World War II
December 7th Two waves of Japanese fighters/bombers tore into American battleships and destroyers during this sneak attack Over 3,600 American casualties 8  battleships sunk or badly damaged 10 smaller ships destroyed along with 164 airplanes 3 aircraft carriers luckily out at sea
 
Ford Island Utah CA Battleship Row
 
 
December 1941 Feb '42 May '42
 
Japanese Internment Public paranoid that Japanese-Americans might help Japan.  110,000 were forcibly interned 1/3 were Issei -- foreign born  2/3 were Nisei -- American born  Given 48 hours to dispose of their belongings  Korematsu v. US  – Supreme Court upholds internment
 
 
 
 
Japanese Internment Represented the greatest violation of civil liberties during WWII $105 million of farmland loss $500 million in yearly income; unknown personal savings  After 1943, 17,600 Nisei fought in U.S. Army No act of sabotage was ever proven against any Japanese-American
The Pacific Theater
 
The Philippines US territory from the Span.-Amer. War US Army stored diesel here Japanese Army invaded the country in December 1941, and quickly overran US and Filipino forces Gen. Douglas MacArthur decided to make Bataan the site of a last stand. Bataan fell on April 9, 1942 and the  Bataan Death March  began.  70,000 captured American and Filipino soldiers were forced to march more than a 70 miles from Bataan to Tarlac
Bataan Death March Prisoners of war were beaten and denied food and water for several days Those who fell behind were executed:  shot, beheaded or bayoneted 16,000 American and Filippino soldiers died during this forced march Bataan became a symbol of  Japanese brutality  and cause equal U.S. treatment
 
Battle of Java Sea February 1942 Japanese defeated the collected forces of four navies  (American, British, Dutch, Australian) Forces Involved Allied   - 5 cruisers & 12 destroyer Japanese - 4 cruisers & 14 destroyers Uncoordinated attack was costly for the Allies – a painful lesson learned 2,300 sailors lost, along with ALL five Allied cruisers and five destroyers Allied forces sunk  NO  Japanese vessels
Gen. MacArthur
Halting the Japanese Advance  Battle of the Coral Sea  (May 1942) entire battle fought with  aircraft  Forces Involved Allied   – 3 carriers & 3 cruisers Japanese - 4   carriers   & 4 cruisers Allies win a strategic victory Japan prevented from successfully invading  New Guinea  and  Australia .  Japanese lost 1,047 highly trained crew to Allies 543 However, US lost large carrier USS Lexington
USS Lexington, Battle of Coral Sea
 
 
Battle of Midway Battle of Midway  (June 4-7, 1942) turning point  in the Pacific war Allies broke the Japanese  code . Japan lost  FOUR  aircraft carriers (of 10) --7 of 11 other ships destroyed; 250 planes.  Significance: Japan no longer had any hopes of attacking US mainland.  Island Hopping  campaign began in 1943 Sought to neutralize Japanese island strongholds and then move on. Islands not strategically important “ skipped”
 
 
Battle of Guadalcanal Solomon Islands between August 1942-February 1943 First Japanese land defeat  after 6 months of jungle fighting. The naval battle of Guadalcanal ended Japanese control of this important supply route  The  Tokyo Express  of supply convoys began to run in reverse, evacuating Japanese soldiers to New Guinea.  Japanese lost two battleships and suffered 25,000 casualties
The European Theater
 
 
Battle of Stalingrad  (Sept. 1942) Perhaps most important battle of the war  --   First major Nazi defeat on land.  Germany invaded the Soviet Union in Spring of 1942, quickly advancing deep into USSR Having suffered defeat after defeat during 1942, Soviet forces counter-attacked in the Battle of Moscow in December 1942. –  Germans stopped Long siege began
“We have only to kick in the door and the whole rotten structure will come crashing down.” — Adolf Hitler
Battle of Stalingrad   (cont.) German high command knew that time was running out for them - United States had entered war following Pearl Harbor   Southern Russia and Stalingrad became the target: Hoped to secure control the  oil-rich area  of the Caspian Sea the Volga River –  major water lane in East agricultural production
Stalingrad Aftermath Germans surrendered on 2 February.  The results were: the  destruction  of the city millions  of casualties the collapse of Germany's 6th Army Henceforth, German army in retreat from the east until Berlin is occupied by the Russians in the spring of 1945. Stalin never forgave the Allies for not opening a 2nd front earlier;  USSR  had to bear the full brunt of Nazi invasion
 
Allied Diplomacy Casablanca Conference  (Jan 1943)  FDR and Winston Churchill declare a policy of  unconditional surrender  for "all enemies"  Agreed that  Italy  would be invaded first before opening a 2nd Front in France Tehran Conference  (Nov-Dec 1943)  First meeting of the  "Big Three"  --  FDR, Stalin, and Churchill Allies agree to an invasion of the Western Europe in 1944.  Stalin promised to enter the war against Japan and coordinated offensive with the US/UK invasion of France
The Home Front
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Rosie the Riveter Rosie the Riveter is a cultural icon of the United States, representing the 6 million women who manned the manufacturing plants which produced munitions and material during World War II  The men who traditionally performed this work were off fighting the war.
War Production Board The WPB decided which/how companies would convert from peacetime to wartime production  It allocated raw materials to key industries. It rationed such things as gasoline, heating oil, metals, rubber, and plastics
War Production Board The WPB also organized nationwide drives to collect scrap iron, tin cans, paper, rags, and cooking fat for recycling into war goods.  Across America, children took part in  “scrap drives”  as they scoured attics, cellars, garages, vacant lots, and back alleys looking for useful junk
Summary of Production 2 x or >
Does this tell us more about Allied or Axis production? 5 times production
Minorities and the War
 
 
 
African Americans WWII One million AA’s served in the military Segregated fighting units throughout war Segregated units of blood Kept out of combat until 1943 Women joined the WAAC
Fair Employment Practices Committee/Act The Fair Employment Act  was signed by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt on June 25, 1941  It prohibited racial discrimination in the national defense industry  It was the  first federal law  to  prohibit employment discrimination  in the US "there shall be no discrimination in the employment of workers in defense industries or government because of race, creed, color, or national origin."
Fair Employment Practices Committee It was issued in response to pressure from civil rights activist  A. Philip Randolph , who had planned a march on Washington, DC to protest racial discrimination.  The march was cancelled after Executive Order 8802 was issued. Later, Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act prohibited racial discrimination in private employment
 
 
Bracero Program Prompted by a demand for manual labor during WW II U.S. government brought 300 experienced Mexican agricultural laborers to harvest in California  The program soon spread to cover most of the United States and provided workers for the agriculture labor market By 1945, more than 75,000  braceros  working in railroad system and 50,000  braceros  working in agriculture
 
Zoot-Suit Riots Zoot Suit Riots  were a series of riots that erupted in Los Angeles, California during World War II Sailors  and  soldiers  stationed in the city fought with Mexican American youths The local press lauded the attacks by the servicemen, describing the assaults as having a "cleansing effect”
North Africa  –  “Operation Torch”  November 1943 Operation Torch was headed by General Dwight Eisenhower (73,500 American troops) Germans led by General Irwin Rommel (the "Desert Fox")  The aim of Torch was to push Axis out of N. Africa and control Mediterranean British fighting German Panzer divisions in North Africa since 1941 Battle of El Alamein  – ended Axis push to Suez Canal
North Africa –  “Operation Torch”   Allied forces in the Mediterranean cut-off Rommel's supply lines  Axis forces were caught in the pincers of a twin advance from Algeria (west) and Libya (East) Some 250,000 Axis soldiers were taken prisoner Rommel escaped to Italy
ITALY 1943-1944 Newly captured North Africa was used as a springboard for the invasion of Sicily on 10 July 1943 Allies then invaded mainland Italy.  Italy surrendered, but Germans continued fight  Allied forces advanced north but were stalled for the winter at the Gustav Line Rome was captured on 5 June 1944 Nazis not fully removed until 1945
This American combat patrol advanced three miles north of Lucca to contact an enemy machine gun nest.
Invasion of Italy General Patton  July '43 Gustav Line June '44
Convoys in the Atlantic The German anti-convoy tactics included: long-range surveillance aircraft to find convoys strings of U-boats  (wolf packs)  that could be directed onto a convoy by radio breaking the British naval codes improved anti-ship weapons, including magnetic and sonic homing torpedoes. The Allied responses included: air raids on the U-boat bases  convoy escorts anti-submarine weapons such as depth charges and the hedgehog long-range aircraft patrols  improved sonar  breaking the German code improved radar and radio direction finding allowing planes to find U-boats
 
 
Who was the author? Why was this written?
D-Day  ”Operation Overlord”   June 6, 1944 One of the war’s most important battles - Commanded by Gen. Eisenhower  120,000 troops left England and landed at Normandy 800,000 more men within 3 weeks 3 million total by war’s end
 
 
 
Omaha Beach  D-Day
 
 
D-Day (cont.) Casualties during D-Day: 4,950 US killed;  1,670 wounded  Significance of battle:  2 nd  front established  (to Russia’s joy)  March toward Berlin had begun
 
Push Across France August 25, 1st Allied troops enter Paris.  By end of summer, Belgium, France and Luxembourg liberated  Had Allies failed, Hitler could have focused on Eastern Front and perhaps negotiated an end to the war with Stalin leaving most of Europe under Nazi control.
June 44 June 44 Jan 45 Jan 45
Pushing on to Germany Pre-invasion bombings Hamburg, Dresden, Berlin and other major cities and targets hit repeatedly  American B-17’s took part in bombing raids on military and civilian targets Incendiary  bombs Allied invasion stalled at Rhine River by mid-September
 
 
 
Battle of the Bulge
Battle of the Bulge December 16, 1944 – Hitler’s last attempt at saving the Reich The German army intended to split the Allied line in half, and then proceed north to destroy four Allied armies Hitler hoped to force the Allies to negotiate a peace treaty in the Axis' favor Although ultimately unsuccessful, the offensive nevertheless tied down huge amounts of Allied resources Slow Allies march to Berlin by months.
Battle of the Bulge  (cont) US casualties numbered over 80,000 - however, The cream of the German army severely depleted outside the defenses of the Siegfried Line  Germany's remaining forces were left in a poor state of supply, thus greatly easing the assault on Germany afterward. In numerical terms, it is the largest land battle the United States Army has fought to date.
Entering Germany By January, the Allies were advancing toward Germany U.S. approached Berlin from west while Soviets moved from east.  Hitler hid in his bunker  (The Fuherbunker)  under the Chancellery in Berlin and committed suicide on April 30, 1945 .  Germany officially surrendered on May 8, 1945  V-E Day
 
 
 
 
April 20, 1945, photo of Adolf Hitler with his  child soldiers in Berlin ( Hitlerjugend)
The Holocaust   Six million Jews were liquidated as part of Hitler's  "Final Solution"  Six million others also killed including Gypsies, Homosexuals, physically handicapped, Jehova's Witnesses & political opponents.  U.S. response to Europe’s Jews before and during the war was extremely biased. (US Anti-Semitism) 40% of German immigration quota between 1933 & 1945 was unfilled while German Jews tried to get into the U.S.
Voyage of the Damned Sailed in May 1939 carrying 936 (mainly German) Jewish refugees seeking asylum from Nazi persecution  The ship was turned back by Cuba  On 4 June 1939, the St. Louis was also refused by FDR as the ship waited in the Caribbean Sea  The ship sailed back to Europe  288 go off in England, and were thus spared from the Holocaust.  The remaining 619 passengers disembarked in Western Europe, safe from Hitler's persecution  until  the German invasions of these countries.  SS St. Louis
 
German soldiers of the SS look on as a member murders a Jewish man kneeling before a filled mass grave in Vinnitsa, Ukraine, in 1942. The back of the photo is inscribed "The last Jew in Vinnitsa". It was found in the personal album of a German soldier.
 
Ausschwitz aerial view RAF reconnaissance picture 1944
 
 
 
Ebensee concentration camp prisoners 1945
 
 
Crematorium at Auschwitz
These charred bodies were found by U.S. troops of the 80th Division, 3rd US army in furnace of horror chamber at the Buchenwald concentration camp near Jena, Germany. 4/16/45.
The Pacific Theater
ISLAND HOPPING
 
 
Saipan and Tinian June-July 1944 Japanese Losses (Saipan) 24,000 killed,  5,000 suicides 921 prisoners (Tinian)8,010 killed, 313 POW PM Hideki Tojo Forced to step down from power Transformed into the busiest airbase of the war Two B-29 airfields with six runways New bomber able to hit Japanese mainland from this island base
Battle of Leyte Gulf Fought in the seas surrounding the  Philippines  from October 23-25, 1944 Largest naval battle  in modern history Allies invaded Leyte to cut off Japan from her South East Asia colonies - a  crucial source of oil  for the Imperial Japanese Navy Japanese gathered remaining naval forces in an attempt to repel the Allies, but suffered heavy losses
Battle of Leyte Gulf Last  major  naval  engagement of war Japanese lost FOUR aircraft carriers Japanese Navy, deprived of fuel, returned to Japan to sit inactive for the remainder of the war Kamikaze  used during this battle for the first time The battle of Leyte Gulf secured beachheads on the  Philippines Much hard fighting would be required before the islands were completely in Allied hands in the Spring of 1945
I have returned!
The Battle for Iwo Jima February, 1945 For 72 hours straight, Allied bombers and battleships “softened” the target to prepare for an amphibious landing Japanese soldiers had dug protective caves into the volcanic earth and stiffly resisted US forces The island’s shifting sand surface made it difficult for tractor vehicles and impassible for wheeled 4x4’s 650 miles from Tokyo
 
 
Iwo Jima’s Aftermath Casualties were the highest to this point in the Pacific Theater: US: 7,000 dead, 19,000 wounded Japan: 21,800 dead, 200 POW’s Over a quarter of the Medals of Honor awarded to Marines in World War II were given for conduct in the invasion of Iwo Jima - 27 in total “ On Iwo Jima, uncommon valor was a common virtue“   —  Admiral Chester W. Nimitz  Effects US began to question X-Day’s viability Fighter escort now available for B-29s raids of mainland
Japanese troops were literally burnt out of their caves and concrete bunkers.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The Battle for Okinawa Began April 1, 1945 and ended in June American losses were over 52,000 casualties, of whom 12,900 were killed or missing, over  twice  the number killed at Iwo Jima The Japanese lost over 100,000 soldiers and +120,000 civilian Okinawans
 
 
The Battle for Okinawa Japanese propaganda stated that the Americans were "barbarians" who would commit horrible atrocities and kill their families  Some of the civilians, having been convinced killed themselves  (and their families)  rather than being captured. Some Japanese committed  seppuku
U.S. deaths  vs. wounded  Jap. deaths  vs. wounded
- 7,465 Kamikazes flew to their deaths  - 120 US ships were sunk, with many more damaged  - 3,048 allied sailors were killed and anther 6,025 wounded   Kamikaze
 
Transcend life and death. When you eliminate all thoughts about life and death, you will be able to totally disregard your earthly life. This will also enable you to concentrate your attention on eradicating the enemy with unwavering determination, meanwhile reinforcing your excellence in flight skills. (A paragraph from the kamikaze pilots' manual.)
Yalta  Conference   Feb 1945 "Big Three" met to discuss post-war Europe.  Stalin agreed to enter Pacific war within 3 months after Germany surrendered  Stalin agreed to a "Declaration of Liberated Europe" which called for  free elections   Called for a world organization to meet in the U.S. beginning on April 25, 1945  (United Nations) U.S., Great Britain, the Soviet Union, France and China would be  permanent  members of the Security Council  Germany  divided into occupied zones  and a coalition government of communists and non-communists was agreed to for Poland
 
Growing Disputes  over the  Post-War World   Stalin insisted on  Soviet control of Eastern Europe  and the  carving up of Germany  Churchill demanded  free governments in Eastern Europe  and a  strong Germany  after the war to preserve a balance of power in Europe.  Roosevelt acted as a mediator and believed he could work with Stalin to achieve A post-world peace within the construct of the United Nations.
Air Raid on the Mainland Bombing of Japan results in destruction of most major cities  March 1945, 100,000 die in a single Tokyo raid Incendiary bombs destroyed largely wooden Japanese structures 60% of buildings destroyed Large cities of Nagoya, Osaka, and Kobe also were firebombed
 
 
The Atomic Bomb   Military advisors warn of  extremely high casualties  if U.S. invades Japan  (X-Day scrapped) August 6, 1945 -- First atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima  80,000 killed immediately; 100,000 injured countless die later of radiation sickness or cancer  Bomb dropped by the  Enola Gay  August 8, Soviet Union declared war against Japan as promised  August 9 -- 2nd bomb dropped on Nagasaki; 60,000 dead instantly
'A just and workable peace - OR ELSE!‘ This British cartoon of 1945 shows the Atomic Bomb overshadowing the peace-makers at the Potsdam Conference.      
 
Fat Man Little Boy
V-J Day August 14, 1945 Japan surrenders World War II is over.  September 2, Japanese formally surrender aboard  U.S.S. Missouri  in Tokyo Bay.
 
 
 
 
MacArthur’s Speech on the USS Missouri We are gathered here, representatives of the major warring powers, to conclude a solemn agreement whereby peace may be restored. The issues, involving divergent ideals and ideologies, have been determined on the battlefields of the world and hence are not for our discussion or debate. Nor is it for us here to meet, representing as we do a majority of the people of the earth, in a spirit of distrust, malice or hatred. But rather it is for us, both victors and vanquished, to rise to that higher dignity which alone befits the sacred purposes we are about to serve, committing all our people unreservedly to faithful compliance with the understanding they are here formally to assume. It is my earnest hope, and indeed the hope of all mankind, that from this solemn occasion a better world shall emerge out of the blood and carnage of the past -- a world dedicated to the dignity of man and the fulfillment of his most cherished wish for freedom, tolerance and justice.
 

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WWII Shortened

  • 2. December 7th Two waves of Japanese fighters/bombers tore into American battleships and destroyers during this sneak attack Over 3,600 American casualties 8 battleships sunk or badly damaged 10 smaller ships destroyed along with 164 airplanes 3 aircraft carriers luckily out at sea
  • 3.  
  • 4. Ford Island Utah CA Battleship Row
  • 5.  
  • 6.  
  • 7. December 1941 Feb '42 May '42
  • 8.  
  • 9. Japanese Internment Public paranoid that Japanese-Americans might help Japan. 110,000 were forcibly interned 1/3 were Issei -- foreign born 2/3 were Nisei -- American born Given 48 hours to dispose of their belongings Korematsu v. US – Supreme Court upholds internment
  • 10.  
  • 11.  
  • 12.  
  • 13.  
  • 14. Japanese Internment Represented the greatest violation of civil liberties during WWII $105 million of farmland loss $500 million in yearly income; unknown personal savings After 1943, 17,600 Nisei fought in U.S. Army No act of sabotage was ever proven against any Japanese-American
  • 16.  
  • 17. The Philippines US territory from the Span.-Amer. War US Army stored diesel here Japanese Army invaded the country in December 1941, and quickly overran US and Filipino forces Gen. Douglas MacArthur decided to make Bataan the site of a last stand. Bataan fell on April 9, 1942 and the Bataan Death March began. 70,000 captured American and Filipino soldiers were forced to march more than a 70 miles from Bataan to Tarlac
  • 18. Bataan Death March Prisoners of war were beaten and denied food and water for several days Those who fell behind were executed: shot, beheaded or bayoneted 16,000 American and Filippino soldiers died during this forced march Bataan became a symbol of Japanese brutality and cause equal U.S. treatment
  • 19.  
  • 20. Battle of Java Sea February 1942 Japanese defeated the collected forces of four navies (American, British, Dutch, Australian) Forces Involved Allied - 5 cruisers & 12 destroyer Japanese - 4 cruisers & 14 destroyers Uncoordinated attack was costly for the Allies – a painful lesson learned 2,300 sailors lost, along with ALL five Allied cruisers and five destroyers Allied forces sunk NO Japanese vessels
  • 22. Halting the Japanese Advance Battle of the Coral Sea (May 1942) entire battle fought with aircraft Forces Involved Allied – 3 carriers & 3 cruisers Japanese - 4 carriers & 4 cruisers Allies win a strategic victory Japan prevented from successfully invading New Guinea and Australia . Japanese lost 1,047 highly trained crew to Allies 543 However, US lost large carrier USS Lexington
  • 23. USS Lexington, Battle of Coral Sea
  • 24.  
  • 25.  
  • 26. Battle of Midway Battle of Midway (June 4-7, 1942) turning point in the Pacific war Allies broke the Japanese code . Japan lost FOUR aircraft carriers (of 10) --7 of 11 other ships destroyed; 250 planes. Significance: Japan no longer had any hopes of attacking US mainland. Island Hopping campaign began in 1943 Sought to neutralize Japanese island strongholds and then move on. Islands not strategically important “ skipped”
  • 27.  
  • 28.  
  • 29. Battle of Guadalcanal Solomon Islands between August 1942-February 1943 First Japanese land defeat after 6 months of jungle fighting. The naval battle of Guadalcanal ended Japanese control of this important supply route The Tokyo Express of supply convoys began to run in reverse, evacuating Japanese soldiers to New Guinea. Japanese lost two battleships and suffered 25,000 casualties
  • 31.  
  • 32.  
  • 33. Battle of Stalingrad (Sept. 1942) Perhaps most important battle of the war -- First major Nazi defeat on land. Germany invaded the Soviet Union in Spring of 1942, quickly advancing deep into USSR Having suffered defeat after defeat during 1942, Soviet forces counter-attacked in the Battle of Moscow in December 1942. – Germans stopped Long siege began
  • 34. “We have only to kick in the door and the whole rotten structure will come crashing down.” — Adolf Hitler
  • 35. Battle of Stalingrad (cont.) German high command knew that time was running out for them - United States had entered war following Pearl Harbor Southern Russia and Stalingrad became the target: Hoped to secure control the oil-rich area of the Caspian Sea the Volga River – major water lane in East agricultural production
  • 36. Stalingrad Aftermath Germans surrendered on 2 February. The results were: the destruction of the city millions of casualties the collapse of Germany's 6th Army Henceforth, German army in retreat from the east until Berlin is occupied by the Russians in the spring of 1945. Stalin never forgave the Allies for not opening a 2nd front earlier; USSR had to bear the full brunt of Nazi invasion
  • 37.  
  • 38. Allied Diplomacy Casablanca Conference (Jan 1943) FDR and Winston Churchill declare a policy of unconditional surrender for "all enemies" Agreed that Italy would be invaded first before opening a 2nd Front in France Tehran Conference (Nov-Dec 1943) First meeting of the "Big Three" -- FDR, Stalin, and Churchill Allies agree to an invasion of the Western Europe in 1944. Stalin promised to enter the war against Japan and coordinated offensive with the US/UK invasion of France
  • 40.  
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  • 56. Rosie the Riveter Rosie the Riveter is a cultural icon of the United States, representing the 6 million women who manned the manufacturing plants which produced munitions and material during World War II The men who traditionally performed this work were off fighting the war.
  • 57. War Production Board The WPB decided which/how companies would convert from peacetime to wartime production It allocated raw materials to key industries. It rationed such things as gasoline, heating oil, metals, rubber, and plastics
  • 58. War Production Board The WPB also organized nationwide drives to collect scrap iron, tin cans, paper, rags, and cooking fat for recycling into war goods. Across America, children took part in “scrap drives” as they scoured attics, cellars, garages, vacant lots, and back alleys looking for useful junk
  • 60. Does this tell us more about Allied or Axis production? 5 times production
  • 62.  
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  • 64.  
  • 65. African Americans WWII One million AA’s served in the military Segregated fighting units throughout war Segregated units of blood Kept out of combat until 1943 Women joined the WAAC
  • 66. Fair Employment Practices Committee/Act The Fair Employment Act was signed by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt on June 25, 1941 It prohibited racial discrimination in the national defense industry It was the first federal law to prohibit employment discrimination in the US "there shall be no discrimination in the employment of workers in defense industries or government because of race, creed, color, or national origin."
  • 67. Fair Employment Practices Committee It was issued in response to pressure from civil rights activist A. Philip Randolph , who had planned a march on Washington, DC to protest racial discrimination. The march was cancelled after Executive Order 8802 was issued. Later, Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act prohibited racial discrimination in private employment
  • 68.  
  • 69.  
  • 70. Bracero Program Prompted by a demand for manual labor during WW II U.S. government brought 300 experienced Mexican agricultural laborers to harvest in California The program soon spread to cover most of the United States and provided workers for the agriculture labor market By 1945, more than 75,000 braceros working in railroad system and 50,000 braceros working in agriculture
  • 71.  
  • 72. Zoot-Suit Riots Zoot Suit Riots were a series of riots that erupted in Los Angeles, California during World War II Sailors and soldiers stationed in the city fought with Mexican American youths The local press lauded the attacks by the servicemen, describing the assaults as having a "cleansing effect”
  • 73. North Africa – “Operation Torch” November 1943 Operation Torch was headed by General Dwight Eisenhower (73,500 American troops) Germans led by General Irwin Rommel (the "Desert Fox") The aim of Torch was to push Axis out of N. Africa and control Mediterranean British fighting German Panzer divisions in North Africa since 1941 Battle of El Alamein – ended Axis push to Suez Canal
  • 74. North Africa – “Operation Torch” Allied forces in the Mediterranean cut-off Rommel's supply lines Axis forces were caught in the pincers of a twin advance from Algeria (west) and Libya (East) Some 250,000 Axis soldiers were taken prisoner Rommel escaped to Italy
  • 75. ITALY 1943-1944 Newly captured North Africa was used as a springboard for the invasion of Sicily on 10 July 1943 Allies then invaded mainland Italy. Italy surrendered, but Germans continued fight Allied forces advanced north but were stalled for the winter at the Gustav Line Rome was captured on 5 June 1944 Nazis not fully removed until 1945
  • 76. This American combat patrol advanced three miles north of Lucca to contact an enemy machine gun nest.
  • 77. Invasion of Italy General Patton July '43 Gustav Line June '44
  • 78. Convoys in the Atlantic The German anti-convoy tactics included: long-range surveillance aircraft to find convoys strings of U-boats (wolf packs) that could be directed onto a convoy by radio breaking the British naval codes improved anti-ship weapons, including magnetic and sonic homing torpedoes. The Allied responses included: air raids on the U-boat bases convoy escorts anti-submarine weapons such as depth charges and the hedgehog long-range aircraft patrols improved sonar breaking the German code improved radar and radio direction finding allowing planes to find U-boats
  • 79.  
  • 80.  
  • 81. Who was the author? Why was this written?
  • 82. D-Day ”Operation Overlord” June 6, 1944 One of the war’s most important battles - Commanded by Gen. Eisenhower 120,000 troops left England and landed at Normandy 800,000 more men within 3 weeks 3 million total by war’s end
  • 83.  
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  • 85.  
  • 86. Omaha Beach D-Day
  • 87.  
  • 88.  
  • 89. D-Day (cont.) Casualties during D-Day: 4,950 US killed; 1,670 wounded Significance of battle: 2 nd front established (to Russia’s joy) March toward Berlin had begun
  • 90.  
  • 91. Push Across France August 25, 1st Allied troops enter Paris. By end of summer, Belgium, France and Luxembourg liberated Had Allies failed, Hitler could have focused on Eastern Front and perhaps negotiated an end to the war with Stalin leaving most of Europe under Nazi control.
  • 92. June 44 June 44 Jan 45 Jan 45
  • 93. Pushing on to Germany Pre-invasion bombings Hamburg, Dresden, Berlin and other major cities and targets hit repeatedly American B-17’s took part in bombing raids on military and civilian targets Incendiary bombs Allied invasion stalled at Rhine River by mid-September
  • 94.  
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  • 96.  
  • 97. Battle of the Bulge
  • 98. Battle of the Bulge December 16, 1944 – Hitler’s last attempt at saving the Reich The German army intended to split the Allied line in half, and then proceed north to destroy four Allied armies Hitler hoped to force the Allies to negotiate a peace treaty in the Axis' favor Although ultimately unsuccessful, the offensive nevertheless tied down huge amounts of Allied resources Slow Allies march to Berlin by months.
  • 99. Battle of the Bulge (cont) US casualties numbered over 80,000 - however, The cream of the German army severely depleted outside the defenses of the Siegfried Line Germany's remaining forces were left in a poor state of supply, thus greatly easing the assault on Germany afterward. In numerical terms, it is the largest land battle the United States Army has fought to date.
  • 100. Entering Germany By January, the Allies were advancing toward Germany U.S. approached Berlin from west while Soviets moved from east. Hitler hid in his bunker (The Fuherbunker) under the Chancellery in Berlin and committed suicide on April 30, 1945 . Germany officially surrendered on May 8, 1945 V-E Day
  • 101.  
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  • 103.  
  • 104.  
  • 105. April 20, 1945, photo of Adolf Hitler with his child soldiers in Berlin ( Hitlerjugend)
  • 106. The Holocaust Six million Jews were liquidated as part of Hitler's "Final Solution" Six million others also killed including Gypsies, Homosexuals, physically handicapped, Jehova's Witnesses & political opponents. U.S. response to Europe’s Jews before and during the war was extremely biased. (US Anti-Semitism) 40% of German immigration quota between 1933 & 1945 was unfilled while German Jews tried to get into the U.S.
  • 107. Voyage of the Damned Sailed in May 1939 carrying 936 (mainly German) Jewish refugees seeking asylum from Nazi persecution The ship was turned back by Cuba On 4 June 1939, the St. Louis was also refused by FDR as the ship waited in the Caribbean Sea The ship sailed back to Europe 288 go off in England, and were thus spared from the Holocaust. The remaining 619 passengers disembarked in Western Europe, safe from Hitler's persecution until the German invasions of these countries. SS St. Louis
  • 108.  
  • 109. German soldiers of the SS look on as a member murders a Jewish man kneeling before a filled mass grave in Vinnitsa, Ukraine, in 1942. The back of the photo is inscribed "The last Jew in Vinnitsa". It was found in the personal album of a German soldier.
  • 110.  
  • 111. Ausschwitz aerial view RAF reconnaissance picture 1944
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  • 115. Ebensee concentration camp prisoners 1945
  • 116.  
  • 117.  
  • 119. These charred bodies were found by U.S. troops of the 80th Division, 3rd US army in furnace of horror chamber at the Buchenwald concentration camp near Jena, Germany. 4/16/45.
  • 122.  
  • 123.  
  • 124. Saipan and Tinian June-July 1944 Japanese Losses (Saipan) 24,000 killed, 5,000 suicides 921 prisoners (Tinian)8,010 killed, 313 POW PM Hideki Tojo Forced to step down from power Transformed into the busiest airbase of the war Two B-29 airfields with six runways New bomber able to hit Japanese mainland from this island base
  • 125. Battle of Leyte Gulf Fought in the seas surrounding the Philippines from October 23-25, 1944 Largest naval battle in modern history Allies invaded Leyte to cut off Japan from her South East Asia colonies - a crucial source of oil for the Imperial Japanese Navy Japanese gathered remaining naval forces in an attempt to repel the Allies, but suffered heavy losses
  • 126. Battle of Leyte Gulf Last major naval engagement of war Japanese lost FOUR aircraft carriers Japanese Navy, deprived of fuel, returned to Japan to sit inactive for the remainder of the war Kamikaze used during this battle for the first time The battle of Leyte Gulf secured beachheads on the Philippines Much hard fighting would be required before the islands were completely in Allied hands in the Spring of 1945
  • 128. The Battle for Iwo Jima February, 1945 For 72 hours straight, Allied bombers and battleships “softened” the target to prepare for an amphibious landing Japanese soldiers had dug protective caves into the volcanic earth and stiffly resisted US forces The island’s shifting sand surface made it difficult for tractor vehicles and impassible for wheeled 4x4’s 650 miles from Tokyo
  • 129.  
  • 130.  
  • 131. Iwo Jima’s Aftermath Casualties were the highest to this point in the Pacific Theater: US: 7,000 dead, 19,000 wounded Japan: 21,800 dead, 200 POW’s Over a quarter of the Medals of Honor awarded to Marines in World War II were given for conduct in the invasion of Iwo Jima - 27 in total “ On Iwo Jima, uncommon valor was a common virtue“ — Admiral Chester W. Nimitz Effects US began to question X-Day’s viability Fighter escort now available for B-29s raids of mainland
  • 132. Japanese troops were literally burnt out of their caves and concrete bunkers.
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  • 139.  
  • 140. The Battle for Okinawa Began April 1, 1945 and ended in June American losses were over 52,000 casualties, of whom 12,900 were killed or missing, over twice the number killed at Iwo Jima The Japanese lost over 100,000 soldiers and +120,000 civilian Okinawans
  • 141.  
  • 142.  
  • 143. The Battle for Okinawa Japanese propaganda stated that the Americans were "barbarians" who would commit horrible atrocities and kill their families Some of the civilians, having been convinced killed themselves (and their families) rather than being captured. Some Japanese committed seppuku
  • 144. U.S. deaths vs. wounded Jap. deaths vs. wounded
  • 145. - 7,465 Kamikazes flew to their deaths - 120 US ships were sunk, with many more damaged - 3,048 allied sailors were killed and anther 6,025 wounded Kamikaze
  • 146.  
  • 147. Transcend life and death. When you eliminate all thoughts about life and death, you will be able to totally disregard your earthly life. This will also enable you to concentrate your attention on eradicating the enemy with unwavering determination, meanwhile reinforcing your excellence in flight skills. (A paragraph from the kamikaze pilots' manual.)
  • 148. Yalta Conference Feb 1945 "Big Three" met to discuss post-war Europe. Stalin agreed to enter Pacific war within 3 months after Germany surrendered Stalin agreed to a "Declaration of Liberated Europe" which called for free elections Called for a world organization to meet in the U.S. beginning on April 25, 1945 (United Nations) U.S., Great Britain, the Soviet Union, France and China would be permanent members of the Security Council Germany divided into occupied zones and a coalition government of communists and non-communists was agreed to for Poland
  • 149.  
  • 150. Growing Disputes over the Post-War World Stalin insisted on Soviet control of Eastern Europe and the carving up of Germany Churchill demanded free governments in Eastern Europe and a strong Germany after the war to preserve a balance of power in Europe. Roosevelt acted as a mediator and believed he could work with Stalin to achieve A post-world peace within the construct of the United Nations.
  • 151. Air Raid on the Mainland Bombing of Japan results in destruction of most major cities March 1945, 100,000 die in a single Tokyo raid Incendiary bombs destroyed largely wooden Japanese structures 60% of buildings destroyed Large cities of Nagoya, Osaka, and Kobe also were firebombed
  • 152.  
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  • 154. The Atomic Bomb Military advisors warn of extremely high casualties if U.S. invades Japan (X-Day scrapped) August 6, 1945 -- First atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima 80,000 killed immediately; 100,000 injured countless die later of radiation sickness or cancer Bomb dropped by the Enola Gay August 8, Soviet Union declared war against Japan as promised August 9 -- 2nd bomb dropped on Nagasaki; 60,000 dead instantly
  • 155. 'A just and workable peace - OR ELSE!‘ This British cartoon of 1945 shows the Atomic Bomb overshadowing the peace-makers at the Potsdam Conference.     
  • 156.  
  • 158. V-J Day August 14, 1945 Japan surrenders World War II is over. September 2, Japanese formally surrender aboard U.S.S. Missouri in Tokyo Bay.
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  • 163. MacArthur’s Speech on the USS Missouri We are gathered here, representatives of the major warring powers, to conclude a solemn agreement whereby peace may be restored. The issues, involving divergent ideals and ideologies, have been determined on the battlefields of the world and hence are not for our discussion or debate. Nor is it for us here to meet, representing as we do a majority of the people of the earth, in a spirit of distrust, malice or hatred. But rather it is for us, both victors and vanquished, to rise to that higher dignity which alone befits the sacred purposes we are about to serve, committing all our people unreservedly to faithful compliance with the understanding they are here formally to assume. It is my earnest hope, and indeed the hope of all mankind, that from this solemn occasion a better world shall emerge out of the blood and carnage of the past -- a world dedicated to the dignity of man and the fulfillment of his most cherished wish for freedom, tolerance and justice.
  • 164.