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Chapter 19:The First World War 1914-1918

ERA 7: The Emergence of Modern America: “The Great War”. Chapter 19:The First World War 1914-1918. I Will Gain An Understanding of:. 1. The Great War ”WWI” (1914-1918) 2. Why U.S. Entered the war (1917) 3. American life during the war

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Chapter 19:The First World War 1914-1918

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  1. ERA 7: The Emergence of Modern America: “The Great War” Chapter 19:The First World War 1914-1918

  2. I Will Gain An Understanding of: • 1. The Great War ”WWI” (1914-1918) • 2. Why U.S. Entered the war (1917) • 3. American life during the war • 7.2: The changing role of the United States in world affairs through World War I

  3. CHAPTER 19: The First World War Section 1: WWI BEGINS

  4. “4 M.A.I.N.” Long Term Causes • 1. Militarism • 2. Alliances • 3. Imperialism • 4. Nationalism

  5. 1. Militarism • Glorification of war • Nations wanted “bigger armies” • And more destructive weapons

  6. 2. Alliances • 1. Alliance Systems: defense agreements between nations • 2. “Entente Cordiale” = Friendly understanding between 2 nations

  7. 3. Imperialism • Nations competed for: • 1. new territories • 2. Raw materials • 3. new economic markets

  8. 4. Nationalism • Extreme Patriotism • Who has the biggest army (militarism)? • The most foreign territory (imperialism)?

  9. Background Info… • Austria- Hungary • And Serbia • Argue over territory

  10. Immediate Cause of WWI • The assassination of • Heir to Austria-Hungarian Throne • Franz Ferdinand

  11. Ferdinand… • Was murdered in 1914 • In Sarajevo (Bosnian Capital) • Austria-Hungarians Held Serbians responsible

  12. M.A.I.N. Causes of WWI • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRcg_t2oJkc • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZmHxq28440c

  13. Austria-Hungary • Declared war on Serbia, 1914 • Began as a “local” Conflict • Austria – Hungary vs. Serbia

  14. How Does a “Local” Conflict Transform itself into a World War? • ***

  15. Alliances… • 1. Russia • Had to support • Serbia • Why?

  16. Alliances… • Czar Nicholas II of Russia • Declared war against: • Austria-Hungary+ • Germany , 1914

  17. Why Germany? • Germany had an alliance with Austria- Hungary • In turn, Germany • Declared war on Russia + France, 1914 • Why France?

  18. Germany, 1914 • Invaded Belgium • (who was neutral) • Belgium asked • Great Britain for help

  19. Great Britain • Declared war on Germany…

  20. From Local Conflict to WWI • WHAT BEGAN AS LOCAL CONFLICT • Turned into WORLD WAR I • “ALLIANCES” dragged the entire European continent into the war • “IMPERIALISM” dragged foreign territories into war

  21. Sides & Alliances • The Triple Entente • 1. Serbia • 2. Russia • 3. Great Britain • 4. France • 5. U.S. (1917) • And all foreign colonies The Central Powers • 1. Austria-Hungary • 2. Germany • 3 .Ottoman Empire • And all foreign colonies

  22. “War of Attrition” • Wearing down by constant attacks • New weapons change the way wars are fought • Introduction of “Trench Warfare”

  23. Trench Warfare • “Western Front” • Battle line stretching 500 miles • From Switzerland to North Sea

  24. “No Man’s Land” • point: to run across “no man’s land” to enemy trench • Mines, barbed Wire , soldiers protect area in front of trench

  25. New Weapons Introduced • 1. Machine guns • 2. heavy artillery • 3. Poison Gas • 4. Tanks • 5. U-Boats (submarines)

  26. “Flaming Coffins”/ Planes • Noisy, “crude vehicles” • Pilot sat directly above fuel tank • Morse Code Transmitter • No brakes…

  27. How do you Land a WWI Plane? • You turn off the engine… • And hope for the best!

  28. German U-BOATS • Early Submarine • U-Boats fired at passenger and freight vessels beginning in 1915

  29. Why did the U.S. Enter WWI? • From Neutrality to Allied Power • Reasons why U.S. entered WWI

  30. U.S. Was Neutral • Between 1914-1917 • What caused U.S. to become involved in WWI?

  31. 1. Sinking of the Lusitania • 1. German U-Boat fired & sank the Lusitania, 1915 • British passenger liner • 1,200 lives lost, 130 Americans

  32. 1.The Sinking of the Lusitania • Caused outrage in American Public • Germany claimed Ship was carrying American weapons and supplies to Great Britain

  33. 2. “Zimmerman “ Telegram • British intercepted a telegram • Sent to German Ambassador in Mexico • If Mexico forms an alliance with Germany, Germany will help it regain the Southwest territories

  34. 3. German Unrestricted Submarine Warfare • German U-boats patrolled the Atlantic off the coast of Great Britain • Defiance of right to free trade

  35. 4. Pro-Allied Propaganda • British reminded U.S. of their British Heritage • French reminded U.S. they helped them during American Revolution

  36. 5. Disruption to Trade • American Producers Supported Allies because they provided a better market for their goods

  37. 6. American Idealism • Which is better? • Central Powers dominating Europe? OR a collection of smaller democracies ?

  38. 7. American Security • Was the U.S. safe? • Issues of security worry the nation

  39. U.S. Entered WWI • April 2, 1917 • American Congress & President Woodrow Wilson Declared war on Germany and allies

  40. SECTION 2: AMERICAN POWER TIPS THE BALANCESECTION 3: THE WAR AT HOME

  41. U.S. In Preparation For War:Military Expansion • 1. National Defense Act , 1916 – expanded the federal army from 90,000 to 175,000 • 2. Naval Construction Act , 1916 – authorized $500-$600 million for 3 year expansion program

  42. U.S. In Preparation For War:Military Expansion • 3. Selective Service Act, 1917 - • “conscription” • All men 21- 30 (later 18-45) • Must register for draft

  43. U.S. In Preparation for the War • 4. Commission on Training Camp Activities • Presented films, lectures, to new recruits

  44. Mobilizing a Nation • 1. Lever Fuel and Fuel Control Act, 1917 • Herbert Hoover’s “Food Administration” • Purpose: To reduce civilian use of foodstuffs

  45. Mobilizing a Nation • Voluntary compliance instead of food rationing • Limited consumption of meat, sugar, energy • Housewives monitored consumption: • “meatless Mondays”, “Wheat-less Wednesdays

  46. Mobilizing A Nation • 12,000 Native Americans Served– American Expeditionary Force • 260,000 African Americans served (excluded from Marines)

  47. The War Industries Board, 1917 Most important mobilization agency • (WIB) could: • 1. Allocate raw materials, 2. tell manufacturers what to produce, • 3. order construction of new plants • 4. fix prices with approval of the President

  48. New Labor Force • 4 million men at war • Created labor shortage • Women, African Americans, minorities encouraged to enter industries

  49. “ The Great Migration” • Over 400,000 African Americans • Moved from South to North / West • Between 1910-1930 number of African Americans in Northern States tripled

  50. Women and WWI • At first: • Helped war-relief drives • Conserved foodstuffs • Supported Red Cross • Joined Army Nurse Corps

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