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Chapter 35 America in World War II

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Title: Chapter 35 America in World War II


1
Chapter 35America in World War II
2
Americas Motivation
  • United States was plunged into the inferno of
    World War II with the most humiliating defeat in
    history.
  • U.S was looking to avenge the devastating attack
    in Pearl Harbor
  • Americans adopted Get Japan First motto
  • However the government had adopted Get Germany
    First motto

3
Allies Trade Space for Time
  • The Allies had the great mass of worlds
    population.
  • Allies had the largest number of people while
    Germany had fewer number of people
  • U.S had the mightiest military power on earth.
  • Also, expense was no limitation for the allies.
  • The only thing that the Allies didnt have was
    time.

4
Allies Spread Trade Space for Time
  • Americas task was far more complex
  • It had to feed, clothe, and arm itself
  • it also had to transport it forces to regions as
    separated as Britain and Burma
  • It had to send a vast amount of food and
    munitions to desperate allies

5
  • Burma is located in Asia and has changed its
    name to Myanmar.

6
The Shock of War
  • WWII speeded the assimilation of many ethnic
    groups into American society.
  • Japanese people in America were forcibly herded
    together in internment camps
  • Even though two-thirds of them were American born
    U.S citizens
  • The camps deprived the people from dignity and
    basic rights
  • Supreme Court in 1944 upheld the
    constitutionality of the internment camps in
    Korematsu vs. U.S
  • In 1988, more than 4 decades later, the
    government officially apologized for its actions
    and approved the payment of reparations of
    20,000 to each camp survivor

7
Japanese Internment Camps
Name State Opened Max Popn
Manzanar California 1942 10,046
Tule Lake California 1942 18,789
Poston Arizona 1942 17,814
Gila River Arizona 1942 13,348
Granada Colorado 1942 7,318
Heart Mountain Wyoming 1942 10,767
Rohwer Arkansas 1942 9,397
Jerome Arkansas 1942 8,130
Minidoka Idaho 1942 8,475
Topaz Utah 1942 8,497
8
Location of the Camps
9
  • Japanese American
  • Internment Camps

10
Building the War Machine
  • American factories poured forth an avalanche of
    weaponry
  • 40 billion bullets, 300,000 aircraft, 76,000
    ships, 86,000 tanks and 2.6 million machine gun
  • Lowered productions of nonessential items
  • Farmers also increased their output
  • Armed forces drained the farms of workers
  • New heavy investments in agriculture machinery
    and improve fertilizers made up the difference

11
Building the War Machine
  • Labor Union increased from 10 millions to 13
    millions
  • Resented the government dictated wage ceiling
  • Had many walk-outs which plagued the war
  • In June 1943, Congress passed Smith- Connally
    Anti-Strike Act
  • Allowed federal government to seize and operate
    tied up industries
  • Strikes against any government-operated industry
    were made a criminal offense

12
Manpower and Woman Power
  • Armed services enlisted nearly 15 million men and
    216,000 women for noncombatant duties
  • Needed many workers so they brought in women to
    work in factories
  • more than 6 millions women took up jobs outside
    of their homes
  • At the wars end. Two-thirds of women war workers
    were left in the labor force

13
Womens Role in WWII
  • Rosie the Riveter became a symbol for women
    workers in American Defense Industries

14
Wartime Migrations
  • War industries sucked people into boomtowns like
    Los Angeles, Detroit, Seattle, and Baton Rouge
  • South experienced dramatic changes
  • Received a disproportionate share of defense
    contracts
  • 1.6 million blacks left south for west and north

15
Segregation in the Armed Forces
  • Black people were drafted into armed forces
  • Assigned to service branches rather than combat
    units and subjected to petty degradations
  • in general, the war helped embolden blacks in
    their long struggle for equality

16
Holding the Home Front
  • The war invigorated Americas economy and lifted
    the country out of a decade-long depression
  • Gross national product vaulted from less than
    100 billions in 1940 to 200 billions in 1945
  • The debt also skyrocketed from 49 billion in
    1941 to 259 billions in 1945
  • The war was costing about 10 million an hour

17
The Rising Sun in the Pacific
  • Japanese launched widespread and uniformly
    successful attacks on various Far Eastern
    bastions
  • Included Guam, Wake, and the Philippines
  • Also seized Hong Kong, British Malaya and cut off
    the critical Burma Road

18
Far Eastern Bastions
  • Guam Wake The Philippines

19
Japans High Tide at Midway
  • Japan also pushed southward
  • Invaded New Guinea, Australia, Solomon Islands
  • Finally lost the battle at Midway Island to U.S
  • All the fighting was done by carrier-based
    aircraft
  • Didnt fired a shot directly at each other

20
  • Admiral Nimitz Hellcat Fighter Plane

21
American Leapfrogging Toward Tokyo
  • Admiral Nimitz skillfully coordinated naval, air
    and ground units
  • Americas new weapon Hellcat, a fighter plane,
    destroyed 250 Japanese aircraft while only losing
    29 American planes
  • On November 1944, round the clock bombing of
    Japan began

22
The Allied Halting of Hitler
  • Hitler had formidable fleet of submarines in the
    Atlantic Ocean
  • At first getting the upper hand was difficult
  • But British code-breakers broke the Germans
    Enigma codes and track the U-boats lurking the
    North Atlantic

23
The Allied Halting of Hitler
  • The turning point of the land-air war was in
    1942.
  • British and America were cascading bombs on
    German cities
  • On October 1942, British general Bernard
    Montgomery delivered a withering attack at El
    Alamein
  • The success gave a new lift to the Allied cause
    especially for the Soviet
  • In November 1942, Russians unleashed a crushing
    counteroffensive
  • A year later, Stalin regained about two-thirds of
    the Soviet land

24
D-Day June 6, 1944
  • Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin met in person to
    coordinate their attack plan in Teheran, the
    capital of Iran
  • Went on from November 28th to December 1st, 1943
  • Preparations for the cross-channel invasion of
    France were gigantic
  • In Britain, more than 3 millions men were readied
  • U.S provided majority of the Allied warriors
  • Overall command was entrusted to General
    Eisenhower
  • The attack was pinpointed to French Normandy
    which was held by Germany

25
  • Stalin, Churchill and FDR

26
D-Day June 6, 1944
  • Germans were tricked into expecting a blow to
    fall farther north
  • The Allies were able to block reinforcements by
    crippling the railroads
  • Germans retreated in August 1944 when
    American-French force swept northward
  • In August 1944, Paris was liberated
  • In October 1944, the first important German city,
    Aachen, fell to the Americans

27
Map of Germany
28
FDR The Fourth-Term of 1944
  • Victory-starved Republicans met in Chicago and
    nominated Thomas E. Dewey for President and John
    W. Bricker of Ohio for Vice President
  • FDR was the indispensable man of the Democrats
  • He was nominated on the first ballot by applause
  • Senator Harry S. Truman of Missouri was nominated
    for Vice-President
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR)
  • Harry S. Truman

29
Roosevelt Defeats Dewey
  • Roosevelt won his fourth term as President over
    Thomas Dewey
  • A sweeping victory 432 to 99 in the Electoral
    College
  • 25,606,585 to 22,014,745 in the popular vote
  • He mostly won because the war was going well

30
The Last Days of Hitler
  • By the end of December, Germany seems to be
    losing its strength
  • Desperate, Hitler staked everything on one last
    throw of his reserves
  • On December 16, 1944, he attacked the Ardennes
    Forest
  • Objective was the Belgian port of Antwerp
  • Americans were caught off guard but they
    stabilize

31
The Last Days of Hitler
  • In March 1945, American troops reached Rhine
    River and found a bridge that led to Elbe River
    in April 1945.
  • In Berlin, they found concentration camps where
    Nazis had murder the undesirables including 6
    millions jews.

32
Holocaust
  • The Allies didnt know the extent of the
    Holocaust until the discovery of the
    concentration camps

33
Tragedy Struck America
  • On April 12, 1945, FDR, while relaxing at Warm
    Springs, died from a massive cerebral hemorrhage
  • Bewildered, unbriefed Vice President Truman took
    the oath
  • On May 7, 1945, Germany surrendered
    unconditionally
  • May 8 was officially proclaimed V-E (Victory in
    Europe)

34
The Atomic Bombs and Japans Defeat
  • America was planning on an all-out invasion of
    Japan
  • Albert Einstein was pushed ahead to unlock the
    secret of an atomic bomb
  • The Manhattan Project or the atomic bomb pushed
    forward
  • Originally intended for Germany but now Japan
  • Robert Oppenheimer invented the bomb

35
Hiroshima Bombing
  • On August 6, 1945, a lone American bomber dropped
    one atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan
  • 180,000 were killed, wounded or missing
  • 70,000 died immediately
  • 60,000 more perished from burns and radiation
    disease

36
Hiroshima Bombing
37
The Atomic Bomb and Japans Defeat
  • Two days after the bombing, Stalin entered the
    war against Japan
  • However, Japan didnt surrender
  • 2nd atomic bomb was dropped in Nagasaki on August
    9th.
  • 80,000 people were killed or missing
  • Finally, on August 10, 1945, Tokyo sued for peace
    on one condition
  • Hirohito would be allowed to remain on his throne
    as nominal emperor
  • On September 2, 1945, official surrender
    ceremonies were conducted
  • America celebrated V-J (Victory in Japan Day)
    after the most horrible war in history that ended
    with two mushrooming atomic clouds

38
  • Japan surrender
  • on USS Missouri
  • on Sept 2, 1945

39
The Allies Triumphant
  • WWII was terribly costly but profitable for U.S
  • American lost 1 millions casualties
  • Soviet Union lost 20 millions people
  • America was untouched and healthy while the rest
    of the world was destroyed
  • American military leadership proved to be of the
    highest order
  • America industrialized more
  • American people preserved their precious
    liberties without serious impairment.

40
America Celebrate Victory
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