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WORLD WAR ii

Mobilization/ Early Struggles. WORLD WAR ii. Roosevelt’s War Message. What were some of the points that FDR was trying to get across in asking Congress to go to war?. Advantages for Each Side. Setting the Stage. 26 Allied Nations vs. 8 Axis Powers

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WORLD WAR ii

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  1. Mobilization/ Early Struggles WORLD WAR ii

  2. Roosevelt’s War Message • What were some of the points that FDR was trying to get across in asking Congress to go to war?

  3. Advantages for Each Side

  4. Setting the Stage • 26 Allied Nations vs. 8 Axis Powers • Major Allied Powers – Great Britain, Soviet Union & the U.S. • Major Axis Powers – Germany, Italy & Japan • Four fronts of battle • Eastern Europe – USSR vs. Germany • North Africa – Italy and Germany vs. Allies • Western Europe – Allies protect England and France from Germany • Far East – Allies (led by U.S.) vs. Japan

  5. Mobilization for War • Mobilization • Switching from a peacetime to wartime economy • Government and private business agree to increase production, unions agree not to strike

  6. Mobilization for War • Production boom • Number of workers producing ammunition increases 25 times from 1940 to 1943 • Built 300,000 aircraft and suspended car production • Depression finally ends – Massive production created an economic boom • Unemployment – fell from 14.6% in 1940 to 1.2% in 1944 • Earnings doubled from 1939 - 1945

  7. Mobilization for War • Government expansion • War Production Board (WPB, created Jan. 1942) – meant to increase military production • Directed factory conversion to wartime production and supervised creation of new plants • Office of War Mobilization (OWM, created May 1943) – coordinated the production and distribution of consumer goods (i.e. regulated clothing to save fabric)

  8. Mobilization for War • Directing the Economy • Government expanded control over the economy • Income tax – number of Americans required to pay increased by nine times, almost everyone paid • War bonds (liberty bonds) – up to $150 billion sold, helped keep inflation down

  9. C. Mobilization for War • Office of Price Administration – also fought inflation by setting maximum prices on most goods • Rationing – when the government controls the available number of consumer goods; military gets top priority • Households received ration books for meat, sugar, butter, shoes, gasoline, tires, other items

  10. Mobilization for War • Raising an Army • Selective Service and Training Act – passed in Sept. 1940, just over 450,000 in military at this time • First peacetime draft in U.S. history • Required all men ages 21-35 (later 18-45) to register • 5 million people volunteer, 10 million more drafted • Women – 300,000 volunteer, many as nurses • Others worked other jobs to allow men to serve in active duty

  11. Promoting the War • Most Americans supported US involvement in the war • Window banners – Blue star = loved one in service, Gold star = death in combat • Moviemakers, songwriters & radio stations participated in keeping up morale • Office of War Information – controlled the flow of news at home • Propaganda – information, ideas, or rumors spread to help or harm a person, group, movement, nation, etc. • Often played the role of mocking the enemy

  12. Life During Wartime • Americans cut back consumption of luxuries and necessary items • Victory gardens returned • “God Bless America” – song written by Irving Berlin became the country’s unofficial anthem • Paperback books – appeared first in 1939, quickly surpassed hardcover books • West Coast blackouts – • cities practiced nighttime blackouts, feared lit cities would be an easy Japanese target

  13. Rosie the Riveter • Shows the importance of female workers during WWII • 1940 – 1944 female workers increased by 6 million • Replaced soldiers at war by taking jobs at factories

  14. Early Battles in the Pacific • Philippines • Japanese attack the day after Pearl Harbor (along with many other places in the Pacific) • Gen. Douglas MacArthur – commander of U.S. and Filipino troops, eventually became commander of all Army troops in the Pacific • U.S. ships and troops overpowered by Japanese, had to withdraw

  15. Early Battles in the Pacific • MacArthur ordered by FDR to Australia – “I shall return.” • Bataan Death March – • 70,000 POW’s forced to march to prison camps, 10,000 die under brutal conditions and treatment • Why did Japanese treat POW’s so poorly?

  16. Early Battles in the Pacific • Bombing of Tokyo – April 1942 – Colonel James Doolittle, little damage but huge emotional lift for Allies • Battle of the Coral Sea – May 1942 – Allied victory stopped Japanese advance toward Australia • Battle of Midway – June 1942 – U.S. breaks Japanese code, sinks four carriers, first big blow to Japanese navy

  17. Early Battles in the Pacific • Aleutian Islands – Japan tries to draw Navy away from Hawaii and Midway • Only U.S. land in North America captured during the war • Guadalcanal – Aug. 1942-Feb. 1943 – U.S. Marines launch first major offensive, things start to turn in Allies’ favor • Highlighted in early episodes of The Pacific

  18. Japanese American Internment • What is internment? Forced relocation and imprisonment • Issei – people born in Japan, ineligible for U.S. citizenship • Nisei – people of Japanese descent born in U.S., thus they were American citizens

  19. Japanese American Internment • Executive Order 9066 – Feb. 1942 – ordered relocation of over 100,000 Japanese Americans living on West Coast to camps across the country • Those relocated had to sell their property & businesses at a great loss, over 60% were U.S. citizens, one-third were under 19 • Hawaii placed under martial (military) law for remainder of the war

  20. Japanese American Internment • Korematsu v. U.S. (1944) – Supreme Court ruled need to protect against espionage outweighed individual rights • 1988 – US government granted $20,000 to those “war prisoners” who were still alive • Why do you think were Japanese residents of the West Coast removed but German and Italian Americans did NOT receive similar treatment?

  21. I. Early Battles in Europe/Africa • Battle of the Atlantic • German U-Boats dominate early • Sank more than 500 ships off U.S. East Coast in first half of 1942 and almost cut off British supply lines • Turning it around – U.S. used convoy system, radar and sonar to destroy U-boats • U.S. began to crank out new ships and destroy U-boats faster than Germans could make them • By mid-1943, battle turned in Allies’ favor

  22. I. Early Battles in Europe/Africa • North Africa • Erwin Rommel – the “Desert Fox”, German commander in North Africa • Battle of El Alamein – British stop German push towards Suez Canal • Operation Torch – Allied offensive in French North Africa (currently Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia) • Led by U.S. General Dwight D. Eisenhower, moved eastward toward Egypt to link with British • May 1943 – Germans surrender in North Africa • Churchill – “Before Alamein we never had a victory. After Alamein we never had a defeat.”

  23. I. Early Battles in Europe/Africa • Stalingrad (Sept. 1942-Feb. 1943) • Target – 250,000 German troops sent to take Soviet oil fields in southern Russia and cut off supply routes to Moscow • Sept. 1942 – Germans take 90 percent of city demolished by airstrikes and artillery • Winter 1942 – Soviets hold on, eventually get edge on Germans who are forbidden to surrender by Hitler

  24. I. Early Battles in Europe/Africa • Feb. 1943 – Germans finally surrender • Casualty count • Germans – 150,000 died, 91,000 captured, 45,000 died marching to POW camps, only 7,000 survived the war • Soviets – 1.25 million soldiers and civilians killed, more than all Americans during the entire war

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