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The US and World War I

The US and World War I. Chapter 21 Mrs. Hauber The Spark Helping to Win the War On The Home Front Losing the Peace. Underlying Causes of WWI. M—Militarism A—Alliances I—Imperialism N—Nationalism ***All Cause Tension!!***. Who’s to Blame?.

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The US and World War I

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  1. The US and World War I Chapter 21 Mrs. Hauber The Spark Helping to Win the War On The Home Front Losing the Peace

  2. Underlying Causes of WWI • M—Militarism • A—Alliances • I—Imperialism • N—Nationalism ***All Cause Tension!!***

  3. Who’s to Blame? • Serbian nationalist Gavrilo Princip murders Ferdinand • Austria-Hungary blames Serbia for not preventing the crime • Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia on July 28th, 1914.

  4. Today’s Uniform WW1 USMC Lance Corporal: Private Class

  5. Falling Dominos • Russia mobilizes to help Serbia • Germany declares War on Russia • 3 days later, Germany declares war on France to avoid a war on two fronts • Neutral Belgium is attacked • Great Britain declares war on Germany

  6. Roots of War Video Clip

  7. US Struggles for Neutrality • Wilson proclaimed neutrality on August 4, 1914 • US does not become involved until 1917

  8. Section 1: A Spark Ignites Europe • War starts in Southeast Europe • Balkans—small warring groups located in the Balkan region • Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife were assassinated while visiting Sarajevo (the capital of Bosnia)

  9. Ties that Bind • Some Americans sided with the Central Powers because of their heritage or dislike of the British • Others sided with the Allies because they did not like the way the Germans treated people (too militaristic) • Britain used propaganda to tell tales about German atrocities

  10. International Law for Neutral Countries: “Freedom of the Seas” • Trade with both sides of warring nations • Ships can be inspected • Contraband can be seized • Commercial ships had to be warned before they were sunk • Germany felt international law no longer applied and they would not adhere to it.

  11. Lusitania • British luxury liner sunk by a German submarine • 1198 people killed (128 Americans) • Carried contraband • Arabic and Sussex—two more Allied ships sunk without warning. • Germany made pledges not to sink unarmed liners again for fear of US involvement.

  12. Trade with the Allies • Loaned Britain large sums of money in order to continue trading with them • US wanted to avoid a depression • Trade with Britain grew while trade with Germany plummeted (mostly due to blockades)

  13. Election of 1916 • Preparedness Program--Arming and organizing for war • Campaign slogan “He kept us out of war” • Wilson wins over Charles Evans Hughes by a narrow victory

  14. Zimmerman Note • German ambassador writes a letter to Mexico asking for their help. • Germany would then help Mexico recapture Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico from the US • Britain intercepted it and US published it.

  15. US Goes to War • US declares war on Germany on April 2, 1917. • Wilson wanted to make the world “safe for democracy” • Historians say: • British navy had protected American economy and we could not afford to lose that.

  16. Section 2: Helping to Win the War • The massive influx of American troops and supplies no doubt hastened the end of the war

  17. 1. Trench Warfare • Dug trenches, lived underground and fired at each other in fixed positions • Battle lines hardly moved at all • Elaborate system (4 or 5 miles) • Goal was to break enemy trenches • Barbed wire and machine guns prevented this.

  18. 2. Ailments • Trench fever • Trench foot • Trench mouth • Shell shock—mental disorder from heavy fire from artillery

  19. 3. Early Losses in the War • Over 500,000 men died on each side by 1914 • Battle of Somme—lasted 5 months in 1916 • Germans lost more men than died in the Civil War • 20,000 died in one day alone • Overall, 10 million died in battle

  20. American regiment that advanced against the Germans Led by General John Pershing 4. American Expeditionary Force (AEF)

  21. AEF (continued) • Before the AEF, Germany almost won the war • US advanced 50 miles past the enemy trenches to Sedan and cut the railroad that gave supplies to the Germans

  22. 5. Germany’s mistake • Did not expect US to turn the tide of the war. • US lost 50, 280 men but was little compared to other countries • Nov 11, 1918—armistice was signed.

  23. Section 3: The Home Front • Life was much different now • Rationing hurt free enterprise • First Experience in total war

  24. 1. Mobilization of Men and Women • Selective Service Act—required all men between 21 and 31 to register for the draft • Passed on May 28, 1917 • Used a lottery system • Men could no longer buy themselves out of the war • US factories provided US troops with ammo, but Britain and France provided the heavy equipment

  25. 2. The War at Sea • All ships traveled in convoys • Convoy—organized group of merchant ships surrounded and protected by naval vessels • Used to ward off submarines • Not one member of the AEF was killed crossing the Atlantic

  26. 3. Mobilizing Money • $23 billion---used for American war effort • $10 billion---used for loans to Allies • To pay for this, the government: • Used taxes • Sold war bonds

  27. 4. Government Takes Control • Food Administration • Program to decrease consumption of food • Headed by Herbert Hoover who previously was in charge of the Belgium Relief Program • Wheatless Mondays • Meatless Tuesdays

  28. 5. Farmers • Enjoyed wartime prosperity because of the increase in crop prices • Later suffer for this when the war is over.

  29. 6. The War Industries Board • Decided which goods should be produced • Set prices for government purchases of goods and supplies • Bernard Baruch—economic dictator who headed the WIB • Eventually production went up and waste went down

  30. 7. The Labor Force • Went down by 4 million • Women took many of the jobs • Women were asked to quit after WWI as an “act of patriotism” • African Americans moved north to fill the gap and find a better life • The shortage of labor sent wages up with private and government firms bidding against each other

  31. 8. Strikes • Samuel Gompers—headed of the AFL pledged that unions would not strike if the government gave them direct support. • National War Labor Board—discouraged strikes and encouraged management to negotiate with unions

  32. 9. Mobilizing Minds • Committee on Public Information—job was to “sell” the war to America • George Creel—journalist and Chairman who printed the “Official Bulletin” of war news • Germans were portrayed as hateful beasts. • Three main themes: • America is unified • Crusade for Peace • Image of the Despicable Enemy

  33. Mobilizing Minds (continued) • Celebrities were used to help sell war bonds • “Four-minute men”—gave four minute speeches around the country in favor of the war • Huns—nickname for Germans which meant bestial monsters outside the civilized world

  34. Section 4: An Uneasy Peace • Germans agreed to an armistice in November of 1918 • Although the fighting stopped on the battlefield, the war continued at the peace conference

  35. 1. The Treaty of Versailles • “Big Four” • Great Britain (David Lloyd George) • France (Georges Clemenceau) • Italy (Vittorio Orlando) • United States (Woodrow Wilson) • Peace Conference was located in Paris • Wilson was the 1st President to travel to Europe while in office

  36. 2. Provisions of the Treaty • Germany’s reparations bill (33 billion) • German colonies were parceled out among the allies • Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Yugoslavia all became independent states. • League of Nations

  37. 3. Wilson’s 14 Points • Blueprint for Peace • Right of all people to “national self-determination” • General principles for international conduct • League of Nations—Wilson’s alliance plan for permanent peace • would help implement these principles and resolve future disputes

  38. 4. Fight over the Treaty • Senate has to approve the treaty • Article X—an attack on any country would be seen as an attack on the entire League of Nations • Members would protect each other from aggressor nations

  39. 5. Borah and Lodge Lead Opposition • Both adamantly opposed joining the League of Nations • Wilson traveled across the country trying to gain support • Americans weren’t ready and elected Harding as the next President

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