Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

40

Transcript of Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

Page 1: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD
Page 2: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

Day 1 Notes

Page 3: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

Chapter 31 Lesson 2 Notes – World War II

from Sept. 3, 1939 to Sept. 2, 1945

BELLIGERENTS

(WARRING NATIONS) OF WORLD WAR II

AXIS POWERS

• Germany led by dictator

[Adolf] Hitler

• Italy led by dictator

[Benito] Mussolini

• Japan led by Emperor

Hirohito [but Prime

Minister / Commander-in-

Chief, Hideki Tojo, made

all decisions]

Page 4: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

ALLIED POWERS

• Great Britain led first by

P.M. [Neville] Chamberlain;

followed by P.M. [Winston] Churchill;

followed by P.M. [Clement] Attlee

• France led by President Daladier

• The Soviet Union led by

[Communist] Dictator [Josef] Stalin

• The U. S. first led by

Pres. [F. D.] Roosevelt;

followed by Pres. [Harry] Truman

Page 5: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

FUNDAMENTAL REASONS FOR

WORLD WAR II CAUSED BY THE

AXIS POWERS

• Militarism:

countries as “war machines;” a build-up

of armament factories;

“War is a glorious adventure.” – Mussolini

Page 6: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

• Imperialism:

countries claimed need for “living

space” (as Germany’s “lebensraum”);

claimed to be “have-not” nations

• Nationalism:

chauvinism; death for homeland is

honorable; determination to reclaim

foreign-controlled population

Page 7: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

• Totalitarianism:dictatorships that scorned civil

liberties, degraded individual

dignity, and displayed an open intent

to destroy world peace

Page 8: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

SECONDARY REASONS FOR WORLD

WAR II CAUSED BY THE DEMOCRACIES

• Collective Security was missing: the

democracies failed to defend one another, or,

they failed to support

communism against fascism; the democracies

hoped for a Russo-German war to lessen the

threat to themselves

• Appeasement: examples are British PM

Chamberlain and the German city of Munich

• U. S. Neutrality: its isolationist policy failed; it

passed several Neutrality Acts forbidding the

sale of armaments to any WWII belligerent

Page 9: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

FAILURE OF THE INTERNATIONAL

ORGANIZATION AND TREATIES MADE PRIOR

TO 1939

• League of Nations: had no means to physically

enforce resolutions against aggression

• Open-Door Policy: freedom to trade in China

was not enforced by the United States

• Kellogg-Briand Pact: outlawing war was too

idealistic

• Locarno Pacts: France and Germany agree to

never war against one another again; but France

had no means to prevent Hitler from militarizing

the

Rhineland as forbidden by the

Treaty of Versailles

Page 11: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

U.S. Open-Door Policy of 1899 & 1900

U.S.: “I’m out for commerce not conquest.”

Page 13: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

Day 2 Notes

Page 14: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

MAJOR EVENTS LEADING TO WORLD WAR II

1931

• Hirohito controlled by militarists;

• invades Manchuria, a region in China

rich in coal & iron; region needed for

Japan’s growing population; a need to

glorify Japan’s divine emperor;

• Japan violates Kellogg-Briand Pact

and U.S.’s Open-Door Policy;

• 2/3 of China eventually falls to Japan

Page 15: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

1935

• Mussolini invades Ethiopia to continue to

build an African colonial empire and plans

to make the Mediterranean area his

“Italian Lake;”

• [Ethiopian] Emperor Selassie begs the

League for sanctions against Italy;

• League appeases Italy

• Britain even allows Italian troops access

through the Suez Canal to reach Ethiopia

easier

Page 16: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

1936

• Mussolini invades and occupies

Albania as part of his “Italian Lake”

empire

• Hitler openly defies the Treaty of

Versailles by militarizing the Rhineland

and violates the Locarno Pacts;

• British PM Chamberlain appeases

Hitler which leads to the Rome-Berlin

Axis, followed by the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo

Axis (also known as the Anti-Comintern

[Com-intern stands for “Communist

International”] Pact against the

Soviet Union)

Page 17: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

• Spanish fascist Francisco Franco, “El

Caudillo”, of the Falange Party, begins

to fight for power from the Spanish

Republic and is aided by Hitler and

Mussolini using Spain as a testing

ground for new and improved

weapons;

• Spain remains neutral during WW II

as its 3-year civil war destroys much

territory and people

1936

Page 18: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

• Austria becomes a German province

when Hitler marches in, to not only defy

the Treaty of Versailles that forbade an

Anschluss, but to also secure a large

German population living there;

• Appeasement by Britain and France

encourages Hitler to continue his

aggressive moves in the Sudetenland

where Hitler reclaims the 3 million

Germans living there;

• the Munich Conference approves the

takeover from Czechoslovakia [no Czech

officials invited to meeting];

• Munich and British P.M. Chamberlain

become most associated with the failed

policy of appeasement

1938

Page 19: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

Kellogg-Briand Pact 1928

Page 20: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

MAJOR EVENTS OF WORLD WAR II

1939

• Hitler, because of the policy of

appeasement, continues his aggressive

moves and conquers Czechoslovakia,

Eastern Europe’s only

democracy;

• western democracies promise no

further appeasement and any further act

of aggression by the Axis Powers will be

met with resistance;

• Hitler and Stalin sign a 10-year

Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact publicly,

but secretly both agree to divide Eastern

Europe, starting with Poland

Page 22: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

1939

• Sept. 1 – German blitzkrieg

(lightning war) by the Luftwaffe

(German air force) and panzer units

(armored tanks) begin attack of W.

Poland;

• Stalin invades E. Poland

• Sept. 3 – Britain & France declare

war on Germany:

World War II officially begins

Page 23: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

1940

• Stalin invades, occupies, & reclaims

Finland but is expelled from League of

Nations (publicly humiliated for

becoming communistic)

• Hitler invades Norway, Denmark for

airfields and for a submarine bases-

outlet to the Atlantic Ocean

• Churchill replaces Chamberlain

• Hitler invades the Low Countries for

surprise attack on France from the

north

• The French port, Dunkirk, is

evacuated successfully by Allies but

they unsuccessfully leave France

without Allies

Page 24: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

• French Gen. Pétain surrenders to

Germany and leads the Vichy Regime

that collaborates (works closely

together) with the Nazis

• French Gen. De Gaulle, from his

headquarters in London, England,

leads the

Free French Movement (resistance

fighters) to struggle against the Nazis

in Occupied France

1940

Page 25: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

• Hitler’s Operation Sea Lion (Battle of

Britain) is abandoned

(Britain’s R. A. F. is badly outnumbered

by Germany’s Luftwaffe but Churchill

and

British people swear to “never

surrender”);

• Hitler turns his attention instead to

the

Soviet Union

• Neutral U.S.’s Cash & Carry and Lend-

Lease policies provide aid to Britain

1940

Page 26: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

Day 3

Page 27: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

1941

• Hitler invades the Balkans to invade the

Soviet Union with his Operation

Barbarossa to gain Lebensraum,

wheat from the Ukraine, and the Caucasus

Mts. oil reserves, but Germany temporarily

retreats due to Soviet Union’s

scorched-earth policy

• Churchill, Roosevelt secretly meet to

state the war aims of the democracies and

sign the

Atlantic Charter

•German Gen. Rommel, (“the Desert Fox”),

takes most of N. Libya away from Britain

Page 28: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

• Hitler’s New Order Plan to conquer

Europe for his Aryan race; extermination

of undesirables with savagery; 6 million

massacred by use of genocide = of those

under his Final Solution Plan, another 6

million, those being Jews, are massacred

in what becomes known as the

Holocaust

1941

Page 29: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

• Japan signs the Tripartite Pact (Rome-

Berlin-Tokyo Axis)

• Japan attacks U.S. naval base at

Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7 (“a date that will

live in infamy” - Roosevelt) because of the

U.S. ban on scrap iron / oil shipments to

Japan

• U.S. declares war on Japan on Dec. 8• U.S. forcibly houses Japanese Americans in

internment camps until war is over

• Battle of the Atlantic: with the Allied-

sinking of the Bismarck, German surface

ships no longer capable of winning battles at

sea

1941

Page 30: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD
Page 31: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

1942

• Battle of Stalingrad: Soviet Union broke the

back of the Nazi military machine by capturing/

killing 200,000 Germans & taking needed

German military equipment

• Battle of El Alamein: Allied American

Commander Eisenhower and British Gen.

Montgomery secure Suez Canal & North

Africa using a pincer strategy to defeat German

Gen. Rommel

Page 32: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

• Battle of Midway: Hawaii is

saved from Japanese

• Battle of Guadalcanal: Australia

is saved, using U.S. strategy of

island-hopping (taking out only a

few of the more important islands

being used as supply depots by

the Japanese)

1942

Page 33: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

1943

&

1944

• Japan begins kamikaze attacks on

Allied bases/ships in the Pacific

• Allies conquer Sicily, leading to fall

of

•Mussolini but Italy continues to be

occupied by Germany

•Operation Overlord: Allied invasion

of Normandy known as D-Day (begins

June 6, 1944) to liberate France;

• Vichy Regime, led by Pétain in

France, falls, eventually leading to

Germany’s surrender

Page 35: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

Eva Braun, Hitler’s wife of

one day, died of cyanide

poisoning on April 30,

1945 shortly before Hitler

shot himself.

Hitler, with his German

shepherd, Blondi, ordered a

doctor to give his “beloved” dog

a cyanide capsule to see if it

would kill her. It did.

Page 36: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

1945

• V – E Day: WW II ends in Europe on

May 8

• Potsdam Conference: Truman,

Stalin, Attlee (Churchill was defeated

for his PM election bid) issue Japan an

ultimatum to surrender; kamikaze

attacks continue

• “Little Boy,” U.S. atomic bomb,

dropped on Japanese munitions

center, Hiroshima Aug. 6; no response

from Emperor Hirohito

Page 37: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

More than 70,000 Japanese instantly killed“Little Boy”

Page 38: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

1945• “Fat Man,” 2nd U.S. atomic

bomb, dropped on Japanese

port city, Nagasaki on Aug. 9

Page 39: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

More than 40,000 Japanese

killed instantly

Page 40: Day 1 Notes - Alvin ISD

1945

• The last Axis Power, Japan,

surrenders in Tokyo Bay on American

warship, the USS Missouri on Aug. 14

• V–J Day: officially ends the 2nd World

War on Sept. 2

• A Cold War (a war of ideologies, with

the threat of [nuclear] warfare always

looming), begins soon afterwards

between the U. S. and the U. S. S. R.

(beginning with U. S. Pres.

Truman and communist dictator

Stalin to start the Cold War)