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THE GREAT WAR & AMERICA THE WORLD WAR I ERA A22 w 9.2.13.

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Presentation on theme: "THE GREAT WAR & AMERICA THE WORLD WAR I ERA A22 w 9.2.13."— Presentation transcript:

1 THE GREAT WAR & AMERICA THE WORLD WAR I ERA A22 w 9.2.13

2 A.THE ROAD TO WAR WAR IN EUROPE AND PROBLEMS OF NEUTRALITY

3 GUIDING QUESTION Why did the United States enter the First World War? Assess the relative influence of the following:  German naval policy,  American economic interests,  Woodrow Wilson’s idealism,  allied propaganda,  America’s claim to world power

4 European Alliances & Battlefronts, 1914-1917

5 THE ROAD TO WAR  neutrality  submarine warfare  Lusitania (May 1915)  Sussex Pledge (March 1916) The Lusitania in New York City (Library of Congress) Lusitania warning (Cobb Heritage Centre, England; photo by Larry O. Nighswander/NGS)

6 THE ROAD TO WAR  Economic ties with Britain & France (trade, loans) - arsenal of the Allies  Public opinion Ethnic influences British propaganda  “preparedness” & pacifists Popular 1915 song reflecting antiwar sentiment

7 THE ROAD TO WAR  Unrestricted submarine warfare  Zimmerman telegram  Russian Revolution (1917)  “The world must be made safe for democracy” (April 2, 1917) German Foreign Minister Alfred Zimmermann U.S. Losses to the German Submarine Campaign, 1916-1918 Wilson announcing the breaking off diplomatic relations with Germany, Feb. 3, 1917

8 B.THE US AT WAR THE FIRST WORLD WAR AT HOME AND ABROAD

9 GUIDING QUESTION To what extent did the First World War bring about lasting change in American society? Consider:  the experiences of blacks,  women,  civil liberties.

10 FIGHTING THE WAR  Selective Service Act (1917)  convoy system  American Expeditionary Force (AEF) John J. Pershing Troops leaving for camp, 1917

11 U.S Role on the Western Front, 1918

12 Economy: FINANCING THE WAR  “Liberty Bonds”

13 Economy: Production  “war boards” War Industries Board  Barnard Baruch Railroad Administration Food Administration – Herbert Hoover National War Labor Board - W.H. Taft & Frank P. Walsh (Ohio Historical Society)

14 Economy & Society: Women  Men’s occupations  19 th Amendment  Lasting Consequences? Midval Steel and Ordnance Co., Nicetown, PA Midval Steel and Ordnance Co., Nicetown, PA Puget Sound Navy Yard, 1919

15 Economy & Society: African-Americans  “Great Migration” – impact? African American family just arrived in Chicago, 1912 (Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, New York Public Library) African American Migration Northward, 1910-1920

16 Results of New Organization of Economy  Unemployment virtually disappeared  Expansion of “big government”  Excessive government regulations in economy  Some gross mismanagement – overlapping jurisdictions  Close cooperation between public and private sectors  Unprecedented opportunities for women & minorities

17 PUBLIC OPINION & CIVIL LIBERTIES  peace movement  Committee on Public Information George Creel Committee for Public Information Poster, 1917

18 PUBLIC OPINION & CIVIL LIBERTIES  Espionage Act of 1917  Sedition Act 1918  Eugene V. Debs  Big Bill Haywood/IWW  Schenk v. U.S. (1919) “clear and present danger”  American Protective League  “one hundred percent Americanism”  German-American community  “Liberty cabbage” IWW Members under arrest

19 C. TREATY OF VERSAILLES WILSON'S FOURTEEN POINTS AND THE RATIFICATION FIGHT

20 GUIDING QUESTIONS  Why did the United States reject the Treaty of Versailles ending the First World War, after President Wilson helped to negotiate the Treaty?  To what extent then did the U.S. achieve the objectives that led it to enter World War I?

21 TREATY OF VERSAILLES 1. Wilson’s Vision  Wilsonianism  Fourteen Points WILSON’S FOURTEEN POINTS

22 TREATY OF VERSAILLES 2.Paris 1919: Six Months that Changed the World  Bolshevik  The Big Four David Lloyd George Georges Clemenceau Vittorio Orlando  Reparations  League of Nations  “Trusteeship”  internationalism  Treaty of Versailles Orlando, Lord George, Clemenceau, and Wilson in Wilson’s study in Paris

23 TREATY OF VERSAILLES 3.Rejection  “irreconciliables”  “reservationists”  Henry Cabot Lodge Henry Cabot Lodge, 1909 Wilson after his stroke, October 1919 (Library of Congress)

24 D.SOCIETY & ECONOMY IN THE POSTWAR YEARS

25 SOCIETY & ECONOMY IN THE POSTWAR YEARS Racial Issues  Red summer of 1919  East St. Louis Riots  Marcus Garvey

26 SOCIETY & ECONOMY IN THE POSTWAR YEARS Post-war Labor Unrest  Coal Miners Strike of 1919  Steel Strike of 1919  Boston Police Strike of 1919 Labor Union Membership 1900-1920 “If capital and labor don’t pull together” Chicago Tribune, 1919

27 SOCIETY & ECONOMY IN THE POSTWAR YEARS Red Scare  Communist International 3 rd International Goal (1919): promote worldwide communism  Red Scare  Palmer Raids (1920) A. Mitchell Palmer’s Home bombed, 1920 Police arrest “suspected Reds” in Chicago, 1920

28 SOCIETY & ECONOMY IN THE POSTWAR YEARS “Return to Normalcy”  Warren G. Harding  “Return to Normalcy”  New Revivalism  “fundamentalis”  Billy Sunday  “tabernacles”


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