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World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final Victory

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Page 1: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

World War IISection 1: World War II BeginsSection 2: Mobilizing for WarSection 3: The War in EuropeSection 4: The War in the PacificSection 5: Final Victory

Page 2: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

SECTION 1 OBJECTIVES:

1-What parts of Europe did Germany conquer by the mid 1940’s?2- How did President Roosevelt aid Britain while preserving United States neutrality?3- What events led to the conflict between the United States and Japan?

Page 3: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Section I Vocabulary• Munich Conference: a gathering in Munich in

1938 in which French and British leaders persuaded Czechoslovakia to return the Sudetenland to Germany.

Page 4: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

• Appeasement: The practice of giving into an aggressor in the hopes of preserving the peace.

• Nonaggression pact: an agreement between Germany and the Soviet Union in which two countries pledged not to attach one another and to divide Poland between them.

• Blitzkrieg: a lightning war, or series of rapid attacks.

• Allies Powers: the Military alliance of Britain, France and the United States.

Page 5: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

• Maginot Line- wall along the French and Germany border

Page 6: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

• Battle of Britain: a series of German air raids on British

• Lend-Lease Act: a law passed by Congress in 1941 that allowed the United States to loan money to Britain to buy war supplies

• Battle of the Atlantic: a battle in which the Allies and Germany fought over ocean trade routes in the Atlantic

• Atlantic Charter: an agreement issued by President Roosevelt and Winston Churchill in 1941

Page 7: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

1.Parts of Europe Conquered by Hitler by

Mid-1940s• In April 1940

German troops occupied Denmark.

• In May 1940 Germany seized the Low Countries of Belgium, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands.

Page 8: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Roosevelt Aids Britain During Neutrality

• In 1939 Congress approved a “cash-and-carry system to supply the allies with weapons.

• Roosevelt swapped 50 US destroyers for 99 year leases on several of Britain’s navel bases in the Caribbean.

Page 9: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Conflicts between the United States and

Japan• In July 1941 Japanese forces seized French

Indochina leading Roosevelt to freeze Japanese funds and blocking the sale of products to Japan.

• On December 7, 1941 the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X6jzVvQ_vM&playnext=1&list=PL2DEDD3A0833D4300&feature=results_main

Page 10: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Section 2 Objectives• How did the United States mobilize for

World War II?• What effects did World War II have on

civilian women and minorities?• Why did the United States Government

intern Japanese Americans during the war?

Page 11: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Section 2 Vocabulary• War Productions Board: a government office in

charge of changing regular factories into wartime factories and limiting the production of consumer goods.

• Selective Training and Service Act: a law that required men between the ages of 21 to 35 to register for the draft

• Fair Employment Practices Committee: a group created by President Roosevelt to prevent racial discrimination in war industries and government jobs

Page 12: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

• Braceros: Mexican workers who were allowed to move to the United States during World War II to fill the labor shortage in the Southwest.

• Zoot-suit riots: a disturbance that occurred in 1943 when sailors in Los Angeles attacked Mexicans wearing the baggy outfits known as zoot suits.

Page 13: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

2.U.S. Prepares for War

• Production boomed as American factories turned out enormous quantities of war materials.

• The government expanded its role and increased its regulation of the economy.

• The War Productions Board (WPB) was created to oversee the conversion of factories to war production.

Page 14: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

• In 1940 Congress passed the Selective Training and Service Act- the 1st peacetime draft in US History requiring all men between the ages of 21 and 35 to register for the draft but later included men aged 18 to 36

Page 15: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Women during WWII• Women replaced men in factories and

business offices• Some 300,000 women worked in the

armed forces, in organizations such as the Women’s Auxiliary Army Corps (WAAC) and served as nurses.

Page 16: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Minorities during War II

• African Americans migrated to the North to work in industry.

• Mexican Americans took advantage of wartime job opportunities.

• Braceros: Mexican workers from Mexico who were allowed to enter the U.S. to work in agricultural jobs.

Page 17: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Japanese American Interment

• After Pearl Harbor, many Americans questioned the loyalty of the Japaneseo Issei- Immigrants born in Japano Nisei- full citizens born in the United States

• Fearing the possibility of spying or sabotage, in Feb 1942 the government began a process of internment, or forced relocation and imprisonment, of Japanese Americans.

Page 18: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Section 3 Objectives• Why was the Allies’ North Africa campaign so

important?• What were the major turning points of the war in

Europe?• How did the Allies drive the Germans out of

France?

Page 19: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Section 3 VocabularyBattle of El Alamein: A battle fought between the Allies and the Axis Powers in Egypt in 1942; the Allies stopped Rommel’s advance in North Africa.

Battle of Stalingrad: A battle in 1942 in which the Germans tried to unsuccessfully take over the Soviet city of Stalingrad.

Page 20: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

• D-Day: June 6, 1944: the day that thousands of Allied soldiers landed on the shores of Normandy in France to fight the Germans.

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=51_gaYAAw5Y

Page 21: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

• Battle of the Bulge: a battle in France in which German troops attacked Allied lines, causing a huge bulge in the lines.

Page 22: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

3. Importance of the Allied North Africa Campaign

• To control the Suez Canal- a vital Allied supply route

• To push the Germans out of Egypt and North Africa

Page 23: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Turning Points in Europe

• The Battle of Stalingrad, January 1943, forced German troops to surrender and ended Hitler’s attempt to crush the Soviet Union.

• The D-Day invasion, June 6, 1944, led to the liberation of France.

• The Battle of the Bulge, Dec. 16, 1944, ended Germany’s ability to wage and offensive war.

Page 24: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Germans are Driven out of France

• U.S. generals Omar Bradley and George Patton led allied forces in attacks on German troops in France.

• New allied forces landed in southern France and began to advance northward.

Page 25: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Section 4 Objectives• Where did Japan attack after its bombing of Pearl

Harbor?• What three battles were the turning points of the

war in the Pacific?• How did the Allies advance toward Japan?

Page 26: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Section 4 Vocabulary• Bataan Death March: an event in which the

Japanese forced more than 70,000 American and Filipino prisoners to walk 65 miles to an internment camp.

Page 27: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

• Battle of Coral Sea: a battle in 1942 in which United States planes sank one Japanese ship and damaged another

Page 28: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

• Battle of Midway: a battle in 1942 in which U.S. planes sank four Japanese ships, successfully stopping the Japanese capture of Midway Island.

• Island-hopping: the strategy in which the Allies would take only important islands in the Pacific

Page 29: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

• Battle of Leyte Gulf: a battle in the Philippines in 1944 in which the Japanese navy tried unsuccessfully to block an Allied invasion

• Kamikaze: a Japanese tactic in which pilots would fly their planes filled with explosives straight at Allied ships off Okinawa.

Page 30: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

4. Japan Advances across Pacific

• By early 1942 Japan had seized Hong Kong, Singapore, Burma, and the Netherlands East Indies

• Japan also captured Guam, Wake Island, the Aleutian Islands of Kiska and Attu, and the Philippines

Page 31: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Three Major Turning Points in the Pacific

• Battle of Coral Sea: Led by U.S. Admiral Chester Nimitz who halted the Japanese advances in the Pacific

• Battle of Midway: Allied forced crippled the Japanese navy

• Guadalcanal: Allies won control of the island and stopped the Japanese from completing an airstrip there

Page 32: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Allied Advance Towards Japan

• Allies planned to conquer one Pacific Island after another, gradually moving closer to Japan.

• Allies planned strategy of island hopping to gain bases from which they could bomb and later invade Japan.

• Allies invaded New Guinea, the Gilbert Islands, Marshall, Mariana, Volcano, Bonin Islands and the Marinas in 1943 to pave the way to begin bombing the Japanese mainland.

Page 33: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Section 5 Objectives• How did the Allies force Germany and Japan to

surrender?• What were the human and economic costs of

World War II?• What events led to the Holocaust?

Page 34: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Section 5 Vocabulary• Atomic bomb: A deadly nuclear weapon

• Manhattan Project: A United States program to develop the atomic bomb

Page 35: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

• Holocaust: Nazi Germany’s attempt to kill the Jews of Europe

• Genocide: the deliberate murder of an entire people

Page 36: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

5. Final Victory & Consequences

• The allies pushed toward Germany from the east and west forcing them to surrender.

• August 6, 1945 an atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima

• August 9, 1945 second bomb dropped on Nagasaki

• Forced the Japanese to surrendero Atomic Bomb: a weapon that produces tremendous power by splitting

atoms.

ohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t19kvUiHvAE

Page 37: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Costs of the War• @50 million people died- more than half of them

civilians• Millions more injured or left suffering from disease

and malnutrition• War devastated national economies in Europe

and Asia

Page 38: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

• Food Production, industry, and transportation networks were destroyed in many areas

• Millions of people were left homeless and lacking basic necessities such as food

• Much of the world’s great art and architecture was lost forever

Page 39: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

The Holocaust• Hitler and the Nazis used this plan to destroy the

Jewish Population• In January 1942, at the Wannssee Conference, the

Nazi leaders agreed to a “final solution” to the Jewish question by using genocide.

Page 40: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

• Nazis planned to eliminate the Jews by placing them in death camps equipped with gas chambers to kill them.

Page 41: World War II Section 1: World War II Begins Section 2: Mobilizing for War Section 3: The War in Europe Section 4: The War in the Pacific Section 5: Final

Concentration Camps• View pictures of Dachau Concentration Camp and

complete Ann Frank project…(attached handout)

• It is important that we “ NEVER FORGET”