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The Italian Campaign. Background 0 German and Russian Troops 0 German troops faced disaster in Russia. 0 They were unable to handle the freezing Russian.

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Presentation on theme: "The Italian Campaign. Background 0 German and Russian Troops 0 German troops faced disaster in Russia. 0 They were unable to handle the freezing Russian."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Italian Campaign

2 Background 0 German and Russian Troops 0 German troops faced disaster in Russia. 0 They were unable to handle the freezing Russian weather. 0 The German army surrendered in 1943. 0 The Russian forces now turned their attention towards Germany. After failing in Russia, Hitler sent his forces to Italy.

3 Background 0 The American’s recovered quickly after Pearl Harbor. 0 The American aircraft carriers defeated the Japanese navy island by island moving closer to Japan. 0 In 1942, British and American troops drove back the Italian and German forces in North Africa. 0 The British and American troops then moved to Italy where the German troops had moved.

4 The Liberation of Italy 0 The Italian campaign was long and tough. 0 The German’s put up a wall of defenses from Rome to Ortona. 0 The American, British and Canadian forces followed the German’s through Italy. 0 They had to trek through the rugged mountains and were often attacked by German snipers hidden in the mountains. 0 It was a city-by-city takeover. 0 More than 30, 000 soldiers were wounded or killed.

5 The Invasion of Sicily

6 0 Canadian soldiers had not seen any action since the disastrous raid on Dieppe. 0 In July 1943, Canadian’s were sent to Italy to aid in the invasion of Sicily. 0 This battle was fought in the hot Italian summer and lasted 38 days. 0 Mussolini’s dream of a new Roman Empire was shattered and his own people rebelled and through him out of power in 1943. 0 Hitler swiftly moved German troops into Italy; he would not let Italy’s surrender hold him back.

7 The Battle of Ortona

8 0 It was a house-by-house takeover. 0 Canadian’s became experts at street fighting. 0 They developed the mouse-holing technique.

9 The Battle of Ortona 0 1,375 Canadian soldiers lost their lives. 0 On June 4, 1944, the Allied armies entered Rome to the cheers of the Italian people. 0 These soldiers, in February 1945 were transferred to join the Canadian army fighting to free Holland from German control.

10 D-Day: The Beginning of the End

11 Mind’s On – You Make the Plan 0 On the map you have make a plan to attack “Fortress Europe” from England. 0 Follow the Resources list and the questions below to help make your plan.

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13 The Plan 0 This happened on June 6, 1944 0 The goal was to penetrate “Fortress Europe” and push the Germans back 0 The official name was Operation Overlord

14 The Attack 0 This was a combined Allied effort – US, British and Canadian 0 This used air, sea and land forces 0 It began with paratroopers at 2:30 a.m. and forces started invading the beaches at 6:30

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17 What Did Canada Do? 0 We gave paratroopers, soldiers, over 100 naval ships and airplanes 0 We landed at JUNO BEACH 0 We were the only Allied force to meet objective for the day – Take the beach and gain territory

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22 Overall Effort and Impact 0 Over 156 000 Allied troops landed on D-Day 0 Roughly 30 000 were Canadian 0 Within a month 1 million Allied soldiers had landed 0 The Liberation of Europe had begun – This was The Beginning of the End for Nazi Germany

23 Wrap Up – War Art 0 Look at the painting of the D-Day attack. On a Post It note complete the following questions: 0 How does this painting compare to the actual pictures we’ve seen today? 0 Why is art important in telling about a historical event? 0 What was the Big Idea of the day?

24 Liberation of the Netherlands

25 Freeing Belgium and the Netherlands 0 After the success of Normandy, in 1944, Canadian troops helped free Belgium from the Nazis, and then did the same for the Netherlands. 0 The Dutch were starving 0 6300 Canadian soldiers died liberating Belgium and the Netherlands. 0 The Dutch still acknowledge Canadians’ sacrifice every year by sending thousands of tulip bulbs to Ottawa.


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