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Published byNathan O’Connor’ Modified over 8 years ago
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The Holocaust
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Persecution Begins Nuremberg Laws- 1935 –Stripped of property, jobs, citizenship –Forced to wear Star of David
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Persecution Begins Kristallnacht- 1938 –Attack Jewish homes, synagogues, businesses
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Persecution Begins Refugees –France, Britain, and U.S. take limited number –The St. Louis Denied entry into Us
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Hitler’s Final Solution SS rounded up groups & shot on sight Forced relocation to ghettos Concentration camps
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The Final Stage Mass Extermination –Death camps could kill 12,000 per day –Usually gassed and cremated
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Prisoners at forced labor under SS guard in an armaments factory. Dachau concentration camp, Germany, 1943.
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Victim of Nazi medical experiment immersed in freezing water at Dachau concentration camp. SS doctor Sigmund Rascher oversees the experiment. Germany, 1942.
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Suitcases that belonged to people deported to the Auschwitz camp. This photograph was taken after Soviet forces liberated the camp. Auschwitz, Poland, after January 1945.
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Corpses found when U.S. troops liberated the Gusen camp, a subcamp of the Mauthausen concentration camp. Austria, after May 12, 1945.
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African American soldiers escort German civilians through a site where camp prisoners were massacred during a death march from Buchenwald. Such tours forced Germans to recognize the crimes committed by the SS. Near Nammering, Germany, 1945
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America Moves Toward War Section 24*4
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U.S. Musters Its Forces FDR created “Cash & Carry” policy 1939 Selective Service & Training Act FDR wins 3 rd term in 1940
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“Arsenal of Democracy” Lend-Lease Act- March 1941 –Lend supplies to nations whose defense is vital to the U.S. Hitler invaded USSR- June 1941 –U.S. sends supplies and aid
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FDR Plans for War Atlantic Charter –FDR and Churchill –Agree on Collective Security Disarmament Self-Determination –Basis for United Nations
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Japan Attacks the U.S. U.S. oil embargo hurts Japanese ambitions in Pacific Dec. 6, 1941- Japan rejects U.S. peace offer
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Japan Attacks the U.S. Pearl Harbor –Dec. 7, 1941 –More devastation than WWI –Push U.S. needed to declare war
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