WWISummary
WWISummary
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. Finally,
Russia and Germany was allied with
Austria-Hungary while Russia,
Austria-Hungary France and Britain were partners
disagreed over the
treatment of Serbs in
central Europe.
Imperialism
✠ For many centuries,
European nations built
empires. Colonies
supplied raw materials
and provided markets
for manufactured
goods. As Germany
industrialized, she
competed with other
nations and colonies
made her more
competitive.
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
TRIPLE ENTENTE ✠ 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
FRANCE BRITAIN RUSSIA known as the Central
Powers, consisted of
Germany, Austria-Hungary,
and Italy (Soon joined by
the Ottoman Empire
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 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 The Schliefflen Plan
prevent a two-front war for
Germany.
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. Between enemy
trenches was “no man’s land” – an
area pockmarked with shell craters
and filled with barbed wire. British soldiers standing in mud
German Soldiers
The conditions in these trenches were horrific. Aside from the fear of
bombardment, soldiers also had to contend with mud, flooding, lice, vermin,
and disease associated with living in such an unhealthy environment.
First Battle of The Somme
✠ During the First Battle of the
Somme—which began on July
1, 1916, and lasted until
mid-November—the British
suffered an enormous number
of casualties (60,000 on the
first day). Final casualties for
this phase of the war totaled
1.2 million, yet only 7 miles of
Gas attacks were common features ground was gained. This
of trench life and often caused bloody trench warfare, in which
blindness and lung disease
armies fought for mere yards
of ground, lasted for three
years.
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. Some
German-Americans supported
Germany in World War I.
However, many Americans felt
closer to the British because of a
shared ancestry and language.
Most importantly, American
French propaganda poster economic interests were far
portrayed the Germans as
inhuman. stronger with the Allies.
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. Any ship found in
the waters around Britain would be
sunk.
The Lusitania Disaster
✠ United States involvement in
World War I was hastened by the
Lusitania disaster. 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.
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 with Mexico
and a return of their “lost
territory” in Texas, New Mexico,
Encoded message from
Germany to Mexico and Arizona.
3. Next came the sinking of four
unarmed U.S. merchant ships by
German subs.
Zimmerman
note
intercepted
by a British
agent and
decoded
America Declares War
✠ On April 2, 1917, 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 mad safe for
democracy.”
✠ Congress passed the
resolution a few days later.
American Power Tips the Balance
✠ America was not ready for
war. Only 200,000 men
were in service when war
was declared, so 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
Important New Weapons
✠ 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 bombs.
✠ Poison Gas: Mustard gas
was used to subdue the
enemy.
Other Weapons & Equipment
✠ Howitzers
✠ Flame throwers
✠ Torpedoes
✠ U-boats
✠ Phosphorus grenades
✠ Field phones
✠ Search lights
✠ Gas masks
✠ Camouflage
✠ Railroad guns
✠ Blimps
German U-boat sinking a British commercial steamer
Both humans and animals were susceptible to the
effects of poison gas. Dogs were used during World War
I as sentries, sled dogs, pack animals, and messengers.
American Troops Go On the Offensive
✠ When Russia surrendered to
the Germans in 1917, the
Central Powers were able to
focus on the Western Front .
By May, the Germans were
within 50 miles of Paris. The
Americans arrived and
immediately played a major
Men of the 42nd Division during the role in pushing the Germans
Second Marne. These men were back. In July and August the
killed by artillery fire just 5 minutes
after this photo was taken Americans helped the Allies
win the Second Battle of the
Marne.
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
War ends 11/11/18
ending the Great War.
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% and
union membership increased
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.
Victory Gardens
✠ To conserve food, Wilson set
up the Food Administration
(FA) which declared one day a
week “meatless,” another
“sweetless,” and two days
“wheatless.” Homeowners
planted “victory gardens” in
their yards and school
children 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
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 Any anti-American
First Amendment (free sentiments were targeted
speech) during wartime