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The Italian Campaign

The Italian Campaign. Background. German and Russian Troops German troops faced disaster in Russia. They were unable to handle the freezing Russian weather. The German army surrendered in 1943.

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The Italian Campaign

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  1. The Italian Campaign

  2. Background • German and Russian Troops • German troops faced disaster in Russia. • They were unable to handle the freezing Russian weather. • The German army surrendered in 1943. • The Russian forces now turned their attention towards Germany. After failing in Russia, Hitler sent his forces to Italy.

  3. Background • The American’s recovered quickly after Pearl Harbor. • The American aircraft carriers defeated the Japanese navy island by island moving closer to Japan. • In 1942, British and American troops drove back the Italian and German forces in North Africa. • The British and American troops then moved to Italy where the German troops had moved.

  4. The Liberation of Italy • The Italian campaign was long and tough. • The German’s put up a wall of defenses from Rome to Ortona. • The American, British and Canadian forces followed the German’s through Italy. • They had to trek through the rugged mountains and were often attacked by German snipers hidden in the mountains. • It was a city-by-city takeover. • More than 30, 000 soldiers were wounded or killed.

  5. The Invasion of Sicily

  6. The Invasion of Sicily • Canadian soldiers had not seen any action since the disastrous raid on Dieppe. • In July 1943, Canadian’s were sent to Italy to aid in the invasion of Sicily. • This battle was fought in the hot Italian summer and lasted 38 days. • Mussolini’s dream of a new Roman Empire was shattered and his own people rebelled and through him out of power in 1943. • Hitler swiftly moved German troops into Italy; he would not let Italy’s surrender hold him back.

  7. The Battle of Ortona

  8. The Battle of Ortona • It was a house-by-house takeover. • Canadian’s became experts at street fighting. • They developed the mouse-holing technique.

  9. The Battle of Ortona • 1,375 Canadian soldiers lost their lives. • On June 4, 1944, the Allied armies entered Rome to the cheers of the Italian people. • These soldiers, in February 1945 were transferred to join the Canadian army fighting to free Holland from German control.

  10. D-Day: The Beginning of the End

  11. Mind’s On – You Make the Plan • On the map you have make a plan to attack “Fortress Europe” from England. • Follow the Resources list and the questions below to help make your plan.

  12. The Plan • This happened on June 6, 1944 • The goal was to penetrate “Fortress Europe” and push the Germans back • The official name was Operation Overlord

  13. The Attack • This was a combined Allied effort – US, British and Canadian • This used air, sea and land forces • It began with paratroopers at 2:30 a.m. and forces started invading the beaches at 6:30

  14. What Did Canada Do? • We gave paratroopers, soldiers, over 100 naval ships and airplanes • We landed at JUNO BEACH • We were the only Allied force to meet objective for the day – Take the beach and gain territory

  15. Overall Effort and Impact • Over 156 000 Allied troops landed on D-Day • Roughly 30 000 were Canadian • Within a month 1 million Allied soldiers had landed • The Liberation of Europe had begun – This was The Beginning of the End for Nazi Germany

  16. Wrap Up – War Art • Look at the painting of the D-Day attack. On a Post It note complete the following questions: • How does this painting compare to the actual pictures we’ve seen today? • Why is art important in telling about a historical event? • What was the Big Idea of the day?

  17. Liberation of the Netherlands

  18. Freeing Belgium and the Netherlands • After the success of Normandy, in 1944, Canadian troops helped free Belgium from the Nazis, and then did the same for the Netherlands. • The Dutch were starving • 6300 Canadian soldiers died liberating Belgium and the Netherlands. • The Dutch still acknowledge Canadians’ sacrifice every year by sending thousands of tulip bulbs to Ottawa.

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