Post on 17-Jan-2016
Unit 6:World War I and its Aftermath
Q1-Compare President Wilson’s moral diplomacy decisions to President Roosevelt’s “Big Stick” diplomacy.
Woodrow Wilson’s Diplomacy Moral Diplomacy and Spreading of Democracy
Mexican Revolution Madero to Huerta to Carranza to chasing Villa Big Stick compared to Moral Diplomacy
International Perspective on Wilson’s Moral Diplomacy Britain Latin-American
• Woodrow Wilson• Mexican Revolution• Porfirio Diaz• Francisco Madero• Huerta• Carranza• John J. Pershing• Pancho Villa
KEY TERMS
1914
Q2-Describe the events that led to the beginning of the “Great War,” explaining how the entangling alliances of Europe caused a minor dispute to become a major war.
Outbreak of World War 1 Alliance System 1870 Franco Prussian War
Naval Race 1898 Germany vs. Britain
Balkan Crisis Nationalism Southeastern Europe=Balkans
Serbs, Bosnians, Croats, and Slovenes South Slavs or Yugoslavs
A Continent Goes to War Gavrilo Princip and “Black Hand”
• Alliance system• Nationalism• Triple Alliance• Triple Entente• Gavrilo Princip• Franz Ferdinand• Schlieffen Plan
KEY TERMS
Q2 Continued….
German Plan Fails Schlieffen Plan Why there Plan fails Trench warfare
SCHLIEFFEN PLAN
Neutrality to War
America Neutrality Pro British Pro German Business Links Moving Toward War
British Blockade Unterseeboot
Sinking Lusitania Zimmerman Telegram Declaring War
Q3-Identify how the US was economically tied to the Allies before WW 1 describing the events that led to America joining the war on the Allied side.
• Unterseeboot• Lusitania• Sussex Pledge• Zimmerman telegram
KEY TERMS
Q4-Describe how the US created new agencies to mobilize the economy, draft soldiers, and build public support for the war.
The Home Front Building Up the Military
Selective Service Act 1917 African Americans in the War Women in the War
Organizing for the War War Industry Board
Bernard Baruch Responsibilities
Food and Fuel Board Herbert Hoover Responsibilities and Slogans
National War Labor Board William Howard Taft and Frank Walsh Responsibilities Minorities join the Effort
Committee on Public Information George Creel Responsibilities Opposition
• Selective Service Act• Field Marshall Henri
Petain• General John J. Pershing• War Industry Board• Food and Fuel Board• National War Labor
Board• Committee on Public
InformationKEY TERMS
Q4… CONTINUED…
Paying for the War Increasing money for
the war Civil Liberties
Curtailed Sedition Act Espionage Act
Climate of Suspicion Anti-German
sentiments Limits on Free
Speech• Schench v. United States
Q5-Analyze John J. Perishing character and explain the first actions Americans experience in the First World War.
Pershing and AEF Pershing’s Beliefs and Personality
Argonne Forest to Vosges Mountains Winning the War at Sea
Convoys Russia Leaves War
Vladimir Lenin Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
German Offensive Falters(Ludendorf) May-Cantingny June 1 Chateau-Thierry June 15 last attempt 2nd Battle of
Marne Battle of Argonne Forest
French Marshal Ferdinand Foch Saint-Mihiel September 26 1918
The War Ends 11th Hour, 11th Day, 11th Month
Armistice signed
Q5-Continued…
Q6-Explain how changes in technology affected the course of the war.
What were the effects of being gassed?
Excerpt from gas victim?
•Combat in World War I• Trench Warfare• No Man’s Land• Machine Guns• Artillery
•New Technology• Poison Gas• Tanks “Little Willy”• Airplanes and
Dogfights
Q7-Analyze President Wilson’s peace plan following World War 1 and reasons it was rejected by Congress.
Flawed Peace Big Four Wilson’s Fourteen Points Treaty of Versailles 1919
Reparations War Guilt