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Course and Conduct of WWI reference Chapter 23

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Title: Course and Conduct of WWI reference Chapter 23


1
Course and Conduct of WWIreference Chapter 23
  • How was WWI different from earlier wars?

2
Selective Service Act - 1917
  • 100,000 volunteer army
  • draft men 21-30
  • 24 million register
  • 2.8 million drafted
  • government campaign to encourage enlistment

3
AEF fights in Europe
  • American Expeditionary Force
  • 2 million troops in Europe by summer of 1918.
  • Most troops fought under American command
  • 1st US troops in Europe

4
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5
African-Americans have a more prominent role
  • segregated
  • limited training for black officers
  • 369th Regiment

6
New Technologies change the nature and
consequences of war
  • New technologies Old tactics Devastation

7
Artillery
  • machine guns
  • howitzers
  • Big Berthas
  • Use of long-range
  • artillery encourages
  • trench warfare

8
Big Bertha
pictures
Krupps
9
Machine Gun
  • 600 bullets per minute

10
Airplanes and Zeppelins
11
Battleships and U-boats
By early 1914 the Royal Navy had 18 modern
dreadnoughts (6 more under construction), 10
battlecruisers, 20 town cruisers, 15 scout
cruisers, 200 destroyers, 29 battleships
(pre-dreadnought design) and 150 cruisers built
before 1907.
12
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13
War At Sea
14
  • Travelers intending to embark on Atlantic voyages
    are reminded that a state of war exists between
    Germany and her Allies and Great Britain and her
    Allies that the zone of war includes the waters
    adjacent to the British Isles that in accordance
    with the formal notice given by the Imperial
    German Government vessels flying the flag of
    Great Britain or her Allies are liable to
    destruction in those waters, and that travelers
    sailing in the war zone on ships of Great Britain
    or her Allies do so at their own risk."
  • Imperial German Embassy, Washington, D.C.,
    April 22, 1915

15
Sea Mines
16
Tank
17
Improved Flamethrowers
18
Poison gas
  • phosgene
  • mustard
  • chlorine

19
Trench Warfare
see diagram p.297
20
Key Events Before US involvement
  • Series of brutal and, ultimately, futile battles
  • Battle of the Somme
  • 60,000 casualties in a day
  • success measured in inches/feet
  • Stalemate continues
  • Germany renews unrestricted submarine warfare
  • Sinks supply ship SS Illinois

21
Important Event as US arrives to enter the war
  • The Russian Revolution
  • Vladimir Lenin and the Bolsheviks assume power
    and sign the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, peace with
    Germany. (Dec.-Mar. 1918)
  • Freed Germany from 2-front war
  • US troops arrive in the nick if time!

22
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23
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24
Germanys renewal of unrestricted sub warfare
targets American ships in the war zone
25
Key events following US entry
  • By 1918, all sides were planning offensives
  • German offensive is stalled by mid-Spring
  • Effective control of the seas by Britain and U.S.
    depletes German resources
  • U.S. and Britain employ convoys against u-boats
  • 1st American offensives May 1918
  • American forces join Brits/French at 2nd Battle
    of Marne by summer 1918

26
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27
Meuse-Argonne Offensive begins Sept. 1918
  • 1 million American soldiers participate
  • 6 weeks
  • push Germans back to their last defensive
    position
  • capture control of the Sedan Railroad
  • supplies more than half of all materials to
    German front
  • See map in text p. 300
  • Convinces Germany to agree to a truce

28
Armistice
  • Fall 1918, Central powers begin to
    collapse/surrender
  • Kaiser Wilhelm (Germany) is overthrown-new
    republic formed.
  • New government signed an armistice
  • November 11, 1918 11 a.m.
  • Armistice Day

29
  • 10 million soldiers killed/20 million wounded
  • 10 million civilian deaths
  • 110,000 American deaths
  • Estimated cost 185 billion

30
Your task
  • Using chart p. 300 Estimated WWI Casualties
  • Create a bar graph of the chart info.
  • Following your spiral notes, write a 1 paragraph
    response to the essential question
  • How was World War I different from previous
    wars?

31
Champs d'HonneurErnest Hemingway
  • Soldiers never do die wellCrosses mark the
    places-Wooden Crosses where they fell,Stuck
    above their faces.Soldiers pitch and cough and
    twitch-All the world roars red and
    blackSoldiers smother in a ditch,Choking
    through the whole attack.

32
The Home Front
  • How did Americans on the home front support or
    oppose the war?

33
Mobilization
  • The Draft 9 million registered
  • 3 million
  • Volunteers 2 million
  • Increased production
  • fuel, ships, weapons, food
  • governing boards oversee the economy

34
The Great Migration
  • Pull factor Job opportunities in the factories
    of the North
  • Push Factor poverty, Jim Crow, lynching
    terrorism

35
Propaganda Campaigns(important element of total
war theory)
  • CPI (Committee on Public Information)
  • George Creel
  • 4-Minute Men

36
Financing the War
  • Increased the number of people paying the new
    income tax
  • 437,000 in 1917
  • 4.4 million in 1918
  • Liberty Bond Drives
  • Bond loan with interest

37
Opposition to the War
  • Many women
  • Jeanette Rankin (1st woman rep. in Congress)
  • You can no more win a war than you can win an
    earthquake.
  • Womens Peace Party
  • Quakers/Pacifists
  • Socialists
  • Opponents of big business
  • command of gold
  • profiteering

Conscientious objectors
38
The Suppression of Dissent
  • Espionage Act 1917
  • crime to interfere with the draft,
  • obstructthe war effort
  • Schenck v. US (1919)
  • Sedition Act 1918
  • Restricts freedom of speech
  • disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive of
    government
  • Other restrictions on speech and action
  • 2,000 prosecutions
  • including Eugene Debs (10 years)
  • Public persecution of Germans
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