wwii/cold war lecture 1

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WWII/Cold War Lecture 1 – I. Background • A. Depression Continues • B. WWI Affects Losers – 1. Devastated Economies – 2. Wounded National Pride – 3. Ruthless Dictatorships Rise

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WWII/Cold War Lecture 1. I. Background A. Depression Continues B. WWI Affects Losers 1. Devastated Economies 2. Wounded National Pride 3. Ruthless Dictatorships Rise. II. Dictatorship Rise. A. Germany, Italy, Japan 1. Promise Of Return To Glory 2. Italy-Benito Mussolini Fascism - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

WWII/Cold WarLecture 1

– I. Background• A. Depression Continues• B. WWI Affects Losers

– 1. Devastated Economies– 2. Wounded National Pride– 3. Ruthless Dictatorships Rise

Page 2: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

II. Dictatorship Rise

– A. Germany, Italy, Japan• 1. Promise Of Return To Glory• 2. Italy-Benito Mussolini

– Fascism

• 3. Germany – Adolf Hitler-Nazi Party & The Third Reich

-Anti-Semitism

• 4. Japan-Hideki Tojo-island aggression

• 5. Tripartite Pact Formed 1940

Page 3: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

B. World Response

• 1. Great Britain – Winston Churchill,• France-Charles de Gaulle• -appeasement• -war Sept. 1939• 2. US• - Isolationism• - Neutrality Acts of 1930’s• Lend-lease program

Page 4: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

III. US Enters War

• A. Pearl Harbor Attacked• 1. 8 Large Ships Sunk, 200 Planes Lost• 2. 2,400 dead• B. US Declares War on Japan Dec 8, 1941• 1. December 11, Japan, Germany, Italy

Reciprocate• 2. Axis Powers – Japan, Germany, Italy• 3. Allied Powers – US, Great Britian, France

Page 5: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

C. Many Fronts

• 1. Europe• - Germany, Italy• -Rhineland & Much of Europe• -1942 Germany, attacks Russia (Russia

joins Allied Powers)• 2. Pacific• -Japan• -Manchuria, Midway, Guadalcanal

Page 6: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

D. Victory In Europe 1943-1945• 1.Normandy, Battle of the Bulge

• 2. Holocaust

• 3. Hitler-Suicide April 30, 1945

• -May 8, Germany surrenders.

Page 7: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

E. Victory In The Pacific

• 1. Island Hopping• -Guam, Phillipines, Japan• -many lives lost• 2. FDR Dies-Harry Truman President• -Truman warns Japan• -Japan refuses to surrender• 3. Manhattan Project• -atomic bomb• -Albert Einstein, Robert Oppenheimer

Page 8: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

4.Uranium Bomb Dropped

• - called “Little Boy”• -Aug 6, 1945 on Hiroshima, Japan• -70,000 Dead, 70,000 Injured• 5. Plutonium Bomb Dropped• - called “Fat Man”• -Aug 9, 1945 on Nagasaki, Japan• -40,000 Dead, 40,000 Injured• 6. Japan Surrenders• -Aug 14, 1945• -formal surrender Sept. 2• -WWII ends

Page 9: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

WW II Lec 2

• I. Background

• A. Shift to War Production

• 1. Challenges

• - WWI & Depression

• - Massive Organization

• More sacrifices

Page 10: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

II. War Economy

• A. Office of War Mobilization• 1. Production of War materials• - auto industry• -cost-plus system• -new market methods• B. Union Workers• 1. Increases strikes, John L. Lewis• 2. Wildcat strikes

Page 11: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

C. War Financing

• 1. federal spending increases

• 2. Taxes raised

• 3. Deficit spending

• D. Shortages

• Metal, rubber, fabric, gas

• Sugar coffee meat rationing

Page 12: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

E. Women’s role

• All ages working, very successful• Discrimination continues, mental, physical,

racial• Post-war jobs loss• III. Racial struggles• A. Employment• 1. Greater opportunities• 2. Discrimination continues

Page 13: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

B. Blacks

• 1. South Jim Crow Laws

• 2. North-De facto Discrimination

• 3. Black organization

• “double V campaign”

• 4. Phillip Randolph

Page 14: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

C. Hispanics

• 1. Discrminated

• 2. Major gains 1944

• - braceros program

• Zoot soot riots

• D. native Americans

• 1. Many in War

• 2. Cultural transition-Alienation

Page 15: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

E. Japanese

• 1. Anti-Japanese sentiment

• 2. Sabotage fears

• 3. Executive Order 9066 (1942)

• - War Relocation Authority

• Internment camps

Page 16: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

WWII/Cold WarLecture 3

• I. Background• A. End of WWII• 1. US-Soviet Divisions• -capitalism vs communism• II. Wartime Problems• A. Tehran & Yalta Conferences• 1. Big 3 Meet• 2. Germany-4 Occupation Zones• -vague agreement

Page 17: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

B. Western Front

• 1. US Delay With Help

• C. Atomic Bomb Development

• 1. British in-soviets out

• III. Post Way Path

• A. US Stance

• 1. Democracy (liberty, equality, rep. gov., worldwide markets)

Page 18: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

B. Soviet Stance

• 1. Communism (workers unite and share, totalitarian dictatorship)

• C. Cold War Begins• 1. Cold War (indirect conflict & tension)• -1917 & 1939 divisions• Stalin 1946 Speech• -strengthen military• Survival against west• 3. Churchill 1946 Speech• - “Iron Curtain” has descended• - stop communist movement

Page 19: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

IV. Containment Policy

• A. Peace Organizations

• 1. League of Nations Failure

• 2. United Nations 1945

• B. Truman Doctrine 1947

• 1. US Support Policy

• 2. Greece & Turkey Aid

Page 20: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

C. Marshall Plan

• 1.Main Obj. – Counter Soviet Expansion & Open New Markets

• 2. European Recovery Program.• -17 bill total over 4 years• -Soviet non-participation• -Berlin airlift• D. Other Developments• 1. NATO 1949• 2. NSC-68• 3. Satellite Nations

Page 21: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

V. Broadening Containment

• A. Korean War• 1. 38th Parallel – N & S Korea• B. Vietnam War• 1. France, N & S Vietnam• 2. Domino Theory• C. Middle East• 1. Israel & Arab States• 2. Oil Supplies• D. Latin America• 1. Cuba-Castro

Page 22: WWII/Cold War Lecture 1

VI. Cold War at Home

• A. HUAC

• 1. Loyalty Prog.

• 2. Hollywood

• B. Spy Cases

• 1. Alger Hiss, Julius & Ethel Rosenburg

• C. McCarthy Era

• 1. Communist Hunt