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THE FIRST WORLD
WAR
1914-1918
CAUSES OF THE WAR
Historians have traditionally cited
four long-term causes of the First
World War
NATIONALISM – a devotion to
the interests and culture of one’s
nation
IMPERIALISM – Economic and
political control over weaker
nations
MILITARISM – The growth of
nationalism and imperialism led
to increased military spending
ALLIANCE SYSTEM – By 1907
Europe was divided into two
armed camps
NATIONALISM
 Often nationalism led
to rivalries and conflicts
between nations
 Additionally, various
ethnic groups resented
domination by others
and wanted
independence
 Russia and Austria-
Hungary disagreed over
the treatment of Serbs in
central Europe
Germany was allied with
Austria-Hungary while
Russia, France and Britain
were partners
IMPERIALISM
 For many centuries,
European nations built
empires
 Colonies supplied European
nations with raw materials and
provided markets for
manufactured goods
 As Germany industrialized it
competed directly with France
and Britain
 Major European countries
also competed for land in
Africa
MILITARISM
 Empires had to be defended and
European nations increased
military spending enormously in
the late 19th
and early 20th
century
 By 1890 the strongest nation
militarily in Europe was Germany
 Germany had a strong army and
built up a navy to rival England’s
fleet
 France, Italy, Japan and the
United States quickly joined in the
naval buildup
Battleships were being stockpiled by European
nations, Japan and America in the late 19th
and
early 20th
century
ALLIANCE SYSTEM
 By 1907 there were two
major defense alliances in
Europe
 The Triple Entente, later
known as the Allies,
consisted of France, Britain,
and Russia
The Triple Alliance, later
known as the Central
Powers, consisted of
Germany, Austria-Hungary,
and Italy (Soon joined by the
Ottoman Empire
FRANCE BRITAIN RUSSIA
TRIPLE ENTENTE
THE SPARK: AN ASSASSINATION
 The Balkan region was considered
“the powder keg of Europe” due to
competing interests in the area
 Russia wanted access to the
Mediterranean Sea
 Germany wanted a rail link to the
Ottoman Empire
 Austria-Hungary, which had taken
control of Bosnia in 1878, accused
Serbia of subverting its rule over Bosnia
 Finally, in June of 1914, Archduke
Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austrian
throne was gunned down by a Serbia
radical igniting a diplomatic crisis
The Archduke is assassinated in
Sarajevo in June 1914
THE FIGHTING BEGINS
 The Alliance system pulled one
nation after another into the conflict
– The Great War had begun
 On August 3, 1914, Germany
invaded Belgium, following a
strategy known as the Schlieffen
Plan
 This plan called for a quick strike
through Belgium to Paris, France
Next, Germany would attack
Russia
 The plan was designed to prevent
a two-front war for Germany
The Schliefflen Plan
THE WAR BECOMES A STALEMATE
 Unable to save Belgium, the Allies
retreated to the Marne River in France
where they halted the German
advance in September of 1914
 Both sides dug in for a long siege
 By the spring of 1915, two parallel
systems of deep trenches crossed
France from Belgium to Switzerland
 There were 3 types of trenches;
front line, support, and reserve
 Between enemy trenches was “no
man’s land” – an area pockmarked
with shell craters and filled with
barbed wire
British soldiers standing in mud
The conditions in these trenches were horrific; aside from
the fear of bombardment, soldiers also had to contend with
the mud, flooding and disease associated with living in
such a harsh environment.
German Soldiers
Trench
Warfare
Trench Foot
Trench Rats
Body Lice & Trench Fever
FIRST BATTLE OF THE SOMME
 During the First Battle of the
Somme - which began July 1, 1916
and lasted until mid-November –
the British suffered 60,000
casualties the first day
 Final casualties for the First
Battle of the Somme totaled 1.2
million, yet only 7 miles of ground
was gained
 This bloody trench warfare, in
which armies fought for mere
yards of ground, lasted for three
years
Gas attacks were common
features of trench life and often
caused blindness and lung
disease
AMERICANS QUESTION NEUTRALITY
 In 1914, most Americans saw no
reason to join a struggle 3,000 miles
away – they wanted neutrality
 Some simply did not want their
sons to experience the horror of
warfare
 German-Americans supported
Germany in World War I
 However, many American felt close
to the British because of a shared
ancestry and language
 Most importantly, American
economic interests were far stronger
with the Allies
French propaganda poster portrayed
the Germans as inhuman and impacted
American attitudes toward the Germans
THE WAR HITS HOME During the first two years of
the war, America was providing
(selling) the allied forces
dynamite, cannon powder,
submarines, copper wire and
tubing and other war material
 Both the Germans and British
imposed naval blockades on
each other
 The Germans used U-boats
(submarines) to prevent
shipments to the North Atlantic
Unrestricted Submarine
Warfare
 Any ship found in the waters
around Britain would be sunk
German U-boat 1919
THE LUSITANIA DISASTER
 United States involvement in
World War I was hastened by the
Lusitania incident
 The Lusitania was a British
passenger liner that carried 1,198
persons on a fateful trip on May 7,
1915
 A German U-boat sank the British
passenger liner killing all aboard
including 128 American tourists
 The Germans claimed the ship
was carrying Allied ammunition
 Americans were outraged and
public opinion turned against
Germany and the Central Powers
May 7, 1915
The N.Y. Times reports on the Lusitania
1916 ELECTION
 The November 1916 election
pitted incumbent Democrat
Woodrow Wilson vs.
Republican candidate Supreme
Court justice Charles Evans
Hughes
 Wilson won a close election
using the slogan, “He kept us
out of war”
 That slogan would prove
ironic because within a few
months the United States
would be embroiled in World
War I
Wilson
AMERICA EDGES CLOSER TO
WAR
Several factors came together to
bring the U.S. into the war;
1) Germany ignored Wilson’s
plea for peace
2) The Zimmerman Note, a
telegram from the German
foreign minister to the German
Ambassador in Mexico, proposed
an alliance
 Germany promised Mexico a
return of their “lost territory” in
Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona
3) Next came the sinking of four
unarmed U.S. merchant ships by
German subs
Encoded message from Germany
to Mexico
(Zimmerman note)
Zimmerman
note
intercepted
by a British
agent and
decoded
AMERICA DECLARES WAR
 A light drizzle fell on
Washington on April 2, 1917,
as senators, representatives,
ambassadors, members of the
Supreme Court, and other
guests crowded into the
Capital building to hear Wilson
deliver his declaration of war
 Wilson said, “The world
must be safe for democracy”
 Congress passed the
resolution a few days later
SECTION 2: AMERICAN POWER
TIPS THE BALANCE
 America was not ready for
war – only 200,000 men were
in service when war was
declared
 Congress passed the
Selective Service Act in May
of 1917
 By the end of 1918, 24
million had signed up and
almost 3 million were called
to duty
 About 2 million American
troops reached Europe
FRESH U.S. SOLDIERS JOIN
FIGHT
 After 2 ½ years of fighting,
the Allied forces were
exhausted
 One of the main
contributions of the Americans
was fresh and enthusiastic
troops
 American infantry were
nicknamed “doughboys”
because of their white belts
 Most doughboys had never
ventured far from the farms or
small towns they lived in
NEW WEAPONS USED
 Machine Guns – Guns could now fire 600 rounds per minute
 The Tank – New steel tanks ran on caterpillar treads
 Airplanes – Early dogfights resembled duals, however by 1918 the
British had a fleet of planes that could deliver bomb loads
 Poison Gas – mustard gas was used to subdue the enemy
Weapons of the Great War :
The War to End All Wars
Bayonet
• Originally a defensive weapon against cavalry
charge
• Rarely attempted until the enemy was retreating
• Use of rifles give infantrymen firepower
• Now used as a personal offensive weapon
• Primary close combat weapon used during
trench warfare
• Machine guns undermined the bayonet
effectivness by an advancing army
Big Bertha Howitzer
• Fire a 2,200 lb shell over 9 miles
• Transported by tractors
• Took 200 man crew over six hours to re-
assemble
Flamethrower
• Idea was to spread fire by launching burning fuel
• Designed for portable use, carried by a single
man
• Belched forth a stream of burning oil for 36
meters
• Used mostly to clear forward defenders during
the start of an attack
• Often times the cylinder exploded – dangerous
job!
Grenades
• Many types of grenades were used
• Called Mills bomb
• Serrated so that when it detonated it broke
into many fragments (fragmentation
bomb)
• Remove safety pin while holding down the
strike lever, and throw
• Had four seconds to get out of the way
• Over 100 million were thrown during the
Great War
Machine Gun
• Positioned on a flat tripod
• Required a gun crew of 4-6 men
• Fire 400-600 small caliber rounds per min
• This figure doubled by war’s end
• Worth as many as 60-100 rifles
• A fearsome defensive weapon
• Enemy infantry assaults were costly
• Toward war end lighter models were being used
a offensive weapons as well
The Mortar
• A short stumpy tube designed to fire a
projectile at a steep angle
• Higher then 45 degrees so that is falls
straight down on the enemy
• Why would this be ideally suited for trench
warfare?
Poison Gas
• Debut in the 2nd
battle of Ypres April 1915
• Yellow-green cloud
• Destroyed the victim’s respiratory organs
• First use provoked widespread
condemnation
• Damaged German’s relations with neutral
countries (US)
• Other side used it and poison gas usage
escalated for remainder of the war
German infantry man French men loading up gas container
Rifle
• the rifle, which remained the most crucial, ever-
present infantry weapon throughout The Great War
• the advent of automatic and semiautomatic
weapons waited until the last year of the war
• eight to twelve rounds per minute
• 15 rounds per minute achieved by riflemen of the
British Expeditionary Force
• range, the average during the war was around
1,400 meters
• accuracy could only be guaranteed at around 600
meters
The Springfield, manufactured in the U.S. (at
Springfield, Massachusetts), was the standard
wartime rifle of the U.S. army
Tank
• 15th September 1916 first used in battle by the
British
• early tanks proved notoriously unreliable
• often broke down and became ditched - i.e. stuck in a
muddy trench
• Conditions for the tank crews
– heat was tremendous
– fumes often nearly choked the men
• Tanks design improved
• British, French and US made them, Germany never
were convinced of their effectiveness
“GASSED” BY John Singer Sargent
Complete an Image Analysis Worksheet
Wilfred Owen, Dulce et Decorum est (1917)
Bent double, like old beggars under sacks,
Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge,
Till on the haunting flares we turned our backs,
And towards our distant rest began to trudge.
Men marched asleep. Many had lost their boots,
But limped on, blood-shod. All went lame, all blind;
Drunk with fatigue; deaf even to the hoots
Of gas-shells dropping softly behind.
Gas! Gas! Quick, boys! An ecstasy of fumbling,
Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time,
But someone still was yelling out and stumbling
And floundering like a man in fire or lime.
Dim through the misty panes and thick green light,
As under a green sea, I saw him drowning.
In all my dreams, before my helpless sight,
He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning.
If in some smothering dreams, you too could pace
Behind the wagon that we flung him in.
And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,
His hanging face, like a devil's sick of sin;
If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,
Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud
Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues,
My friend, you would not tell with such high zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory,
The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori.
Famous poem by Wilfred
Owen about the evils of
mustard gas
1. What is the meaning of “Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori”?
2. How do Owen’s words speak profoundly to the reality of war?
3. . What feeling does Owen leave you with regarding the
“sweetness and honor” of die for one’s country?
Wilfred Owen, Dulce et Decorum est (1917)
Questions
Dulce et decorum est Pro patria mori
English translation: It is sweet and honourable to die for one’s
country.
Animals were also
susceptible to gas
 When Russia surrendered to
the Germans in 1917, it allowed
the Central Powers to focus on
the Western Front
 By May, the Germans were
within 50 miles of Paris
 The Americans arrived and
immediately played a major role in
pushing the Germans back
In July and August the Americans
helped the Allies win the Second
Battle of the Marne
AMERICAN TROOPS GO ON
THE OFFENSIVE
Men of the 42nd Division during the
Second Marne. These men were
killed by artillery fire just 5 minutes
after this photo was taken
AMERICAN WAR HERO
 Alvin York, a blacksmith from
Tennessee, originally sought an
exemption from the war as a
Conscientious Objector
 York eventually decided it was
morally acceptable to fight if the
cause was right
 On October 8, 1918, armed
with only a rifle and a revolver,
York killed 25 Germans and (with
six doughboys) captured 132
prisoners
 Upon his return home he was
promoted to Sergeant and hailed
a hero
The movie
The man
GERMANY COLLAPSES,
WAR ENDS
 On November 3, 1918,
Germany’s partner, Austria-
Hungary, surrendered to the
Allies
 That same day, German
sailors mutinied against their
government
 Other revolts followed, and
Germany was too exhausted to
continue
 So at the eleventh hour, on the
eleventh day, of the eleventh
month of 1918, Germany signed
a truce ending the Great War
War ends 11/11/18
GERMANY COLLAPSES;
THE GREAT WAR ENDS
Losses of the Great War
each symbol – 100,000 deaths
SECTION 3: THE WAR AT
HOME
 The entire U.S. economy was
focused on the war effort
 The shift from a consumer
economy to war economy
required a collaboration
between business and
government
 In the process, the power of
the U.S. government expanded
 Congress gave President
Wilson direct control over the
economy
WAR INDUSTRIES BOARD
 The War Industries Board
(WIB) encouraged companies
to use mass-production
techniques
 Under the WIB, industrial
production and wages
increased 20%
 Union membership almost
doubled during the war years –
from 2.5 million to 4 million
 To deal with disputes
between management and
labor, President Wilson set up
the National War Labor Board
in 1918
Poster encouraging production
VICTORY GARDENS
 To conserve food, Wilson
set up the Food Administration
(FA)
 The FA declared one day a
week “meatless” another
“sweetless” and two days
“wheatless”
 Homeowners planted
“victory gardens” in their
yards
 Schoolchildren worked
after-school growing tomatoes
and cucumbers in public parks
 Farmers increased
production by almost 30% by
adding 40 million acres of
farmland
SELLING THE WAR
 The U.S. had two major
tasks; raising money and
convincing the public to
support the war
 The U.S. spent $35.5
billion on the war effort
 The government raised
about 1/3 of that through an
income tax and “sin” taxes
 The rest was raised
through war bonds sold to
the public (Liberty Loans &
Victory Loans)
PROPAGANDA
 To popularize the war,
the government set up the
nations first propaganda
agency called the
Committee on Public
Information (CPI)
 George Creel led the
agency and persuaded
many of the nation’s artists
to create thousands of
paintings, posters, cartoons
and sculptures to promote
the war
Types of Propaganda
• Bandwagon Transfer
• Name-calling Testimonial
• Logical fallacies Fear
• Glittering generalities Plain folks
Scenarios
• “Sam Slugger”, a hall of famer appears in a
television ad supporting Mike Politico for U.S.
Senate
• In a political campaign a candidate refers to his
opponent as a “tree hugger”
• A cigarette ad proclaims “Don’t let them take
your rights away!”
• An ad claims everyone in Lemmingtown is
behind Jim Duffie for Mayor shouldn’t you be?
More Scenarios
• An environmentalist group people producing
plants produces a TV ad with a scientist
explaining the dangers of altering the
environment
• After a morning speech the President drops by
McDonalds for a burger and fries and photo op
• The AARP present a magazine ad showing an
elderly couple living in poverty because Social
Security has been cut by Republicans and
urging you to vote Democrat
Even More Scenarios
• Premise 1: Bill Clinton supports Gun
Control Premise 2: Communist regimes
support gun control Premise 3: Bill Clinton
is a communist
• THE END
• Now for some World War I Posters
ATTACK ON CIVIL LIBERTIES
 As the war progressed, Civil
Liberties were compromised
 Anti-Immigrant feelings were
openly expressed especially
anti-German and Austrian-
Hungarian
 Espionage and Sedition Acts
were passed by Congress
 These acts were designed to
prevent anti-war protests but
went against the spirit of the
First Amendment (Free
speech)
 Socialists and labor leaders
were targeted
Any anti-American
sentiments were targeted
during wartime
SOCIAL CHANGE DURING
THE WAR
 The greatest effect of the First
World War on the African
American population was that it
accelerated the Great Migration
 The Great Migration was the
large scale population shift for
hundreds of thousands of blacks
from the south to Northern cities
 They left to escape
discrimination and to seek
greater job opportunities
 Popular destinations included
Chicago, New York and
Philadelphia
This African American family
settled in Chicago
WOMEN IN THE WAR
 Many women were called
upon to take on jobs previously
held by men who were serving in
the war
 They became railroad workers,
cooks, dockworkers, factory
workers, and miners
 Many women served as
volunteers in organizations such
as the Red Cross
 Their service hastened the
passage of the 19th Amendment
in 1920 giving women the right
to vote
THE FLU EPIDEMIC
 In the fall of 1918, the United States
suffered a home-front crises when a
flu epidemic affected 25% of the
population
 Mines shut down, telephone service
was cut in half, factory work was
delayed
 Cities ran short on coffins while
corpses lay unburied for as long as a
week
 The epidemic killed as many as
500,000 in the U.S. before it
disappeared in 1919
 Worldwide the epidemic killed 30
million people
Seattle, like many other places,
became a masked city. All police wore
them, as shown in this photo from
"The Great Influenza"
 Despite the hero’s welcome he
received in Europe, Wilson’s plan for
peace would be rejected by the Allies
 Wilson’s plan was called the
“Fourteen points”
 Included in his “points” were:
 No secret treaties
 Freedom of the Seas
 More free trade
 Reduction of arms
 Less colonialism
 League of Nations to promote peace
SECTION 4: WILSON FIGHTS
FOR PEACE
Wilson’s 14
points in
his own
short hand
ALLIES REJECT WILSON”S
PLAN, SIGN TREATY
 The Big Four leaders, Wilson
(U.S.), Clemenceau (France),
Lloyd George (England), and
Orlando (Italy), worked out the
Treaty’s details
 Wilson conceded on most of
his 14 points in return for the
establishment of the League of
Nations
 On June 28, 1919, the Big Four
and the leaders of the defeated
nations gathered in the Hall of
Mirrors at Versailles and signed
the Treaty of Versailles
Hall of Mirrors
TREATY OF VERSAILLES
The Treaty established nine
new nations including;
 Poland, Czechoslovakia, and
Yugoslavia
 The Treaty broke up the
Austro-Hungarian Empire and
the Ottoman Empire empires
 The Treaty barred Germany
from maintaining an army,
required them to give Alsace-
Lorraine back to France, and
forced them to pay $33 billion
in reparations to the Allies
The Big Four met at Versailles
THE WEAKNESS OF THE
TREATY
The harsh treatment of
Germany prevented the
Treaty from creating a
lasting peace in Europe
 The Treaty humiliated
the Germans by forcing
them to admit sole
responsibility for the war
(War-Guilt Clause)
 Furthermore, Germany
would never be able to pay
$33 billion in reparations
Germans felt the Versailles
Treaty was unfair
 In the United States, the Treaty
was hotly debated especially the
League of Nations
 Conservative senators, headed
by Henry Cabot Lodge, were
suspicious of the Leagues’ joint
economic and military
commitments
 Many wanted the U.S. Congress
to maintain the right to declare war
 Ultimately, Congress rejected
U.S. involvement in the very
League the U.S. President had
created
DEBATE OVER TREATY AT
HOME
The U.S. never did join the league
THE LEGACY OF WWI
 At home, the war strengthened
both the military and the power of
the government
 The propaganda campaign
provoked powerful fears in society
 For many countries the war
created political instability and
violence that lasted for years
 Russia established the first
Communist state during the war
 Americans called World War I,
“The War to end all Wars” ---
however unresolved issues would
eventually drag the U.S. into an even
deadlier conflict
WWI 1914-1918
22 million dead, more than half civilians.
An additional 20 million wounded.

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Chapter 11 powerpt1

  • 2. CAUSES OF THE WAR Historians have traditionally cited four long-term causes of the First World War NATIONALISM – a devotion to the interests and culture of one’s nation IMPERIALISM – Economic and political control over weaker nations MILITARISM – The growth of nationalism and imperialism led to increased military spending ALLIANCE SYSTEM – By 1907 Europe was divided into two armed camps
  • 3. NATIONALISM  Often nationalism led to rivalries and conflicts between nations  Additionally, various ethnic groups resented domination by others and wanted independence  Russia and Austria- Hungary disagreed over the treatment of Serbs in central Europe Germany was allied with Austria-Hungary while Russia, France and Britain were partners
  • 4.
  • 5. IMPERIALISM  For many centuries, European nations built empires  Colonies supplied European nations with raw materials and provided markets for manufactured goods  As Germany industrialized it competed directly with France and Britain  Major European countries also competed for land in Africa
  • 6.
  • 7. MILITARISM  Empires had to be defended and European nations increased military spending enormously in the late 19th and early 20th century  By 1890 the strongest nation militarily in Europe was Germany  Germany had a strong army and built up a navy to rival England’s fleet  France, Italy, Japan and the United States quickly joined in the naval buildup
  • 8. Battleships were being stockpiled by European nations, Japan and America in the late 19th and early 20th century
  • 9. ALLIANCE SYSTEM  By 1907 there were two major defense alliances in Europe  The Triple Entente, later known as the Allies, consisted of France, Britain, and Russia The Triple Alliance, later known as the Central Powers, consisted of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy (Soon joined by the Ottoman Empire FRANCE BRITAIN RUSSIA TRIPLE ENTENTE
  • 10.
  • 11. THE SPARK: AN ASSASSINATION  The Balkan region was considered “the powder keg of Europe” due to competing interests in the area  Russia wanted access to the Mediterranean Sea  Germany wanted a rail link to the Ottoman Empire  Austria-Hungary, which had taken control of Bosnia in 1878, accused Serbia of subverting its rule over Bosnia  Finally, in June of 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austrian throne was gunned down by a Serbia radical igniting a diplomatic crisis The Archduke is assassinated in Sarajevo in June 1914
  • 12. THE FIGHTING BEGINS  The Alliance system pulled one nation after another into the conflict – The Great War had begun  On August 3, 1914, Germany invaded Belgium, following a strategy known as the Schlieffen Plan  This plan called for a quick strike through Belgium to Paris, France Next, Germany would attack Russia  The plan was designed to prevent a two-front war for Germany The Schliefflen Plan
  • 13. THE WAR BECOMES A STALEMATE  Unable to save Belgium, the Allies retreated to the Marne River in France where they halted the German advance in September of 1914  Both sides dug in for a long siege  By the spring of 1915, two parallel systems of deep trenches crossed France from Belgium to Switzerland  There were 3 types of trenches; front line, support, and reserve  Between enemy trenches was “no man’s land” – an area pockmarked with shell craters and filled with barbed wire British soldiers standing in mud
  • 14. The conditions in these trenches were horrific; aside from the fear of bombardment, soldiers also had to contend with the mud, flooding and disease associated with living in such a harsh environment. German Soldiers
  • 18. Body Lice & Trench Fever
  • 19. FIRST BATTLE OF THE SOMME  During the First Battle of the Somme - which began July 1, 1916 and lasted until mid-November – the British suffered 60,000 casualties the first day  Final casualties for the First Battle of the Somme totaled 1.2 million, yet only 7 miles of ground was gained  This bloody trench warfare, in which armies fought for mere yards of ground, lasted for three years Gas attacks were common features of trench life and often caused blindness and lung disease
  • 20. AMERICANS QUESTION NEUTRALITY  In 1914, most Americans saw no reason to join a struggle 3,000 miles away – they wanted neutrality  Some simply did not want their sons to experience the horror of warfare  German-Americans supported Germany in World War I  However, many American felt close to the British because of a shared ancestry and language  Most importantly, American economic interests were far stronger with the Allies French propaganda poster portrayed the Germans as inhuman and impacted American attitudes toward the Germans
  • 21. THE WAR HITS HOME During the first two years of the war, America was providing (selling) the allied forces dynamite, cannon powder, submarines, copper wire and tubing and other war material  Both the Germans and British imposed naval blockades on each other  The Germans used U-boats (submarines) to prevent shipments to the North Atlantic Unrestricted Submarine Warfare  Any ship found in the waters around Britain would be sunk German U-boat 1919
  • 22. THE LUSITANIA DISASTER  United States involvement in World War I was hastened by the Lusitania incident  The Lusitania was a British passenger liner that carried 1,198 persons on a fateful trip on May 7, 1915  A German U-boat sank the British passenger liner killing all aboard including 128 American tourists  The Germans claimed the ship was carrying Allied ammunition  Americans were outraged and public opinion turned against Germany and the Central Powers May 7, 1915
  • 23. The N.Y. Times reports on the Lusitania
  • 24. 1916 ELECTION  The November 1916 election pitted incumbent Democrat Woodrow Wilson vs. Republican candidate Supreme Court justice Charles Evans Hughes  Wilson won a close election using the slogan, “He kept us out of war”  That slogan would prove ironic because within a few months the United States would be embroiled in World War I Wilson
  • 25. AMERICA EDGES CLOSER TO WAR Several factors came together to bring the U.S. into the war; 1) Germany ignored Wilson’s plea for peace 2) The Zimmerman Note, a telegram from the German foreign minister to the German Ambassador in Mexico, proposed an alliance  Germany promised Mexico a return of their “lost territory” in Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona 3) Next came the sinking of four unarmed U.S. merchant ships by German subs Encoded message from Germany to Mexico (Zimmerman note)
  • 27. AMERICA DECLARES WAR  A light drizzle fell on Washington on April 2, 1917, as senators, representatives, ambassadors, members of the Supreme Court, and other guests crowded into the Capital building to hear Wilson deliver his declaration of war  Wilson said, “The world must be safe for democracy”  Congress passed the resolution a few days later
  • 28. SECTION 2: AMERICAN POWER TIPS THE BALANCE  America was not ready for war – only 200,000 men were in service when war was declared  Congress passed the Selective Service Act in May of 1917  By the end of 1918, 24 million had signed up and almost 3 million were called to duty  About 2 million American troops reached Europe
  • 29. FRESH U.S. SOLDIERS JOIN FIGHT  After 2 ½ years of fighting, the Allied forces were exhausted  One of the main contributions of the Americans was fresh and enthusiastic troops  American infantry were nicknamed “doughboys” because of their white belts  Most doughboys had never ventured far from the farms or small towns they lived in
  • 30. NEW WEAPONS USED  Machine Guns – Guns could now fire 600 rounds per minute  The Tank – New steel tanks ran on caterpillar treads  Airplanes – Early dogfights resembled duals, however by 1918 the British had a fleet of planes that could deliver bomb loads  Poison Gas – mustard gas was used to subdue the enemy
  • 31. Weapons of the Great War : The War to End All Wars
  • 32. Bayonet • Originally a defensive weapon against cavalry charge • Rarely attempted until the enemy was retreating • Use of rifles give infantrymen firepower • Now used as a personal offensive weapon • Primary close combat weapon used during trench warfare • Machine guns undermined the bayonet effectivness by an advancing army
  • 33.
  • 34. Big Bertha Howitzer • Fire a 2,200 lb shell over 9 miles • Transported by tractors • Took 200 man crew over six hours to re- assemble
  • 35.
  • 36. Flamethrower • Idea was to spread fire by launching burning fuel • Designed for portable use, carried by a single man • Belched forth a stream of burning oil for 36 meters • Used mostly to clear forward defenders during the start of an attack • Often times the cylinder exploded – dangerous job!
  • 37.
  • 38. Grenades • Many types of grenades were used • Called Mills bomb • Serrated so that when it detonated it broke into many fragments (fragmentation bomb) • Remove safety pin while holding down the strike lever, and throw • Had four seconds to get out of the way • Over 100 million were thrown during the Great War
  • 39.
  • 40.
  • 41. Machine Gun • Positioned on a flat tripod • Required a gun crew of 4-6 men • Fire 400-600 small caliber rounds per min • This figure doubled by war’s end • Worth as many as 60-100 rifles • A fearsome defensive weapon • Enemy infantry assaults were costly • Toward war end lighter models were being used a offensive weapons as well
  • 42.
  • 43. The Mortar • A short stumpy tube designed to fire a projectile at a steep angle • Higher then 45 degrees so that is falls straight down on the enemy • Why would this be ideally suited for trench warfare?
  • 44.
  • 45.
  • 46. Poison Gas • Debut in the 2nd battle of Ypres April 1915 • Yellow-green cloud • Destroyed the victim’s respiratory organs • First use provoked widespread condemnation • Damaged German’s relations with neutral countries (US) • Other side used it and poison gas usage escalated for remainder of the war
  • 47. German infantry man French men loading up gas container
  • 48. Rifle • the rifle, which remained the most crucial, ever- present infantry weapon throughout The Great War • the advent of automatic and semiautomatic weapons waited until the last year of the war • eight to twelve rounds per minute • 15 rounds per minute achieved by riflemen of the British Expeditionary Force • range, the average during the war was around 1,400 meters • accuracy could only be guaranteed at around 600 meters
  • 49. The Springfield, manufactured in the U.S. (at Springfield, Massachusetts), was the standard wartime rifle of the U.S. army
  • 50. Tank • 15th September 1916 first used in battle by the British • early tanks proved notoriously unreliable • often broke down and became ditched - i.e. stuck in a muddy trench • Conditions for the tank crews – heat was tremendous – fumes often nearly choked the men • Tanks design improved • British, French and US made them, Germany never were convinced of their effectiveness
  • 51.
  • 52. “GASSED” BY John Singer Sargent Complete an Image Analysis Worksheet
  • 53. Wilfred Owen, Dulce et Decorum est (1917) Bent double, like old beggars under sacks, Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge, Till on the haunting flares we turned our backs, And towards our distant rest began to trudge. Men marched asleep. Many had lost their boots, But limped on, blood-shod. All went lame, all blind; Drunk with fatigue; deaf even to the hoots Of gas-shells dropping softly behind. Gas! Gas! Quick, boys! An ecstasy of fumbling, Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time, But someone still was yelling out and stumbling And floundering like a man in fire or lime. Dim through the misty panes and thick green light, As under a green sea, I saw him drowning. In all my dreams, before my helpless sight, He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning. If in some smothering dreams, you too could pace Behind the wagon that we flung him in. And watch the white eyes writhing in his face, His hanging face, like a devil's sick of sin; If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs, Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues, My friend, you would not tell with such high zest To children ardent for some desperate glory, The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est Pro patria mori. Famous poem by Wilfred Owen about the evils of mustard gas
  • 54. 1. What is the meaning of “Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori”? 2. How do Owen’s words speak profoundly to the reality of war? 3. . What feeling does Owen leave you with regarding the “sweetness and honor” of die for one’s country? Wilfred Owen, Dulce et Decorum est (1917) Questions Dulce et decorum est Pro patria mori English translation: It is sweet and honourable to die for one’s country.
  • 56.  When Russia surrendered to the Germans in 1917, it allowed the Central Powers to focus on the Western Front  By May, the Germans were within 50 miles of Paris  The Americans arrived and immediately played a major role in pushing the Germans back In July and August the Americans helped the Allies win the Second Battle of the Marne AMERICAN TROOPS GO ON THE OFFENSIVE Men of the 42nd Division during the Second Marne. These men were killed by artillery fire just 5 minutes after this photo was taken
  • 57. AMERICAN WAR HERO  Alvin York, a blacksmith from Tennessee, originally sought an exemption from the war as a Conscientious Objector  York eventually decided it was morally acceptable to fight if the cause was right  On October 8, 1918, armed with only a rifle and a revolver, York killed 25 Germans and (with six doughboys) captured 132 prisoners  Upon his return home he was promoted to Sergeant and hailed a hero The movie The man
  • 58. GERMANY COLLAPSES, WAR ENDS  On November 3, 1918, Germany’s partner, Austria- Hungary, surrendered to the Allies  That same day, German sailors mutinied against their government  Other revolts followed, and Germany was too exhausted to continue  So at the eleventh hour, on the eleventh day, of the eleventh month of 1918, Germany signed a truce ending the Great War War ends 11/11/18 GERMANY COLLAPSES; THE GREAT WAR ENDS
  • 59. Losses of the Great War each symbol – 100,000 deaths
  • 60. SECTION 3: THE WAR AT HOME  The entire U.S. economy was focused on the war effort  The shift from a consumer economy to war economy required a collaboration between business and government  In the process, the power of the U.S. government expanded  Congress gave President Wilson direct control over the economy
  • 61. WAR INDUSTRIES BOARD  The War Industries Board (WIB) encouraged companies to use mass-production techniques  Under the WIB, industrial production and wages increased 20%  Union membership almost doubled during the war years – from 2.5 million to 4 million  To deal with disputes between management and labor, President Wilson set up the National War Labor Board in 1918 Poster encouraging production
  • 62. VICTORY GARDENS  To conserve food, Wilson set up the Food Administration (FA)  The FA declared one day a week “meatless” another “sweetless” and two days “wheatless”  Homeowners planted “victory gardens” in their yards  Schoolchildren worked after-school growing tomatoes and cucumbers in public parks  Farmers increased production by almost 30% by adding 40 million acres of farmland
  • 63. SELLING THE WAR  The U.S. had two major tasks; raising money and convincing the public to support the war  The U.S. spent $35.5 billion on the war effort  The government raised about 1/3 of that through an income tax and “sin” taxes  The rest was raised through war bonds sold to the public (Liberty Loans & Victory Loans)
  • 64. PROPAGANDA  To popularize the war, the government set up the nations first propaganda agency called the Committee on Public Information (CPI)  George Creel led the agency and persuaded many of the nation’s artists to create thousands of paintings, posters, cartoons and sculptures to promote the war
  • 65. Types of Propaganda • Bandwagon Transfer • Name-calling Testimonial • Logical fallacies Fear • Glittering generalities Plain folks
  • 66. Scenarios • “Sam Slugger”, a hall of famer appears in a television ad supporting Mike Politico for U.S. Senate • In a political campaign a candidate refers to his opponent as a “tree hugger” • A cigarette ad proclaims “Don’t let them take your rights away!” • An ad claims everyone in Lemmingtown is behind Jim Duffie for Mayor shouldn’t you be?
  • 67. More Scenarios • An environmentalist group people producing plants produces a TV ad with a scientist explaining the dangers of altering the environment • After a morning speech the President drops by McDonalds for a burger and fries and photo op • The AARP present a magazine ad showing an elderly couple living in poverty because Social Security has been cut by Republicans and urging you to vote Democrat
  • 68. Even More Scenarios • Premise 1: Bill Clinton supports Gun Control Premise 2: Communist regimes support gun control Premise 3: Bill Clinton is a communist • THE END • Now for some World War I Posters
  • 69.
  • 70.
  • 71.
  • 72.
  • 73.
  • 74.
  • 75.
  • 76.
  • 77.
  • 78.
  • 79.
  • 80.
  • 81. ATTACK ON CIVIL LIBERTIES  As the war progressed, Civil Liberties were compromised  Anti-Immigrant feelings were openly expressed especially anti-German and Austrian- Hungarian  Espionage and Sedition Acts were passed by Congress  These acts were designed to prevent anti-war protests but went against the spirit of the First Amendment (Free speech)  Socialists and labor leaders were targeted Any anti-American sentiments were targeted during wartime
  • 82. SOCIAL CHANGE DURING THE WAR  The greatest effect of the First World War on the African American population was that it accelerated the Great Migration  The Great Migration was the large scale population shift for hundreds of thousands of blacks from the south to Northern cities  They left to escape discrimination and to seek greater job opportunities  Popular destinations included Chicago, New York and Philadelphia This African American family settled in Chicago
  • 83. WOMEN IN THE WAR  Many women were called upon to take on jobs previously held by men who were serving in the war  They became railroad workers, cooks, dockworkers, factory workers, and miners  Many women served as volunteers in organizations such as the Red Cross  Their service hastened the passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920 giving women the right to vote
  • 84. THE FLU EPIDEMIC  In the fall of 1918, the United States suffered a home-front crises when a flu epidemic affected 25% of the population  Mines shut down, telephone service was cut in half, factory work was delayed  Cities ran short on coffins while corpses lay unburied for as long as a week  The epidemic killed as many as 500,000 in the U.S. before it disappeared in 1919  Worldwide the epidemic killed 30 million people Seattle, like many other places, became a masked city. All police wore them, as shown in this photo from "The Great Influenza"
  • 85.  Despite the hero’s welcome he received in Europe, Wilson’s plan for peace would be rejected by the Allies  Wilson’s plan was called the “Fourteen points”  Included in his “points” were:  No secret treaties  Freedom of the Seas  More free trade  Reduction of arms  Less colonialism  League of Nations to promote peace SECTION 4: WILSON FIGHTS FOR PEACE Wilson’s 14 points in his own short hand
  • 86. ALLIES REJECT WILSON”S PLAN, SIGN TREATY  The Big Four leaders, Wilson (U.S.), Clemenceau (France), Lloyd George (England), and Orlando (Italy), worked out the Treaty’s details  Wilson conceded on most of his 14 points in return for the establishment of the League of Nations  On June 28, 1919, the Big Four and the leaders of the defeated nations gathered in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles and signed the Treaty of Versailles Hall of Mirrors
  • 87. TREATY OF VERSAILLES The Treaty established nine new nations including;  Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia  The Treaty broke up the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the Ottoman Empire empires  The Treaty barred Germany from maintaining an army, required them to give Alsace- Lorraine back to France, and forced them to pay $33 billion in reparations to the Allies The Big Four met at Versailles
  • 88.
  • 89. THE WEAKNESS OF THE TREATY The harsh treatment of Germany prevented the Treaty from creating a lasting peace in Europe  The Treaty humiliated the Germans by forcing them to admit sole responsibility for the war (War-Guilt Clause)  Furthermore, Germany would never be able to pay $33 billion in reparations Germans felt the Versailles Treaty was unfair
  • 90.  In the United States, the Treaty was hotly debated especially the League of Nations  Conservative senators, headed by Henry Cabot Lodge, were suspicious of the Leagues’ joint economic and military commitments  Many wanted the U.S. Congress to maintain the right to declare war  Ultimately, Congress rejected U.S. involvement in the very League the U.S. President had created DEBATE OVER TREATY AT HOME The U.S. never did join the league
  • 91. THE LEGACY OF WWI  At home, the war strengthened both the military and the power of the government  The propaganda campaign provoked powerful fears in society  For many countries the war created political instability and violence that lasted for years  Russia established the first Communist state during the war  Americans called World War I, “The War to end all Wars” --- however unresolved issues would eventually drag the U.S. into an even deadlier conflict WWI 1914-1918 22 million dead, more than half civilians. An additional 20 million wounded.