fighting

Sometimes an easy target

“Going over the top”

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No Man’s Land

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No Man’s Land

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Dangers of Trench life

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Trenchfoot

From having wet feet most of the time and nowhere to dry them out

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Dead bodies….

Left to rot in the trenches because of the machine gun fire that kept the soldiers in the trenches

An easy food source for rats and a place to breed disease

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Bring rats

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Soldiers of all nations hunted the rats–sometimes rations were short and meat was added to their diet

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Life in the Trenches

Elaborate systems of defense barbed wire

Concrete machine gun nests

Mortar batteries

Troops lived in holes underground

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Life in the Trenches

Boredom

Soldiers read to pass the time

Sarah Bernhardt came out to the front to read poetry to the soldiers

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“Death is everywhere”

“We all had on us the stench of dead bodies.” Death numbed the soldier’s minds.

Shell shock

Psychological devastation

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Life in the Trenches

Trench warfare baffled military leaders Attempt a breakthrough

Then return to a war of movement

Millions of young men sacrificed attempting the breakthrough

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Poison Gas

A new weapon, hard to combat. Different gas mask styles were created by different countries. None were 100% effective.

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“Death is everywhere”

Mustard gas Carried by the wind

Burned out soldier’s lungs

Deadly in the trenches where it would sit at the bottom

After WWI, chemical warfare was outlawed in the Geneva Conventions

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Belgian Uniforms and masks Australian Gas mask

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Japanese gas mask U. S. gas mask

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Gas Training

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Trench Warfare New Terminology

Offensive attacks into No Man’s Land

Shell fire created a new health condition—”Shell shocked”; “combat fatigue- WWII, Korea, Vietnam; PTSD- OEF, OIF, GWOT

“Going over the top”

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Pick One of the Suggested Tasks

Draw a picture of a trench see p. 336-7 of textbook from what you remember of the PowerPoint slides.

Write a description how trench warfare worked.

Draw a picture of a soldier and what he would have had to take into battle.

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Technology and Trench Warfare Quiz

1. Name two new weapons developed for WWI.

2. What were the some of the premises of the trench system developed?

3. Give two of the horrors of trench warfare.

4. What warfare was considered too horrific to continue by the Geneva Conventions?

5. Give one of the new terms coined in WWI?

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Battles and America’s Entry

- Numerous battles- Christmas Truce

- First and Second Battles of the Marne- Battle of Verdun

- The Eastern Front- America’s Entry

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Christmas truceChristmas truce was a series of widespread unofficialceasefires that took place along the Western Front aroundChristmas 1914, during World War I.

British and German troops meeting in No man's land during the unofficial truce (British troops from the Northumberland Hussars, 7th Division, Bridoux-Rouge Banc Sector)

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First and Second Battles of the Marne

French soldiers waiting for assault behind a ditch

First(1914)

Strength Strength

1,071,000 1,485,000

39 French and 6 British divisions

27 German divisions

Casualties & Losses Casualties & Losses

263,000- 81,700 died 220,000

"German soldiers advancing past a captured French position, between Loivre and Brimont, Marne department, 1918"

Second (1918)

Strength Strength

1,071,000 1,485,000

44 French divisions8 American divisions4 British divisions

2 Italian divisions

52 German divisions

Casualties & Losses Casualties & Losses

132,717 dead or wounded

139,000 dead or wounded

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Battle of Verdun

10 months

700,000 men killed

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The Eastern Front

Russian army moved into Eastern Germany on August 30, 1914 Defeated

The Austrians kicked out of Serbia

Italians attacked Austria in 1915

G. came to Austrian aid and pushed Russians back 300 miles into own territory

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The Eastern Front

Much more mobile more than the West

But loss of life still very high

1915: 2.5 million Russians killed, captured, or wounded

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The Eastern Front

Germany and Austria Hungary joined by Bulgaria in Sept. 1915

Attacked and eliminated Serbia from war

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America Interested in War?No American was interested in war in 1914. No American interest was at stake,and American security was not threatened in the slightest. As the war evolvedinto a quagmire, Americans were glad that their young men were notparticipating. The injuries were unspeakable that would move the front only afew yards, and the term “basket case” was coined in this war referring to aquadruple amputee.

President Wilson, for his part, urged Americans to be neutral in thought, word,and deed. Yet the president was at heart pro-British. Wilson himself onceremarked privately, “England is fighting our fight and you may well understandthat I shall not, in the present state of the world’s affairs, place obstacles in herway. . . . I will not take any action to embarrass England when she is fighting forher life and the life of the world.”

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Wilson and World War I

In the summer of 1914, all of Europe was plunged into war. Wilson called uponthe United States to be neutral “even in spirit,” but few Americans were able toremain impartial. For two years, the president made every effort to avoid war.Even after the unarmed British liner Lusitania was sunk by a German submarinewith a loss of almost 1,200 lives including 124 Americans, he argued: “There issuch a thing as a man being too proud to fight.”

In 1916, he was reelected. He defeated the Republican candidate Charles EvansHughes by an electoral vote of 277 to 254. The campaign slogan “He kept us outof war” probably won him more popular votes than any other factor. After theelection, Wilson tried to end the war by active mediation. The Germans, however,resumed unrestricted submarine warfare. On 2 Apr 1917, the president askedCongress for a declaration of war. Before a joint session of the two houses, heread the solemn words, “The present German submarine warfare againstcommerce is a warfare against mankind, It is a war against all nations . . . . Weare accepting this challenge . . . . The world must be made safe for democracy.”On 6 Apr 1917, Congress declared war.

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Wilson and World War I (cont’d)

President Wilson helped contribute to the confusion of what a republic was whenhe identified World War I as the effort of the allied forces to “make the world safefor democracy.” President Wilson had surrounded himself with many of the earlyrecruits to the Intercollegiate Socialist Society (ISS) movement, and these mayhave encouraged the adoption of this slogan just as they later changed the nameof their ISS organization to the League of Industrial Democracy because of theviolence of the Russian Revolution of 1917. In spite of these efforts to clarify thedifference, the United States began to be consistently identified in both the pressand the school books as a “democracy.”

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Congressman Charles A. Lindbergh, Sr. Counts “Internationalism” a Mistake

After World War I, Congressman Charles A. Lindbergh, Sr., father of the famous“Lone Eagle” who was the first man to fly the Atlantic, asked the people of theUnited States to reconsider the policy Washington was pursuing in its foreignaffairs. He was particularly concerned about how Americans were pushed intoWorld War I. In 1923, he wrote:

Take for example our entry into the World War [in 1917]. We did not think. Weelected a president for a second term because he said he “kept us out of war” in hisfirst term. We proved by a large vote that we did not want to go to war, but nosooner was the president re-elected than the propaganda started to put us to war.Then we became hysterical, as people always have done in war, and we believedeverything bad against our enemy and believed only good of our allies andourselves. As a matter of fact, all the leaders were bad, vicious. They lost theirreason and the people followed.

We cannot properly blame the people of any of the European nations, unless weblame ourselves. None of them were free from danger of the others. . . . We,however, were not in danger, statements by profiteers and militarists to thecontrary notwithstanding . . . . The greatest good we could do the world at thattime was to stay out, and that would have been infinitely better for ourselves, for

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Congressman Charles A. Lindbergh, Sr. Counts “Internationalism” a Mistake

(cont’d)we could have helped the world had we conserved our resources. There never wasa nation that did a more unstatesmanlike thing than we did to enter the war. Wecame out without establishing a single principle for which we entered.

The one compelling duty of America is to put its own house in shape, and to standupon an economic system that will make its natural resources available to theintelligence, industry, and use of the people. When we do that the way to worldredemption from the folly of present chaos will stand out in our country so clearly,honestly, and usefully that we shall be copied wherever peoples do their ownthinking.

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Why Did Wilson Favor War? In February 1917, Wilson had greeted Jane Addams and a group of peace activistsat the White House. His guests caught a glimpse of his rationale for war. Thepresident explained that “as head of a nation participating in the war, the presidentof the United States would have a seat at the peace table, but. . . . If he remainedthe representative of a neutral country, he could at best only ‘call through a crack inthe door.’ ”

Wilson believed that American could bring impartiality to the peace table, but if theEuropeans were left to themselves, they would develop a vindictive peace. (As youremember, the Congress of Vienna brought almost a century of peace to theEuropean continent and this was done without any American help.)

In his speech calling for a war declaration, Wilson argued that the U.S. would fightfor great moral principles and that democratic regimes were less warlike thanautocratic ones. Wilson also spoke of submarine warfare as “a war against allmankind.” According to historian Thomas Fleming, this claim is not substantiated byAmerica’s experience in later wars: “There is no moral onus for using it in the onlyway that gives submariners a decent chance for survival against their surfaceenemies—torpedoing enemy ships without warning. This surprise-attack approachwas the policy adopted by the U.S. Navy during World War II. No one, includingAmerica’s Japanese or German enemies, called the practice a war against mankind.

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Why Did Wilson Favor War?(cont’d)

Wilson also promised in his war address to Congress that Americans’ treatment ofethnic Germans who lived among them would prove to the world that the U.S. hadno quarrel with the German people, only the German government. It did not workout that way. German-Americans were harassed and demonized. Symphonyorchestras refused to perform works by Beethoven, Mozart, and other German-speaking composers; in many states, it became illegal to teach German in schools(and in two states, it was illegal to speak German in public); German-languagebooks were burned; “disloyal “professors were dismissed; beer fell out of popularity;and sauerkraut was renamed “liberty cabbage.” Same thing happened not long agoto France. Freedom fries is a political euphemism for French fries and Freedomtoast for French toast used by some people in the United States as a result of anti-French sentiment during the controversy over the U.S. decision to launch the 2003invasion of Iraq. France expressed strong opposition in the United Nations to suchan invasion.

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War is Declared and Opportunities Abound for All

The war finally becomes an impossible impasse due to acts committedby Germany. The events were Germany’s use of restricted submarinewarfare, the publication of the Zimmermann telegram revealing aGerman plot to help Mexico retake the American Southwest, and theimprovement of Germany’s position on the eastern front as a result ofthe Russian Revolution.

The U.S. mobilized the industrial base for war The United States strengthened its armed forces through the Defense Act of 1916,

which increased the regular army, and the Selective Service Act of 1917, whichinstituted a draft.

Federal agencies that regulated the industry were the War Industries Board, whichregulated the economy to guarantee sufficient military supplies; the FoodAdministration, which operated the nation’s supplies; the Railroad Administration,which operated the nation’s railroads; the United States Shipping Board, whichsupervised shipbuilding; and the National War Board, which settled labor disputes.

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War is Declared and Opportunities Abound for All

(cont’d) Favorable circumstances appear for women and blacks in “Home Front”

industry. The war provided women with the opportunity to work in war factories and to

perform many jobs previously held only by men. More than 10,000 women enteredthe armed services in non-combat roles.

The war accelerated the migration of blacks from the South to the North and West,where many found jobs in war factories. Some 370,000 blacks served in the armedforces during the war.

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Committee on Public InformationThe absence of public unity was a primary concern when America entered the war on

April 6, 1917. In Washington, unwavering public support was considered to be crucial to

the entire wartime effort. On April 13, 1917, Wilson created the Committee on Public

Information (CPI) to promote the war domestically while publicizing American war aims

abroad. Under the leadership of a muckraking journalist named George Creel, the CPI

recruited heavily from business, media, academia, and the art world. The CPI blended

advertising techniques with a sophisticated understanding of human psychology, and its

efforts represent the first time that a modern government disseminated propaganda on

such a large scale. It is fascinating that this phenomenon, often linked with totalitarian

regimes, emerged in a democratic state.

Although George Creel was an outspoken critic of censorship at the hands of public

servants, the CPI took immediate steps to limit damaging information. Invoking the threat

of German propaganda, the CPI implemented "voluntary guidelines" for the news media

and helped to pass the Espionage Act of 1917 and the Sedition Act of 1918.

One of the most important elements of the CPI was the Division of News, which

distributed more than 6,000 press releases and acted as the primary conduit for war-

related information. According to Creel, on any given week, more than 20,000

newspaper columns were filled with material gleaned from CPI handouts. Realizing that

many Americans glided right past the front page and headed straight for the features

section, the CPI also created the Division of Syndicated Features and recruited the help

of leading novelists, short story writers, and essayists.

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Committee on Public InformationThese popular American writers presented the official line in an easily digestible

form, and their work was said to have reached twelve million people every month.

The Division of Civic and Educational Cooperation relied heavily on scholars who

churned out pamphlets with titles such as The German Whisper, German War

Practices, and Conquest and Kultur. The academic rigor of many of these pieces

was questionable, but more respectable thinkers, such as John Dewey and Walter

Lippmann—Progressive socialists, also voiced their support for the war.

Moving images were even more popular than still ones, and the Division of Films

ensured that the war was promoted in the cinema. The film industry suffered from a

sleazy reputation, and producers sought respectability by lending wholehearted

support to the war effort. Hollywood's mood was summed up in a 1917 editorial in

The Motion Picture News which proclaimed that "every individual at work in this

industry wants to do his share" and promised that "through slides, film leaders and

trailers, posters, and newspaper publicity they will spread that propaganda so

necessary to the immediate mobilization of the country's great resources." Movies

with titles like The Kaiser: The Beast of Berlin, Wolves of Kultur, and Pershing's

Crusaders flooded American theaters. One picture, To Hell With The Kaiser, was so

popular that Massachusetts riot police were summoned to deal with an angry mob

that had been denied admission.

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4 Minute Men

The CPI created the Four Minute Men, 75,000 volunteer speakers in 5,200communities, who deliver the CPI’s propaganda to their neighbors and tochurch congregations. The CPI’s psychologists target various demographicsegments of the American public with tailor-made propaganda. Foreignlanguage speakers are used to target immigrants, farmers are used tosell the war to farmers, businessmen are used to convince otherbusinessmen of the recently discovered virtue of the war. In all, the CPI’sspeakers give more than seven million speeches provoking hatred andfear of Germany and Germans to more than three hundred million people.After many of the speeches, mobs form and attack German-Americanhomes and businesses.

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American Protection League-Snitch on Your Neighbor

The American Protective League was an American organization of privatecitizens that worked with Federal law enforcement agencies during the World War Iera to identify suspected German sympathizers and to counteract the activities ofradicals, anarchists, anti-war activists, and left-wing labor and politicalorganizations. The APL was formed in 1917 by A. M. Briggs, a wealthy Chicagoadvertising executive. At its zenith the APL claimed 250,000 dues-paying membersin 600 cities. It quickly established its national headquarters in Washington, D.C.

A private organization, the APL nevertheless had a semi-official status. It receivedofficial approval from Attorney General Thomas Gregory. He authorized the APL tocarry on its letterhead the words "Organized with the Approval and Operating underthe Direction of the United States Department of Justice, Bureau of Investigation.”Under this directive, the APL worked with the Bureau of Investigation (BOI) —precursor to the FBI — which gathered information for U.S. District Attorneys.

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American Protection League-Snitch on Your Neighbor (cont’d)

APL members were accused of acting as vigilantes, allegedly violating the civilliberties of American citizens, including so-called "anti-slacker raids" designed toround up men who had not registered for the draft. The APL was also accused ofillegally detaining citizens associated with anarchist, labor, and pacifist movements.

An APL report on its actions in the Northwest for five months in 1918 showed thatamong its 25 activities, its largest effort (some 10% of its activity), was indisrupting the Industrial Workers of the World—IWW (the "Wobblies"), a radicallabor union. Some IWW members had been involved in violent labor disputes andbomb plots against U.S. businessmen and government officials. In turn, the IWWalleged that APL members burgled and vandalized IWW offices and harassed IWWmembers.

After the Armistice with Germany ended the war, Attorney General Gregory creditedthe APL with the defeat of German spies and propaganda. He claimed that hisDepartment still required the APL's services as enemy nations sought to weakenAmerican resolve during the peace negotiations, especially as newly democraticGermany sought kindlier treatment than its predecessor government might haveexpected.

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American Protection League-Snitch on Your Neighbor (cont’d)

A. Mitchell Palmer succeeded Gregory as Attorney General on 5 March 1919. Beforeassuming office, he had opposed the APL activities. One of Palmer's first acts was torelease 10,000 aliens of German ancestry who had been taken into governmentcustody during the war. He stopped accepting intelligence information gathered bythe APL. He also refused to share information in his APL-provided files when OhioGovernor James M. Cox requested it. He called the APL materials "gossip, hearsayinformation, conclusions, and inferences" and added that "information of thischaracter could not be used without danger of doing serious wrong to individualswho were probably innocent.” In March 1919, when some in Congress and thepress were urging him to reinstate the Justice Department's wartime relationshipwith the APL, he told reporters that "its operation in any community constitutes agrave menace.” A few months after the Armistice, the League officially disbanded.

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Black Tom- The First Terrorist Attack on America

The Black Tom explosion on July 30, 1916, in Jersey City, New Jersey, was an actof sabotage on American ammunition supplies by German agents to prevent themateriel from being used by the Allies in World War I.

As soon as war broke out in Europe, the United States began manufacturingmunitions and sharing the weapons with allied British, French, and Russian forces inEurope. German agents in the United States reported the stockpiling and shipping ofweapons, and the German government took action. Because they could only openlyattack United States property in limited ways such as the sinking of merchant shipscarrying contraband munitions without provoking America to wage war, the Germangovernment sent undercover agents to sabotage munitions operations. Numerousfires were set at military supply manufacturing sites. Shipping lines and railroadswere also sometimes targets. Over 50 acts of sabotage were carried out onAmerican targets from 1914 to 1918. Of those 50, nearly 30 occurred in the NewYork area alone. Not only did several factories and warehouses operate in the NewYork area, but ports in and around New York were the major staging point forshipping supplies to the western front in Europe.

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Black Tom- The First Terrorist Attack on America (cont’d)

After midnight, a series of small fires were discovered on the pier. Some guards fled,fearing an explosion. Others attempted to fight the fires and eventually called theJersey City Fire Department.

At 2:08 a.m., the first and largest of the explosions took place. Fragments from theexplosion traveled long distances, some lodging in the Statue of Liberty and some inthe clock tower of The Jersey Journal building in Journal Square, over a mile away,stopping the clock at 2:12 a.m. The explosion was the equivalent of an earthquakemeasuring between 5.0 and 5.5 on the Richter scale and was felt as far away asPhiladelphia. Windows broke as far as 25 miles (40 km) away, including thousands inlower Manhattan. Some window panes in Times Square were completely shattered.The outer wall of Jersey City's City Hall was cracked and the Brooklyn Bridge wasshaken. People as far away as Maryland were awakened by what they thought was anearthquake.

Two of the watchmen who had lit smudge pots to keep away mosquitoes on theirwatch were immediately arrested. It soon became clear that the fires of the smudgepots had not caused the fire and that the blast had not been an accident. It wastraced to a Slovak immigrant named Michael Kristoff, who had served in the U.S.Army, but admitted to carrying suitcases for the Germans before America enteredWorld War I.

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Black Tom- The First Terrorist Attack on America (cont’d)

According to him, two of the guards were German agents. It is likely that thebombing involved some of the techniques developed by a group of German agentssurrounding German ambassador Count Johann Heinrich von Bernstorff, probablyusing the pencil bombs developed by Captain Franz von Rintelen. Althoughsuspicion at the time fell solely on German saboteurs like Kurt Jahnke and hisassistant Lothar Witzke, still judged as "likely" responsible by some, laterinvestigations in the aftermath of the Annie Larsen affair unearthed links betweenthe Ghadar conspiracy and the Black Tom explosion Franz von Papen is known tohave also been involved in both.

Bottom Line:

The whole incident was covered up by President Wilson because the outrage by theAmerican public would have run counter to his presidential campaign slogan, “Hekept us out of the war” and he wanted to be re-elected. He denied the incident andblamed it on capitalists who did not do the right thing in safety and security.

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America Faces War on a Grand Scale

World War starts in Europe World War I was touched off by the assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand of

Austria-Hungary by Serbian nationalists in Sarajevo.

The rise of the German Empire and its desire for territorial security led to the allianceof Germany, Austria-Hungary, and the Ottoman Empire in one camp. A competingalliance was formed by Great Britain, France, and Russia, each of which feared thatGermany and its allies might attempt aggression against them.

America’s early position on the war The United states followed a policy of neutrality

Most Americans favored the Allied side, because of their many cultural ties to GreatBritain and their gratitude to France. British control of the seas made Americadependent on trade with the Allies.

The Lusitania incident It rallied American public support behind the Allies with Wilson’s propaganda.

Germany issued the Arabic and Sussex pledges to keep America from the Allies.

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America Faces War on a Grand Scale (cont’d)

Wilson prepares America for war Wilson prepared the nation for war by doubling the size of the army, strengthening

the National Guard, and undertaking a building program that aimed to makeAmerica’s navy the world’s largest by 1920.

Wilson was re-elected in 1916 by deception and used the slogan, “He kept us out ofwar.” Less than one year later, America was at war.

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The Home Front

Women took war factory jobs

Received lower wages than males

Food shortages made running a household difficult

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The Home Front

Censorship

Not told about high death toll

Romanticized the battlefields

“soldiers have died a beautiful death, in noble battle, we shall rediscover poetry…epic and chivalrous”

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The Home Front

Censorship

“Newspapers described

troops as itching to go over the top.”

“Government reported to the press that life in the trenches promoted good health and clear air”

Slogan

A WWI companion book and movie along with the book and movie—In Flanders Field

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The Home Front

“On Leave”

Troops would stay together so they could sympathize with each other

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The Home Front

Impossible to hide death

Women in mourning

Badly wounded soldiers returned home

Opposition began to emerge

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Treaty of Brest-Litovsk

Lenin had to deal with the war. Calls for a negotiated peace failed. Lenin thenbargained directly with the Germans. Faced with a crippling loss of territory or thecollapse of his government, he chose the former. Trotsky headed the Sovietdelegation that signed a peace treaty at Brest-Litovsk, in what is now Belarus, on 3Mar 1918. Under its terms, Russia lost Ukraine, its Polish and Baltic provinces, andFinland. The treaty was effectively annulled by Germany’s defeat in November1918, and the Soviet Union eventually regained all of the territory except Finlandand Poland.

At the time that the Congress of Soviets met to approve the treaty, the Bolshevikschanged their name to the Russian Communist party. The treaty had no negativeeffects for Lenin. Opponents from different Russian factions were united by theiropposition to it. Patriotic indignation at the betrayal of Russia to Germany quicklysurfaced, even in the army. This division between the Communists and theiropponents led to a civil war that lasted until late 1920. Trotsky was appointedcommissar for war.

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The war ends

1917 – Russia surrenders under the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk(aseparate peace)

U.S. joins the war on the Allied side

Nov. 11, 1918 Armistice

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Death Toll of War

Allied Powers Central Powers

42 million served 23 million served

22 million casualties

52% attrition rate

15 million casualties

65% attrition rate

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Psychological impact

“Never such innocence again” (similar to 9/11)

Bitterness towards aristocratic officers whose lives were never in danger

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Social Impact

Men lost limbs and were mutilated

Birthrate fell markedly

Invalids unable to work

Ethnic hostility

Influenza epidemic

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WWI Battles

The Home FrontAmerica’s Entry

ExamplesExamples

Battles, America’s Entry, and Armistice Graphic Organizer

Slogans Slogans

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Battles, America’s Entry, and Armistice Quiz

1. Give one pro and one con argument for U.S. entry into WWI.

2. Give a WWI Wilsonian slogan.

3. Give a WWI Home Front book, movie, or slogan.

4. Give two reasons that America entered WWI.

5. Give two examples of the Home Front.

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Poetry and Literature of World War I

Extra Credit is available

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Dulce Et Decorum EstBent double, like old beggars under sacks,Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge,Till on the haunting flares we turned our backsAnd towards our distant rest began to trudge.Men marched asleep. Many had lost their bootsBut limped on, blood-shod. All went lame; all blind;Drunk with fatigue; deaf even to the hootsOf disappointed shells that dropped behind.

GAS! Gas! Quick, boys!-- An ecstasy of fumbling,Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time;But someone still was yelling out and stumblingAnd floundering like a man in fire or lime.--Dim, through the misty panes and thick green lightAs under a green sea, I saw him drowning.

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* It is sweet and proper to die for your countryWilfred Owen, died 1918

In all my dreams, before my helpless sight,He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning.

If in some smothering dreams you too could paceBehind the wagon that we flung him in,And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,His hanging face, like a devil's sick of sin;If you could hear, at every jolt, the bloodCome gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cudOf vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues,--My friend, you would not tell with such high zestTo children ardent for some desperate glory,The old Lie: Dulce et decorum estPro patria mori. *

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Louse Hunting

Nudes -- stark and glistening,

Yelling in lurid glee. Grinning faces

And raging limbs

Whirl over the floor one fire.

For a shirt verminously busy

Yon soldier tore from his throat, with oaths

Godhead might shrink at, but not the lice.

And soon the shirt was aflare

Over the candle he'd lit while we lay.

Then we all sprang up and stript

To hunt the verminous brood.

Soon like a demons' pantomine

The place was raging.

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What a louse looks like if it were large enough to see.

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See the silhouettes agape,

See the glibbering shadows

Mixed with the battled arms on

the wall.

See gargantuan hooked fingers

Pluck in supreme flesh

To smutch supreme littleness.

See the merry limbs in hot

Highland fling

Because some wizard vermin

Charmed from the quiet this revel

When our ears were half lulled

By the dark music

Blown from Sleep's trumpet

Isaac Rosenberg

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IN FLANDERS FIELDS

John McCrae, died 1918

In Flanders fields the poppies blowBetween the crosses, row on rowThat mark our place; and in the skyThe larks, still bravely singing, flyScarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days agoWe lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,Loved and were loved, and now we lieIn Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:To you from failing hands we throwThe torch; be yours to hold it high.If ye break faith with us who dieWe shall not sleep, though poppies growIn Flanders fields.

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More resources on page 783-4 of the text. Possible extra credit test score

Write a poem as if you were a soldier or a medic during World War I, living and working in the trenches. It must be at least 12 lines and actually be decent.

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Armistice

The End of the War?

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End Results

Millions Killed

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End Results

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End Results

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The Treaty of Versailles

June 1919

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The Big Four

Woodrow Wilson USA David Lloyd-George Great Britain

Georges Clemenceau France Vittorio Orlando Italy

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The Big Four at Versailles in 1919

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What did France want from the treaty?

Security

Revenge

Reparations

Clemenceau : The Tiger

Clemenceau wanted to make sure that Germany could not invade France in the future. He was determined that Germany should be made to pay for the damage that had been caused in northern France by the invading German armies.

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David Lloyd-George

In public Lloyd-George said he wanted to punish the Germans. The British public was very anti-German at the end of the war.

In private he realized that Britain needed Germany to recover because she was an important trading partner.

He was also worried about the “disease from the east”, communism. The Russian government had been overthrown by a communist revolution in 1917. Lloyd-George believed that the spread of communism had to be stopped. A strong Germany would be a barrier against it.

What did Britain Want?

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Woodrow Wilson

What did America Want?

Woodrow Wilson wanted the treaty to be based on his Fourteen Points

He believed Germany should be punished but not severely. He wanted a just settlement that would not leave Germany feeling resentful

Wilson wanted to set up an international organization called The League of Nations which would settle disputes

The American public did not support him. They were fed up with involvement in European affairs. The USA became more isolationist.

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The Peace Conference: The Disaster Wilson Pretended Not to Notice

Wilson was highly concerned with his lofty principles of “peace without victory”, andthe absence of revenge and self-aggrandizement. But in the closed doornegotiations among the Big Four (Britain, France, Italy, and the United States),Wilson saw only revenge and self-aggrandizement.

So wedded was Wilson to the idea of a League of Nations that the British andFrench delegations knew that all they had to do to persuade Wilson to abandon anyof the other Fourteen Points was to threaten not to join his beloved League. Forhis part, Wilson persuaded himself that as long as he got his League, thatinstitution could modify any objectionable aspects of the peace treaty. Ultimately,for Wilson, it was the League that mattered.

A sacred cow for Wilson was the ideal of self determination, however, in breakingup the Austro-Hungarian Empire more ethnicities were created for more nations.When Czechoslovakia was created, it contained 3 million Germans in the regionknown as the Sudetenland. Adolf Hitler would use the principle of self-determination to then demand annexation of Czechoslovakia to regain theseGermans. Portions of German-speaking Europe were parceled out not only toCzechoslovakia but also to Poland, Italy, and France; Germany even lost the portcity of Danzig which was 95% German. Austria was essentially reduced to its

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The Peace Conference: The Disaster Wilson Pretended Not to Notice (cont’d)

German speaking core. And despite the overwhelming popular support that existedfor a union of Germany with this smaller Austria, Wilson expressly forbade any suchunion in the treaty.

The treaty enraged Germans because they insisted upon surrendering on theFourteen Points which called for a general disarmament. The Treaty of Versaillescalled for only Germany to disarm and had the following restrictions: no air force,tanks, submarines (naturally) and restricted the army to 100,000. Germany wouldbear the whole burden of the reparations for the war and sole responsibility for thewar. Count Ulrich von Brockdorff-Rantzau repudiated this sole responsibilitybecause of the mass starvation of the German nation because of the Britishblockade that lasted four months past the armistice on the 11th hour of the 11th dayof the 11th month, 1918.

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The League of NationsThe first international organization set up to maintain world peace was the Leagueof Nations. It was founded in 1920 as part of the settlement that ended WorldWar I. Weakened from the start by the refusal of the United States to join, theorganization proved ineffective in defusing the hostilities that led to World War IIin 1939. After World War II, the League of Nations was replaced by the UnitedNations to institute the attempt of a new world government.

The League of Nations was first suggested in the Fourteen Points presented on 8Jan 1918, by Woodrow Wilson, President of the United States, as a basis forarmistice negotiations. After the peace negotiations opened, the work wascontinued by a commission headed by Wilson. A working plan, called TheCovenant of the League of Nations, became Section I of the Treaty of Versailles.The League came officially into existence with the ratification of this treaty on 10Jan 1920. The first Assembly met in Geneve, Switz., 15 Nov 1920, with 41 nationsrepresented. More than 20 nations joined later, but there were numerouswithdrawals.

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The U.S. Rejects World Leadership President Wilson’s plans were severely weakened in Congress.

Weakened support was evident in the election of a Republican Senate and House in1918 and in the discontent expressed by many Republicans on being excluded fromthe peace-treaty negotiations.

France, Great Britain, and Italy were intent on imposing harsh terms on the CentralPowers and were contemptuous of Wilson’s Fourteen Points.

The Versailles Treaty called for:

The creation of six new countries in central Europe

The separation of Austria and Hungary

Germany had to surrender its colonies, pay reparations, and pledge to remain disarmed

The treaty also called for a League of Nations

The organization of the League of Nations and its fate The League of Nations was to be composed of:

An Administrative Secretariat

An Assembly of all member nations

A Council consisting of the United States, Great Britain, France, Italy, Japan, and four non-permanent members chosen by the assembly

Congressional opponents of the League objected to the League Covenant, which theyfelt would restrict America’s independent power to declare war and threaten theMonroe Doctrine.

The Versailles Treaty was defeated in the Senate in two versions.

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What were the terms of the Treaty of Versailles?

To do with Germany’s armed forces :

The German army was to be reduced to 100,000 men. It was not allowed to have tanks.

Germany was not allowed an air force

The area known as the Rhineland was to be de-militarized

The Allies were to occupy the west bank of the Rhein for fifteen years

The German navy was to have no submarines or large battle-ships

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Territorial Losses

Germany lost ALL of her overseas colonies

Alsace-Lorraine was given to France

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Eupen and Malmedy were given to Belgium

North-Schleswig was given to Denmark

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Posen was given to Poland so that she would have access to the Baltic Sea. This area became known as the Polish Corridor. It meant that East Prussia was cut off from the rest of Germany.

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"The Allied and Associated Governments affirm, and Germany accepts, theresponsibility of Germany and her Allies for causing all the loss and damage to which the Allied and Associate Governments and their nationals have been subjected as a consequence of a war imposed upon them by the aggression of Germany and her Allies."

Article 231

The War Guilt Clause

GERMANY ACCEPTED RESPONSIBILITY FOR STARTING THE WAR

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REPARATIONS

Germany agreed to pay for the damage caused by her armies during the war. The sum she had to pay was later fixed at £6,600 million

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Germany was forbidden to unite with Austria

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How did Germans React to the Treaty?

Germans thought the Treaty was a “diktat” : a dictated peace. They had not been invited to the peace conference at Versailles and when the Treaty was presented to them they were threatened with war if they did not sign it.

The Treaty was NOT based on Wilson’s Fourteen Points as the Germans had been promised it would.

Most Germans believed that the War Guilt Clause wasunjustified. The French and British had done just as much to start the war

The loss of territory and population angered most Germans who believed that the losses were too severe.

Many Germans believed the German economy would be crippledby having to pay reparations.

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The Treaty of Versailles was signed on 28th June 1919. It officially ended the 1st World War. Many historians believe

that it was a major cause of the 2nd World War.Most Germans were horrified by the harshness of the

Treaty. There was anger amongst all groups in Germany, no matter what their political beliefs. Some German newspapers called for revenge for the humiliation of

Versailles.However anger was also directed against the government

in Germany. Already there was a myth growing in the country that the German army had been “stabbed in the

back” by politicians…the so called “November Criminals”. Now these same politicians had signed the “Diktat”, the

dictated peace. The new democracy in Germany was now closely linked with the humiliation of Versailles.

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Armistice Concept Map

Who are some partipants?

Armistice

What are some terms?

Treaty .

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Armistice Quiz

1. What was Wilson’s basis for the armistice treaty?

2. What was the final treaty?

3. Name one of the terms.

4. What was Wilson’s world organization?

5. What did the peace treaty eventually lead to?