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February 2

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US and Canada During WWII IB Objectives The diplomatic and/or military role of two countries in the Second World War Social impact of the Second World War on: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: February 2


1
February 2 Was the US justified in using the
atomic bombs against Japan?
2
US and Canada During WWII
3
IB Objectives
  • The diplomatic and/or military role of two
    countries in the Second World War
  • Social impact of the Second World War on African
    Americans, Native Americans, women and
    minorities conscription
  • Treatment of Japanese Americans and Japanese
    Canadians

4
IB Objectives
  • Reaction to the Holocaust in the Americas
  • Impact of technological developments and the
    beginning of the atomic age
  • Economic and diplomatic effects of the Second
    World War in one country of the Americas

5
IB Paper 3 Sample Questions
  • Analyze the social and economic effects of the
    Second World War on one country of the region.
  • The atomic bombs were necessary to end the
    Second World War. To what extent do you agree
    with this statement.
  • Assess the effects of the Second World War on
    women and minorities in two countries in the
    region.

6
IB Paper 3 Sample Questions
  • With reference to one country of the region,
    evaluate the impact of the Second World War on
    the economy and on minority groups.
  • Why did the United States become involved in the
    Second World War?
  • For what reasons, and with what results, were
    Japanese citizens of Canada and the United States
    interned during the Second World War?

7
IB Paper 3 Sample Questions
  • Assess the impact of the Second World War on the
    economy of one country of the region.

8
Key Terms
  • Mackenzie King
  • Canadian Japanese Internment

9
Lecture Outline
  • US
  • A. Economy
  • B. Minorities
  • II. Canada

10
Effects of WWII on the US
  • The US had begun to mobilize prior to WWII. By
    December 1941, more than 1.5 million men and
    women were in uniform. By the end of the war, 15
    million Americans were in the armed forces.
  • WWII cost 560 billion and the national debt rose
    from 48 billion in 1941 to 247 billion in 1945.

11
Effects of WWII on the US
  • Real wages rose 50 during the war and prices
    rose only moderately.
  • The size of the federal government grew rapidly,
    from 1.1 million civilian employees in 1940 to
    3.3 million in 1945.
  • In 1944 alone, 96,000 airplanes were built in US
    factories.
  • By 1943, Kaiser Shipyards were building 1 ship a
    daya total of 10 million tons of shipping were
    constructed during the war.

12
WWII and minorities
  • The armed forces and US society remained
    segregated, but WWII created opportunities for
    African Americans.
  • It sowed the seeds of the civil rights movement.
  • African Americans moved to the North in search of
    industrial jobs.
  • By 1950, approximately 1/3 of Americas black
    population lived outside the South.

13
WWII and Minorities
  • Riots broke out in the summer of 1943.
  • The worst occurred in Detroit where 500,000
    newcomers, including 60,000 blacks, had moved
    since 1940.
  • In June 1943 a fight between teenage whites and
    blacks sparked two days of fighting and
    widespread looting.
  • 25 blacks and 9 whites were killed, hundreds
    injured, and millions of dollars of property lost.

14
Canada and WWII
  • King supported appeasement.
  • He visited Nazi Germany in 1937 and believed that
    Hitler was not a threat but an ally in fighting
    against Communism.
  • Canada joined the war on September 10, 1939.
    First time Canada declared war.
  • Canada hoped that its contribution to the war
    effort would be materials not troops in order to
    avoid another conscription crisis.

15
Canada and WII
  • 131,533 Commonwealth airmen, including 72,835
    Canadians, graduated from Canadas air training
    schools. This program pumped nearly 1.3 billion
    into the Canadian economy.
  • The Canadian army grew from 4,000 to almost
    700,000 men and women. The navy grew from 17 to
    900 ships.
  • A nation of less than 12 million people would put
    over 1 million into uniform.

16
Canada and WWII
  • In the unsuccessful raid by the 2nd Canadian
    Division on Dieppe, France in August 1942, nearly
    2,700 of the 5,000 Canadians who hit the beach
    were casualties.
  • Canada ultimately had the 3rd largest navy, and
    the 4th largest air force and army among the
    Allied powers in Europe.

17
Canada and WWII
  • 43,000 Canadian women were in uniform.
  • Canadian military casualties were 42,642 killed
    and about 58,000 wounded.

18
Effects of the War on the Economy
  • Canadas manufacturing production more than
    doubled, and the country produced 85,000 vehicles
    and over 16,000 military aircraft during the war.
  • Union membership doubled during the war.

19
Canadian Japanese Internment
  • The War Measures Act, a privy (executive) order,
    called for Japanese internment.
  • 22,000 Japanese-Canadians (15,000 were native
    born) were interned.
  • Men were sent to lumber labor camps and women and
    children to shanty towns. If you wanted your
    family to stay together you had to work on sugar
    beet farms in South Alberta.

20
Canadian Japanese Internment
  • 4,000 were deported and the plan was to deport
    them all.
  • September 1945 government required those in camps
    to relocate East of the Rocky Mts. Or undergo
    repatriation to Japan.
  • Internment did not end until 1947.

21
Canadian Japanese Internment
  • There was no restitution when they were released.
  • March 31, 1949 all restrictions of Japanese
    citizens were removed.

22
Canadian Japanese Internment
  • September 22, 1988 P.M. Mulroney signed an
    agreement that included a payment of 21,000 to
    all living individuals who had been affected by
    the internment, established a fund for community
    rebuilding, a purge of criminal records of those
    convicted, restitution of citizenship for those
    who were exiled, and the creation of the Canadian
    Race Relations Foundation.

23
Canada and WWII
  • Canada didnt begin conscription until 1944.
  • King was re-elected in1945
  • WWII laid the basis for the future Canadian
    welfare state.

24
Create a venn diagram comparing the effects of
WWII in Canada and the US
25
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