Chapter 24 – The World War II Era (1935-1945)

Vocabulary:

1.  Josef Stalin - dictator of the Soviet Union, who turned the

Soviet Union into a totalitarian state (communism)

2.  totalitarian state - country where a single party controls the

government and every aspect of people’s lives

3.  Benito Mussolini - prime minister of Italy, who turned Italy into the

world’s first fascist state (fascism)

4.  fascism - political system that is rooted in militarism,

extreme nationalism, and blind loyalty to the state

5.  Adolf Hitler - dictator of Germany, who turned Germany into an

extreme nationalist state (Nazism)

6.  aggression - warlike act by one country without just cause

7.  appeasement - practice of giving in to aggression in order to avoid

war

8.  Winston Churchill - British prime minister during WWII

9.  total war - conflict involving not just armies, but entire nations

10.  Dwight D. Eisenhower - General who led the first American ground troops in

combat during WWII

11.  Douglas MacArthur - General who commanded a Filipino-American force

during WWII

12.  rationing - limitations on the amounts of certain goods that

people can buy

13.  intern - to temporarily imprison so as to keep from leaving a

country

14.  A. Philip Randolph - union leader, head of the Brotherhood of Sleeping

Car Porters, who threatened a mass protest unless FDR moved to end discrimination in the armed forces

15.  bracero - Mexican laborer who worked in the US during

WWII

16.  Harry S. Truman - 33rd President of the US, who was suddenly thrust

into the highest office in the country

17.  island hopping - during WWII, Allied strategy of capturing

Japanese-held islands to gain control of the Pacific

Ocean

18.  kamikaze - WWII Japanese pilot trained to make a suicidal

crash attack, usually upon a ship

19.  genocide - deliberate attempt to kill or destroy an entire nation

or group of people

20.  war crimes - wartime act of cruelty and brutality that is judged to be beyond the accepted rules of war and human

behavior

21.  Nazis - members of the National Socialist German Workers

Party

22.  scapegoat - person/group who is made to bear the blame for

others

23.  concentration camp - prison camp for civilians who are considered

enemies of the state

24.  Neutrality Acts - series of laws passed by Congress in 1935 that

Banned arms sales or loans to countries at war

25.  Good Neighbor Policy - President FDR’s policy intended to strengthen

Friendly relations with Latin America

26.  Munich Conference - 1938 meeting of leaders of Britain, France, Italy,

and Germany at which an agreement was signed

giving part of Czechoslovakia to Hitler

27.  Nazi-Soviet Pact - agreement signed by Hitler and Stalin in1939 in

which they agreed not to attack each other

28.  blitzkrieg - the swift attacks launched by Germany in WWII

29.  Axis - WWII military alliance of Germany, Italy, Japan,

and six other nations.

30.  Allies - WWII military alliance of Britain, France, the

Soviet Union, China, the US, and 45 other countries

31.  Battle of Britain - Germany’s failed attempt to subdue Britain in 1940

in preparation for invasion

32.  Lend-Lease Act - during WWII the law that allowed the US to sell

arms and equipment to Britain

33.  Atlantic Charter - 1941 program developed by the US and Britain that

Set goals for the postwar world

34.  War Production Board - government agency created during WWII to help

Factories shift from making consumer goods to making war materials

35.  victory garden - vegetable garden during WWII, planted to combat

food shortages in the US

36.  Rosie the Riveter - fictional factory worker who became a symbol of

working women during WWII

37.  “Double V” campaign - African American civil rights campaign during

WWII

38.  Tuskegee Airmen - African American fighter pilots who trained in

Tuskegee, Alabama during WWII

39.  compensation - repayment for losses

40.  Battle of Midway - 1942 battle in the Pacific, in which American planes

Sank four Japanese aircraft carriers

41.  Operation Overlord - code name for the Allied invasion of Europe (1944)

42.  D-Day - June 6, 1944, day of invasion by Allied

Forces of Western Europe

43.  Battle of the Bulge - German counter-attack in December 1944 that

temporarily slowed the Allied invasion of Germany

44.  Navajo code-talkers - WWII Navajo soldiers who use their own language

to radio vital messages during the island-hopping campaign

45.  Potsdam Declaration - message sent by the Allies in July 1945, calling for

Japanese surrender

46.  Bataan Death March - long trek across the Philippines that American and

Filipino prisoners of war were forced to make by the Japanese

47.  Holocaust - slaughter of Europe’s Jews by the Nazi’s before and

During WWII

48.  Nuremberg Trials - Nazi war crime trials held in 1945 and 1946

49.  Pearl Harbor - American naval base in Hawaii

50.  Yalta Conference - Yalta, USSR – the “big three” meet to make plans

To end the war and for the future of Europe

51.  Manhattan Project - 1942 – top-secret program to build an atomic bomb

52.  Marshall Plan - 1948 – Secretary of State George C. Marshall’s plan

to help boost the economies of Europe

53.  GI Bill of Rights - (GI Bill) provided educational and economic help to

veterans

54.  United Nations - 1945 – international peace organization created

Chapter 24 – The World War II Era (1935 – 1945)

Section 1 – Aggression Leads to War

Obj: to describe the kind of dictatorship Stalin set up in the Soviet Union; to explain how authoritarian governments came to power in Germany, Italy, and Japan; to understand why the US adopted a policy of isolationism

·  Stalin’s Totalitarian State –

o  Lenin had set up communist government of the Soviet Union

o  1924 – After Lenin’s death, Joseph Stalin gained power and ruled as a totalitarian dictator.

o  Took brutal measures to modernize Soviet industry and agriculture

o  Ordered peasants to hand over their land and animals to government-run farms

o  Millions who resisted were executed or sent to labor camps

o  Stalin also staged trials and execution of his political enemies

o  Many confessed to false charges under torture

·  Fascist Italy –

o  Unlike Stalin, Italy and Germany’s dictators were fascists (vowed to create new empires through the military, nationalism and extreme blind loyalties to the state)

o  Communists drew much of their support from the working class

o  Fascists found allies among business leaders and landowners

o  1922 - Benito Mussolini and his Fascist party seized power in Italy

§  Used economic unrest and fears of communist revolution to win support

§  Once in power, outlawed all political parties except his own, controlled the press, and banned criticism of the government.

§  Critics were jailed or simply murdered.

§  School children recited the motto “Mussolini is always right!”

§  1930s – used foreign conquests to distract Italians from economic problems

·  promised to restore the greatness of Ancient Rome – military aggression

§  1935 – invaded Ethiopia

·  Nazi Germany –

o  Adolf Hitler – the National Socialist German Worker’s Party (Nazis)

o  Like Mussolini, Hitler played on anger about the Versailles Treaty (reparations)

o  Assured Germans that they did not lose the war, rather Jews and other traitors had “stabbed Germany in the back”

§  This statement was, of course, false, but the people were looking for a scapegoat (excuse)

o  He was a powerful speaker and a skillful politician

o  The depression a perfect opportunity for him

o  1933 – he became chancellor or head of the German government

o  Ended democratic rule within two years and created a militaristic totalitarian state.

o  Government controlled the press, the schools and religion

o  1936 – organized a week-long rally in Nuremberg – superior race

§  Especially Jews, Gypsies and other peoples.

§  Later rounded Jews and sent them to concentration camps

§  He would later release a plan to kill all the Jews in Europe

§  Claimed Germany had the right to expand to the east

o  He defied the Treaty of Versailles and began to build up Germany’s armed forces.

§  The League of Nations condemned these actions

§  Predicted that the rest of Europe would not react, just protest and they will always be too late

o  1936 – German troops moved into the Rhineland near the border with France and Belgium

§  France and Britain protested, but took no action

·  Military Rule in Japan –

o  Japan’s economy suffered terribly in the Great Depression

o  Its people grew impatient with their democratic government, so military leaders took power.

o  Like Hitler, Japanese leaders also preached racial superiority

o  They also believed they were superior and purer than other Asians, as well as non-Asians

o  They set their sights on Manchuria, China in an effort to expand

§  Manchuria was rich in coal and iron, two resources scarce in Japan

o  They set up a state in Manchuria and called it Manchukuo

o  China called on the League of Nations, who condemned Japan but did little else.

o  The US also refused to recognize Manchukuo but took no action.

·  American Isolationism –

o  As war was gathering overseas, the US was determined to keep from becoming involved

§  Neutrality Acts:

§  1935 – Congress passed the first of a series of Neutrality Acts, which banned arms sales or loans to countries at war.

·  Congress also warned Americans not to travel on ships of countries at war

·  Us limited economic ties with warring nations

§  The Good Neighbor Policy:

·  US tried to improve relations with Latin American nations

·  1930 – President Herbert Hoover rejected the Roosevelt Corollary.

o  Claimed that the US no longer had the right to intervene in Latin American affairs

§  FDR also worked to build friendlier relations with Latin America

·  His Good Neighbor Policy - withdrew American troops from Nicaragua and Haiti.

·  Cancelled the Platt Amendment, which limited the independence of Cuba

Chapter 24 – The World War II Era (1935 – 1945)

Section 2 – The United States at War

Obj: to explain how aggression led to war in Asia and Europe; to describe how the US repsonded to WWI outbreak; and, why the US finally entered the war

·  During the 1930s, neither the US nor European nations were prepared to halt aggression in Europe or Asia.

·  As the armies of Germany, Italy and Japan conquered more territory, the democracies still hoped to avoid another world war.

·  Japan Sparks War in Asia –

o  1937 – Japan began an all-out war with China

o  Japanese troops defeat Chinese armies and occupied northern and central China.

o  This alarmed American leaders, they felt it undermined the Open Door Policy (promise of equal access to trade in China)

o  It also threatened the Philippines (which the US controlled)

o  Even though, isolationist feelings remained strong among the American people and kept the US from taking a firm stand against the Japanese

·  Germany Brings War to Europe –

o  1938 – Hitler continued his plan for expansion

o  Violated the Treaty of Versailles, and annexes Austria

§  Again, Britain and France took no action

o  Later, he claimed the western part of Czechoslovakia, stating it contained many German people

o  Sept 1938 – Munich, Germany – leaders of Britain, France, Italy and Germany met at the Munich Conference.

§  Hitler promised that Germany would seek no further territory once it had acquired the western part of Czechoslovakia.

§  To preserve peace, Britain and France agreed – they appeased Germany and Hitler

o  Nazi Germany seized the rest of Czechoslovakia the next year and Britain and France realized that they had to take a firm action against the Nazi aggression

o  1939 – Hitler eyed Poland next.

§  Signed the Nazi-Soviet Pact with Stalin (the two rival dictators agreed not to attack each other)

·  Secretly, they also agreed to divide Poland and other parts of Eastern Europe

o  Sept 1939 – Hitler launched a blitzkrieg against Poland

§  Poland soon surrendered

o  Soviet Union seized eastern Poland

§  Stalin’s forces also invaded Finland and later Estonia, Lithuania, and Latvia.

·  A Second World War –

o  Two days after Hitler’s invasion of Poland, Britain and France declared war on Germany

o  WWII had begun

o  It was truly a global conflict

o  Military forces fought all over the world

o  The Axis Powers

§  Germany

§  Italy

§  Japan

§  6 other nations

o  The Allied Power

§  Britain

§  France

§  The Soviet Union

§  China

§  45 other nations

§  The US

o  1940 – the Fall of France

§  Hitler’s armies marched north and west

·  Denmark

·  Norway

·  Holland

·  Belgium

§  Finally pushing their way to France

§  Hitler’s ally, Italy, also attacked France

§  British sent troops to help France, both were quickly overpowered

§  June 22, 1940 – France surrendered to Germany –

§  The Fall of France shocked the world

o  The Battle of Britain –

§  Britain now stood alone

§  Germany drops bombs on London and other British cities

§  Britain fights back and after months of bombing, Hitler gives up his planned invasion of Britain

·  The US Moves Toward War –

o  After invasion of Poland – FDR announced that the US would remain neutral

o  US aided Allies

§  Roosevelt’s cash-and-carry plan

§  FDR gave Britain 50 old American destroyers in exchange for a 99-year lease of military bases in Newfoundland and the Caribbean

o  US was taking steps to prepare for war

§  Greater spending for the army and navy

§  Set up a military draft

§  FDR runs a third term, breaking the two-term policy set by George Washington