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1917 the turning point of WWI The Russian Revolution The U.S. entered the war
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Czar Nicholas II - “Autocracy, Orthodoxy and Nationalism” Unlike his predecessors, he was weak, incompetent and suspected of being under the influence of his German-born wife Alexandra, and a half- crazed monk named Grigori Rasputin.
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There were two revolutions in 1917: The February (March-western calendar) The October (November…)
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The November 6 th Revolution… The second revolution was instigated and inspired by a radical socialist party then known as the Bolsheviks. Its leader was Vladimir Lenin.
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World War One: The Battle of Tannenberg, 1914
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In 1915, Czar Nicholas decided to go and direct the war from the front lines Czarina allowed a crazed monk named Rasputin to run the homefront
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Demonstrators gathering in front of the Winter Palace in Petrograd, just prior to the Russian Revolution, January 1917.
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Czar Nicholas abdicated on March 15. A Provisional Government (the provisional government is often referred to as the “Kerensky Government” ) because its primary figure was Alexander Kerensky.. - continued the war- - big mistake that led to its undoing
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Vladimir Ulyanov aka “Lenin” was a folk legend… A founder of the Bolshevik Party which was outlawed in Russia. Lenin had spent 20 years living in exile but writing about a “peoples revolution.”
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Location of Bolshevik Leaders in February, 1917 Bolshevik LeadersLocation LeninSwitzerland RadekSwitzerland ZinovievSwitzerland BukharinNew York LitvinovLondon Antonov-OvseenkoParis DzerzhinskyMoscow LatsisPetrograd MolotovPetrograd KirovVladikavkaz StalinKureika (Siberia) OrdzhonikidzePokrovsk (Siberia) SverdlovTurukhansk (Siberia) KamenevAchinsk (Siberia) RykovNarym (Siberia)
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Lenin was secretly aided by the German govt to return to Russia
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Upon returning to Russia, Lenin promised “Peace, Bread and Land” …and “All Power to the Soviets.”
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The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, March 1918 Lenin accepted Germany’s harsh conditions in order to focus on securing power…the real revolution was yet to come. Russia lost 1/3 of its population, 3/4 of its iron resources and 9/10 of its coal supply plus a huge indemnity to Germany. News of the treaty contributed to a civil war which lasted until 1921.
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American Entrance into the war Woodrow Wilson’s Proclamation of Neutrality
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Significance of American entrance into the war: Turned the tide of battle in favor of the Allies Broke sharply with America’s traditional avoidance of foreign entanglements – the policy of isolation – George Washington America’s emergence as a world power and eventually a world leader
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What changed for Americans? German unrestricted submarine warfare: attacked ships of neutral nations without warning and without attempting to save the crew and passengers May 7, 1915: The Lusitania – 128 Americans died
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Allied propaganda: Americans felt a kinship with the British and friendship with France since the American Revolution
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American economic interests American agricultural and manufactured goods were sold almost exclusively to the Allies. American investors extended substantial loans to the Allies
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American idealism “a war to end all wars” “the world must be made safe for democracy” The March Revolution in Russia brought a democratic govt to Russia
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April 6, 1917 America goes to war… The formal end to neutrality came when Congress passed a formal declaration of war Wilson offered a peace plan: The Fourteen Points It took about a year for the U.S. to recruit, train, supply and transport a modern army to Europe
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Hostility towards Germany Autocratic Kaiser William Invasion of neutral Belgium The Lusitania Cont’d submarine warfare The Zimmerman telegram
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