1 / 68

World War II

World War II. 1939-1945. By Sam Irving. Hitler on the Offensive. BIG Idea: Hitler’s desire for lebensraum , or living space, for Germans led to war in Europe. Acts of Aggression. Broke the Versailles Treaty Increased the military beyond the limits of the treaty.

sian
Télécharger la présentation

World War II

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. World War II 1939-1945 By Sam Irving

  2. Hitler on the Offensive • BIG Idea: Hitler’s desire for lebensraum, or living space, for Germans led to war in Europe.

  3. Acts of Aggression • Broke the Versailles Treaty • Increased the military beyond the limits of the treaty. • Occupied the demilitarized Rhineland, a German area on the French border. • Guessed correctly that France and Britain would do nothing.

  4. The Rhineland

  5. Anschluss (Joining): sent troops into ethnically-German Austria & proclaimed it part of the Reich in March 1938. • Demanded the Sudetenland, an ethnically-German part of Czechoslovakia.

  6. Czechoslovakian Sudetenland (Shown in white).

  7. Appeasement: France and Britain gave in to Hitler’s territorial demands to maintain peace. • Munich Conference (1938) gave Hitler the Sudetenland. • Takes the rest of Czechoslovakia a ½ year later.

  8. Neville Chamberlain (left), Edouard Daladier, Adolf Hitler, and Benito Mussolini prior to signing the Munich Agreement.

  9. What’s this political cartoon conveying?

  10. Nazi-Soviet Nonaggression Pact 1939 • Stalin & Hitler pledged neutrality • Secretly carved-up Eastern Europe • Hitler invades Poland in 1939. • Soviets occupied eastern Poland. • Britain & France declare war.

  11. Major Combatants • Allies: Britain, France, U.S., & Soviet Union • Axis: Germany, Italy, & Japan.

  12. Assignment: Appeasement Blog Debate • ELT: Analyze cause and effect relationships using historical information that is organized chronologically. • Let’s debate how we deal with belligerent nations today.

  13. What’s this map showing?

  14. War in Europe • BIG Idea: Germans used blitzkrieg, or “lightning war,” a strategy of taking the enemy by surprise, to conquer all of Western Europe in months. • British evacuation at Dunkirk

  15. Whose left fighting the Nazis?

  16. Bombing of Civilians • Bombing of Britain • Germans bombed London for 57 consecutive nights. • British endured and blocked Hitler’s invasion. • U.S. aids Britain • General desire for isolation and neutrality after WWI. • Lend-Lease Act (1940): allowed F.D.R. to lend war equipment to Britain.

  17. London 1940

  18. Allies fire-bombed German cities. • 100,000 civilian casualties in Dresden.

  19. Hitler v. Stalin • Hitler invades the Soviet Union in 1941. • Stalingrad: Soviets refuse to surrender, winter sets in, and Nazis retreat. • Sound familiar? • Eastern Front marked by atrocities on both sides. • Nazis viewed eastern Europeans as sub-human.

  20. Assignment:War in Europe Guided Reading • ELT:Analyze the impact of major wars on the modern world. • Let’s take a closer look at WWII in Europe.

  21. The Holocaust

  22. Beginnings • Forced to wear the Star of David, an ancient Jewish symbol. • Forced to live in crowded, unsanitary ghettos. • Ex. Warsaw, Poland • Deliberate starvation

  23. Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1943

  24. Killing Squads (Einsatzgruppen) • S.S. groups who moved with the regular German army in the east. • Shot over 1 million Jews and buried them in mass graves.

  25. Ivangorod, Ukraine 1942

  26. What’s this?

  27. The Final Solution (Summer 1942) • Sent to death camps in the east. • Ex. Auschwitz, Poland • Gas Chambers • Starved or worked to death • Victims of cruel experiments • 6 million Jews and 6 million Slavs and “undesirables” were murdered.

  28. Gates at Auschwitz

  29. A Gas Chamber at Auschwitz

  30. Assignment • Essential Learning Target: Give examples of how philosophical beliefs have influenced society. • How did Nazi racism lead to atrocities on the Eastern front? • Primary Source Reading: Rena’s Promise: A Story of Sisters in Auschwitz • Read and answer questions 1-5.

  31. Allied Victory in Europe • BIG Idea: Once Allied and Soviet forces defeated Germany in 1945, mistrust and tension between the two victors divided Europe.

  32. D-Day

  33. D-Day • June 6th, 1944: Amphibious invasion of Nazi-held France by Allied forces.

  34. Victory • American and Soviet troops met on the Elbe river, completely occupying Germany. • German unconditional surrender on May 7th 1945.

  35. What did they do to Germany?

  36. The Yalta Conference 1945 • Divided Germany, and Berlin, into 4 zones occupied by Britain, France, the U.S., and the Soviet Union. • United Nations formed.

  37. Europe Divided • Roosevelt encouraged capitalist, democratic states in Western Europe. • Stalin kept control of Soviet-occupied Eastern Europe. • “An iron curtain descended across the continent.” • Winston Churchill

  38. Assignment • ELT: Analyze the impact of major wars on the modern world. • “The Cost of War” Pie Chart Analysis • Let’s consider the human cost of WWII.

  39. War in the Pacific Why was the West upset with Japan?

  40. Causes • Japan acquired European and U.S. colonies in Indo-China. • Attempted to create “The Greater East-Asia Co-prosperity Sphere” (a Japanese Empire ruling all of Asia) • U.S. sanctioned the sale of oil & steel to Japan. • Japan joins the Axis in 1940.

  41. Pearl Harbor (Dec. 7, 1941) • 2,400 dead • 19 ships & 188 airplanes destroyed • Aircraft carriers & ½ the U.S. planes were at sea during the attack. • U.S. was now officially at war with the Axis powers.

  42. Japanese Internment in the U.S. • 110,000 Japanese-Americans forced into internment camps. • Loss of dignity, family, and property.

More Related