Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and...

18
The End of WWI

Transcript of Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and...

Page 1: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

The End of WWI

Page 2: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops

General John J. Pershing was against scattering the soldiers and also demanded giving the volunteers training before fighting

He was allowed to give 3 months of intense training

American Expeditionary Force (1)

Page 3: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

November 1917 the Bolsheviks overthrew the Russian government led by Vladimir Lenin

Communist- equal distribution of wealth and the end of all forms of private property (2)

Russia was falling apart both militarily and economically (3)◦ 8 million Russians had died or were

ruined during the war◦ Soldiers were deserting◦ Food riots raged because of lack of

food (which was saved for the soldiers)

Russia leaves the War

Page 4: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Treaty of Brest-Litovsk was between Russia and the Central Power

A Civil War broke out between the Communists and the czar (monarchy) supporters

The Allies sent aid to support the czar supporters, but Russia was out of the war.

Russian Leaving

Page 5: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Because of Russia’s removal, Germany was able to send all their troops from the eastern front to the western front in an attempt to smash the Western front

While Germany was pushing forward, the US forces finally joined the fight

March 21, 1918- Germany began to attack blasting 6,000 heavy guns at Allied troops along the Somme River

The End Begins (4)

Page 6: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Germany drove 40 miles into the Allied lines

They attacked the Marne River and were able to push forward to Paris

However, the Americans joined the French, and added energy and vigor, which the Germans weren’t expecting

Germans were stopped 50 miles from Paris, and the Allies were able to slowly drive them back

The End continued (5)

Page 7: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Convoy system- Protected shipping, the merchant ships began to travel in groups with destroyers protecting them (6)

July 1918 the Germans made a last ditch attempt to get to Paris across the Marne River, but were pushed back

September 1918- the Allies won battles at Saint Mihiel on the border of France and Germany and also along the Meurse River and in the Argonne Forest near the Belgium border

Turning Point of the War

Page 8: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

November 1918- Allies were making rapid advances to Germany

Examples of US bravery◦ Alvin York- October 1918- killed

25 and captured 132 prisoners (5)

◦ Harlem Hellfighters- African American soldiers of the 269th Infantry saw the most combat time of the American soldiers and were the first the reach the Rhine River/German Border

◦ Because of this the were awarded the Cross of War by the French

Turning Point Continued

Page 9: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Germany tired of war Food was scarce (800 civilians died

each day from starvation) Food strikes and riots occurred Running out of soldiers (killed,

wounded, and captured) Bulgaria and Ottoman Empire

surrendered in the Fall of 1918 Austria-Hungary signed peace

agreement on November 3 Kaiser Wilhelm II (Leader of

Germany) gave up his throne and fled to the Netherlands

The fighting officially ended the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918

Armistice (7 & 8)

Page 10: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Massive Casualties ◦ Entire generation of young

men are dead◦ Total: 8.5 million, 5 million

Allied, 3.5 million Central Powers

◦ France- 90% of their young men served in WWI, and 7 out of 10 were killed or wounded

◦ US- 116,000 dead and 200,000 wounded

Costs of War (9)

Page 11: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Financial Disaster to much of Europe◦ Factories and Farmland is in ruins◦ $30 billion worth of property was destroyed◦ Allies spent $145 billion on the war◦ Central Powers spent $63 billion on the war◦ EVERYONE is in debt

Costs of War continued (9)

Page 12: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

1918 worldwide epidemic Was around for 2 years Killed approx. 30 million people- more than the

War itself Started in a Kansas Army Training camp, and

spread rapidly Went from soldiers to civilians and eventually

to Europe Killed many who were young and strong (that

were left from the war) Quarantines were attempted to stop the

spread- no public gatherings (including school classes)- were instituted in many places

Influenza Epidemic (10)

Page 13: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Wilson’s Fourteen Points (11)◦ Specific proposals for postwar peace

Points would settle national border disputes, military cutbacks, lower tariffs, banned secret agreements, and allowed for self-determination (settlement for colonial people who wished to be independent- i.e. no longer a colony, and chose their own political status)

Last (and biggest) Idea was the League of Nations- which was an international assembly of nations whose focus was to settle international disputes and encourage democracy (12)

Only point agreed to in the peace treaty was the League of Nations

Ideas for Peace

Page 14: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Only France, UK, Italy, and the US were allowed to attend- no one from Russia or the Central Powers (13)

Allied leaders defended their own interests and wanted to severely punish Germany

War Guilt Clause- demanded that Germany take entire blame for WWI (14)

Demanded reparations (money to the winners) Took large parts of Germany’s territory- both colonies

and parts of actual Germany Limited Germany’s military

Paris Peace Conference

Page 15: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Signed by France, Britain, and Italy League of Nations was established Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania,

Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia became their own countries

Central Powers turned their colonies over to League of Nations who assigned them to the other European Countries

Wilson reluctantly agreed to it hoping that while the other points were rejected, that the League of nations would solve the remaining problems

Treat of Versailles (14)

Page 16: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Do you think that there would be any future problems that come because of the Treaty of Versailles?

PROBLEMS?????

Page 17: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Constitutionally, the US Senate still had to ratify the Versailles Treaty before it was official for the US

Wilson could not get 2/3rds of the Senate to agree to ratify

Republicans dissatisfied with the fact that Germany agreed to it ◦ “No peace that satisfies Germany

in any degree can ever satisfy us”

Demanded changes to the Treaty (mainly to League of Nations ability to use military force) before ratification

US Response (15)

Page 18: Argument over whether the US troops should be its own army or scattered amongst the French and British troops  General John J. Pershing was against.

Wilson refused to compromise and tried to pressure the Republicans

Wilson demanded that the Democrats not agree to the changes

Neither party would compromise, and the Treaty of Versailles was defeated

US made separate peace treaties with each of the Central Powers and never joined the League of Nations

(15)