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WORLD WAR I SPOILS OF WAR

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Page 1: WORLD WAR I SPOILS OF WAR. the assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand by a secret Serbian society started WWI

WORLD WAR I

SPOILS OF WAR

Page 2: WORLD WAR I SPOILS OF WAR. the assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand by a secret Serbian society started WWI
Page 3: WORLD WAR I SPOILS OF WAR. the assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand by a secret Serbian society started WWI

the assassination of AustrianArchduke Franz Ferdinand by asecret Serbian society startedWWI

Page 4: WORLD WAR I SPOILS OF WAR. the assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand by a secret Serbian society started WWI

Drawing of President Woodrow Wilson writing a declaration of war

Page 5: WORLD WAR I SPOILS OF WAR. the assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand by a secret Serbian society started WWI
Page 6: WORLD WAR I SPOILS OF WAR. the assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand by a secret Serbian society started WWI

Typical American uniform during WWI (doughboys)

CLICK HERE

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SOLDIERS TRAINING

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Alvin York

• He was awarded the Medal of Honor for leading an attack on a German machine gun nest, taking 32 machine guns, killing 28 German soldiers and capturing 132 others.

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Kaiser Wilhelm

• Was the Kaiser (president of Germany)• Thought Germany could win a easy war– Did not take into account the new inventions

during this time

Page 10: WORLD WAR I SPOILS OF WAR. the assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand by a secret Serbian society started WWI

Typical German Uniform WWI

• Click here to exploreGerman military gear

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LIFE IN THE TRENCHES

• CLICK THE PICTURE

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Typical Trench during WWI

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• Tending to wounded• Soldier in the Trench

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Hungarian Forces in Trenches (1915)

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Tank crashed into trench

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Forces in knee deep mud in trenches

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Soldiers Resting After Battle

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How to Look and Shoot without Getting Shot

• During WWI it was very hard for soldiers to fight. If they stuck their head out of the trench they would be suddenly shot by a sniper or machine gun fire.

• Both sides developed ways to counter act this by modifying their rifles and using periscopes.

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50 Yards from the German Trenches

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No Mans land

• Term used for the area of land between two enemy trenches that neither side wishes to openly move on or take control of due to fear of being attacked by the enemy in the process.

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Causalities of War

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Causalities of War

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Dead German Artilleryman

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Half of a dead soldier

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Unburied Dead Soldiers

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German Spy

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New Technology during WWI

• Gas attacks were used for the first time during WWI.• Introduced by the Germans• Chlorine and phosgene gases attacked the lungs ripping

the very breath out of its victims. • Mustard gas was worse. At least a respirator provided

some defense against the chlorine and phosgene gases. • Mustard gas attacked the skin - moist skin such as the

eyes, armpits, and groin. It burned its way into its victim leaving searing blisters and unimaginable pain.

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New Technology during WWI

• New machines and weapons were invented also such as tanks, armored cars, machine guns, and artillery.

• It was a new war• Many people did not realize the impact of new

weapons would have on the number of soldiers killed.

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Artillery• Big Berthas were giant howitzers used to beat up

enemy trenches• The Paris Gun was a large gun built to fire on Paris

France• The gun was capable of hurling a 210 lb shell to a

range of 81 miles and a maximum altitude of 25 miles — the greatest height reached by a human-made projectile until the first successful V-2 flight test in October 1942.

• Had to be carried by railroad and assembled on site

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War Propaganda

• Propaganda is various posters and pictures to make people think one way or another about the war

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German soldier firing across a river

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Captured German Prisoners

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Submarine of the Time

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Shell Shock

• in the past commonly known as shell shock or battle fatigue, is a military term used to categorize a range of behaviors resulting from the stress of battle which decrease the combatant's fighting efficiency. The most common symptoms are fatigue, slower reaction times, indecision, disconnection from one's surroundings, and inability to prioritize.

• During the war, 306 British soldiers were executed for cowardice, many of them victims of shell shock

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Causalities