1 / 40

America and the Great War

America and the Great War. Chapter 23. I. The Road to War. The Collapse of the European Peace Imperialism, Nationalism and Militarism Alliances Central Powers = Triple Alliance: Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy Allied Powers = Triple Entente: Britain, France, Russia

Download Presentation

America and the Great War

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. America and the Great War Chapter 23

  2. I. The Road to War • The Collapse of the European Peace • Imperialism, Nationalism and Militarism • Alliances • Central Powers = Triple Alliance: Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy • Allied Powers = Triple Entente: Britain, France, Russia • Archduke Franz Ferdinand: Sarajevo, Bosnia, June 28, 1914 • The Dominos fall…

  3. Wilson’s Neutrality • 1914 “Maintain impartial thought as well as deed” = Impossible • Social • German and Irish Americans had hatred for British • General admiration for England’s tradition and culture (Wilson) • Lurid reports of German atrocities in Belgium • Economic • United states could weather an embargo from the Central Powers, but not the Allies • War orders from Britain and France stimulated US economy • 1915 US had gone from Neutral to arsenal for the Allies • Submarines • viewed as barbaric • British passenger liner Lusitania sunk without warning, 128 Americans dead (ship was carrying passengers and munitions) • huge American war fervor • Wilson demands Central Powers recognize US neutral rights and allow passenger and trade ships • Germany in a tough spot

  4. Preparedness Versus Pacifism • 1916 Election year • Divided factions in the US: TR v. Bryan and LaFollette • Wilson originally against military buildup, but as tensions grew with Germany he changed his mind. • “He kept us out of the war” a campaign slogan never used by the candidate himself • Wins close election

  5. The War for Democracy • Wilson in need for support of war • new world order, a league of nations • Germans become desperate • launch a series of major assaults on the enemy’s lines in France • unrestricted submarine warfare… against all ships… to cut Britain off from vital supplies • Idea being that Allied forces would collapse before the US could intervene

  6. The War for Democracy Continued • Two events to get the United States involved • Zimmermann telegram • Russian Revolution: US does not have to ally itself with a despotic regime • April 2, 1917 Wilson asks Congress for a declaration of war… would not receive it until April 6… dissent was strong.

  7. II. “War Without Stint” • Entering the War • Most immediate affect seen at sea • 1917 only one out of every four British ships were returning • American Destroyers aided the British navy in its assault on the U-boats • Anti-submarine mines • Sinking of Allied Ships: April 1917: 900,000 tons / December 1917: 350,000 tons / October 1918: 112,000 • V.I. Lenin negotiates treaty with Germany • Eastern front troops would soon be available on the Western Front

  8. The American Expeditionary Force • Army shortcomings • only 120,000 soldiers in US army in 1917 • little battle experience • Selective Service Act = Draft • 3 million men brought into the army • additional 2 million volunteer • New Army referred to themselves as The American Expeditionary Force (AEF) • Trench life = horrible

  9. The American Expeditionary Force Again • 1/10 soldiers gets VD • Diverse fighting force • Women allowed to enlist, not allowed in combat, but played vital role in hospitals and offices • 250,000 black soldiers enlisted or drafted • segregated units • most reduced to menial tasks • tensions on the home front • The introduction of the IQ test and “morons”

  10. The Military Struggle • intense, brief fighting: European forces exhausted • Eight months after US entry into the war in Spring 1918, the war was over • John J. Pershing (remember Poncho Villa?) • See map on page 782 for key attacks and battles • Armistice (cease fire) November 11, 1918

  11. III. The War and American Society • Organizing the Economy for War • $32 Billion in expenses spent in war by USA… this was in a time when the entire federal budget seldom exceeded $1 billion before 1915 and GNP was only $35 billion in 1910 • “Liberty Bonds” • patriotic appeals / propaganda • produced $23 billion • New taxes brining in $10 billion • Council of National Defense organized economy into different sectors based on function rather than geographic…(transportation, food, fuel supplies)

  12. Organizing the Economy for War • War Industries Board: wielded powers greater than any other government agency before it • Bernard Baruch • Decided which factories would convert to war production • Decided where supplies would go • appeared to be in line with Progressive ideals, but actually enhanced the private sector through a mutually beneficial alliance • prevailing belief that a close relationship between gov’t and business should continue after the war

  13. Labor and the War • National War Labor Board est. 1918 • eight-hour day • maintenance of minimal living standards • equal pay for women doing equal work • recognition of unions to bargain collectively • workers cannot strike • businesses cannot engage in lockouts • Union membership increased by more than 1.5 million between 1917 and 1919 • 1914 Ludlow Massacre (Colorado) • miners walk out of mines owned by John D. Rockefeller • joined by wives and daughters, they go on strike • continue strike after being fired • State Militia called in to “protect” the mines • 39 people dead, 11 children

  14. Economic and Social Results of the War • War caused a boom in the economy • Employment opportunity for women and minorities • “Great Migration” of blacks from rural South to urban centers in the North • ads in newspapers • word of mouth • Backlash from established Northern blacks • revivalist religion • feared racism from whites • Huge increases in Northern black population regardless (see p. 785) • July 2, 1917 white mob attacked a black neighborhood in St. Louis • burned houses • shot blacks as they fled • 40 African Americans dead

  15. Economic and Social Results of the War Continued • 1 million women worked in jobs that were previously thought of as male preserves: steel, munitions, trucking, public transportation • After war was over, almost all of the women working in previously male industrial jobs quit or were fired, the result: the percentage of women working for wages actually declined between 1910 and 1920

  16. IV. The Search for Social Unity Progressive ideal: that war would lead America to unite behind a great common cause and create a lasting sense of collective purpose

  17. The Peace Movement • German Americans: opposed American intervention • Irish Americans: opposed any support of British • Religious Pacifists: Quakers, Mennonites and others • Socialist Party / Industrial Workers of the World (Wobblies): saw war as a meaningless battle among capitalist nations for commercial supremacy

  18. Women and The Peace Movement • Opposition • Woman’s Peace Party: Carrie Chapman Catt • Jane Addams refused to support the war, criticized as a result • “mother half of humanity” • Support • National American Woman Suffrage Association: supported the war • Catt abandon’s peace cause and calls upon the woman’s right to vote as a “war measure”

  19. Selling the War and Suppressing Dissent • Many Americans opposed to the war prior to declaration, but make a “spontaneous decision” to support the president, the government and the “boys” overseas • floods of voluntary enlistments • women joined local Red Crosses • children buy war bonds in their schools • churches include prayers for the President and troops • Religious revivalism connected to war effort: Billy Sunday • Government leaders concerned about significant minorities who continued to oppose the war even after the United States entered it

  20. Selling the War and Suppressing Dissent Continued • Committee on Public Information (CPI) • Distributed 75 million pieces propaganda • directed by George Creel who believed in the importance of unity • vile threats if reporters did not practice “self censorship” • started with theory of only distributing the “facts”… but tactics grew crude • The Kaiser: Beast of Berlin • The Prussian Cur • began to make efforts to suppress dissent • ran a full page ad encourage Americans to contact the justice department if they encountered anyone opposed to the war

  21. Selling the War and Suppressing Dissent Continued Again • Espionage Act of 1917 • created stiff penalties for spying, sabotage or obstruction of the war effort • allowed the post to be censored • all Socialist print would not be mailed • Sabotage and Sedition Acts of 1918 • made illegal any public expression of opposition to the war • widely interpreted

  22. Selling the War and Suppressing Dissent Still Continued • Biggest target was Socialist Party and IWW members • Eugene V. Debs: sentence to ten years prison in 1918 • Bill Haywood fled to the Soviet Union • 1,500 people were arrested in 1918 for the crime of criticizing the government • Vigilante Mobs assembled to “discipline” war opponents • American Protective League • 250,000 agents who pried into the activities of their neighbors: opening mail, tapping telephones • received gov’t funds for their work

  23. Selling the War and Suppressing Dissent Concluded • Most frequent targets of repression were • Irish: expressed hopes of a German victory prior to 1917 • Jews: expressed opposition to the anti-Semitic policies of the Russian gov’t • German American Community: public opinion turns bitterly hostile, even though many Germans supported American war effort after 1917 • sauerkraut renamed “liberty cabbage” • hamburger renamed “liberty sausage” • German language removed from school curriculum • “something fundamentally wrong with the Teutonic soul”

  24. The Search For A New World Order • The Fourteen Points • January 8, 1918 Wilson appeared before Congress to present the principles for which he claimed the nation was fighting… became known as The Fourteen Points • First: eight specific recommendations for adjusting postwar boundaries and for establishing new nations to replace defunct Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires… reflected his belief in the right of all peoples to self-determination

  25. The Fourteen Points Continued • Second: five general principles to govern international conduct in the future • freedom of the seas • open covenants instead of secret treaties • reductions in armaments • free trade • impartial mediation of colonial claims • Third: a proposal for a league of nations that would help implement these new principles and territorial adjustments and resolve future controversies

  26. The Fourteen Points Continued Again • Flaws • provided no formula for deciding how to implement “national self-determination” • did not address political rivalries • Reflected belief that the world was capable of just and efficient government as were individual nations, human race was capable of living in peace… reflection of Progressive Ideals • Fourteen Points was also a response to Bolshevik government in Russia • effort to keep Russia in the War • response to V.I. Lenin’s statement weeks before • Wanted the world to look to the US, not Russia for guidance

  27. Early Obstacles • Abroad • Leaders of Allied powers were preparing to reject Wilson’s plan even before the armistice was signed • Wilson’s moral superiority • US did not become their “ally” but rather was an “associate” • Enormous amount of bitterness towards Germans from France and Britain • At Home • Republicans capture majorities in both Houses in 1918 • Domestic economic troubles • Republicans were supporting the 14 points until Wilson made it a ballot issue • Wilson did not appoint any Republicans to the negotiating team hat would represent the United States in Paris • Wilson believed the world would follow his lead

  28. The Paris Peace Conference • Wilson looked upon as a savior in Europe… greeted by the largest crowd in Paris’s history • GB, France, Italy and US all represented at Peace conference (The Big Four) • Russia and Germany not represented (fear of Russia) • Wilson adamant about being the lone representative at the conference despite warnings • Wilson’s idealism v. national aggrandizement

  29. The Paris Peace Conference Continued • Many of Wilson’s plans shot down: freedom of the seas, free trade • Reparations • Wilson opposed demanding compensation from the defeated Central Powers • Other Allied leaders were adamant… slowly Wilson gave way • $56 billion / crippled German economy could only pay $9 billion • Idea: never again should the Germans be allowed to become powerful enough to threaten the peace of Europe • Wilson Victories • territories under “trusteeship” • designed Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia… ethnically diverse • Allies voted to accept the “covenant” of the League of Nations

  30. The Ratification Battle • many Americans were comfortable with their country’s isolationism… now in a new major commitment to internationalism • Treaty of Versailles “Dare we reject it and break the heart of the world?” • Wilson = refusal to change, stubborn, perhaps from a stroke? • Politics: Republicans want to make Wilson look bad… Henry Cabot Lodge attempts delay • Senate refuses to budge, Wilson takes the issue to the public

  31. Wilson’s Ordeal • exhausting cross country speaking tour • 8,000 miles a day by train, speaking four times a day • collapses in Pueblo, Colorado • suffers major stroke in Washington • six weeks bed-ridden • Final 18 months of Presidency: paralyzed and unstable • Senate adds amendments and reservations… Wilson orders original document to be accepted or no document at all • League of Nations never passes the United States Congress

  32. VI. A Society in Turmoil Aftermath of war did not usher in an age of liberal reform that progressives had predicted, but a period of repression and reaction

  33. Industry and Labor • fighting ended sooner than anyone could have anticipated… gov’t contracts to businesses cut off • raging inflation in response to poor abandonment of wartime price controls • 1921: GNP declines nearly 10% • soldier returning increase # of available workforce, decrease wages

  34. Industry and Labor Continued • 1919: over 3,600 strikes in response to employees rescinding war time benefits • January: Seattle, Washington - General Strike Achieved, US Marines intervene • September: Boston, Mass - Police force on strike, violence and looting breaks out… entire police force fired • September: greatest strike in US history 350,000 steelworkers walk of job in demand of an 8 hour day • violence from employers, hired armed guards • AFL timidly retreats • Strike collapses in January, death blow to labor • “Where is that Democracy for which we fought?”

  35. The Demands of African Americans • AA veterans marched in the main streets of industrial cities with other returning troops, but then again through the streets of black neighborhoods, • AA community looked to them as heroes: sign that a new age had come • Little impact on white attitudes / increased black determination to fight for their rights • 1919 South: lynching increase - 70 blacks, some of them war veterans, died at the hands of white mobs • Race riots in St. Louis

  36. The Demands of African Americans • Chicago, segregated beach on Lake Michigan, young black boy stoned to death by whites • black crowds gathered in white neighborhoods to retaliate • white crowds roamed into black neighborhoods to retaliate • Chicago at war for a week • In the end 38 people dead, 537 injured, 1,000 left homeless • New characteristic: Blacks fighting back • NAACP encouraged blacks to defend themselves • Marcus Garvey • encouraged AA to take pride in their own culture • United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) • Started black businesses • Began encouraging supporters to leave America and return to Africa • Garvey indicted in 1923 on charges of business fraud

  37. The Red Scare • white middle class fearing of instability and radicalism • racial violence • feminists • Russian Revolution • Communist International: “Comintern” purpose to spread communist revolution around the world • Terror in the US • bombings in spring of 1919 • mail bombs

  38. The Red Scare Continued • Results • inspired middleclass Americans to fight back against radicalism • reinforced old-stock Protestant idea of “100% Americanism” • reinforce fear: race riots = “the work of armed revolutionaries running rampant through our cities” • Steel strike = “Bolshevik idea” • Peacetime sedition laws • Spontaneous acts of violence • Restriction of press • Removal of subversive books • Against the war = criminal

  39. The Red Scare Continued Again • Palmer Raids • Michael Palmer = Attorney General (J. Edgar Hoover was his assistant) • Raids on alleged radical centers: 6,000 people arrested / 500 non US citizens deported • Intention was to uncover huge caches of weapons, what they found was three pistols and no dynamite • Sacco and Vanzetti • 1920 two Italian immigrants charged with the murder of paymaster in Braintree, Massachusetts • questionable evidence • confessed anarchists, thus widespread presumption of guilt • trial featured “extraordinary injudiciousness” and an openly bigoted judge, Webster Thayer • August 23, 1927 amid widespread protests around the world, the two men were sentenced to die in the electric chair

  40. The Retreat from Idealism • passage of 19th Amendment did not mark the beginning of an era of reform, but rather the ending of one • Social problems combine to create a general sense of disillusionment • economic problems • feminist demands • labor unrest • racial tensions • intensity of anti-radicalism • WW hoped the 1920 election would be a referendum on the League of Nations… Ohio Governor James M. Cox was the Democratic Candidate / FDR was VP • Harding has no ideals, but promises a “return to normalcy”

More Related