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Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

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Page 1: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

Bell Ringer

• Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

Page 2: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

World War I and Its AftermathChapter 12

Page 3: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The United States Enters the War

• Wilson believed in honesty and unselfishness, he opposed imperialism

• He believed the US should promote democracy to ensure a peaceful world, free of revolution and war

• During Wilson’s presidency, a revolutionary war was occurring in Mexico

• Porfirio Diaz is overthrown after the people of Mexico decide they are tired of the few own most of the wealth

• Francisco Madero takes Diaz place, but proved to be an inefficient leader, so he was murdered and Victorian Huerta took power

• Huerta was angry with Wilson who refused to recognize the new government; Wilson even authorized arming the other political factions

Page 4: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The United States Enters the War

• American sailors visited the city of Tampico were arrested• Although the were released quickly the American

General demanded an apology which was refused• Wilson used this as an opportunity to overthrow

Huerta which led to anti-American riots• Venustiano Carranza became president of Mexico,

which led to Pancho Villa to lead guerrillas into the US to force Wilson to intervene

• Wilson sent John J. Pershing to protect the US border with 6,000 troops, he was not successful in capturing them

• The US withdrew troops from the area due to the war in Europe in 1917

Page 5: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The United States Enters the War

• Despite nearly 40 years of peace there were a number of problems leading up the World War I

• The Alliance System• While the US was in the Civil War Prussia was

uniting to become the German Empire• Germany attacked France and forced them to

give up part of their boarder, making them enemies

• Germany allied with Italy and Austria-Hungry creating the Triple Alliance

• Russians feared expansion into their territory, so the allied with France creating the Franco-Russian Alliance

Page 6: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The United States Enters the War

• The Naval Race• Great Britain had remained neutral until

Germany began building up their navy• Tensions between Great Britain and

Germany begin to build when the arms race began

• Great Britain would not sign a formal alliance but instead entered into the “entente cordiale”—friendly understanding

• Britain, France and Russia became known as the Triple Entente

Page 7: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The United States Enters the War

• The Balkan Crisis• Nationalism had become an intense part of

Europe’s beliefs• Many groups believed in self-determination—the

idea that people who belong to a nation should have their own country and government

• These groups (Serbs, Bosnians, Croats, and Slovenes) from the Balkans all wanted independence

• Serbs form Serbia between the Ottoman Empire and Austria-Hungary and want to unite the South Slavs

• Russia supported the Serbs, Austria-Hungary annexed Bosnia, which the Serbs wanted, causing clash between Russia and Austria-Hungary

Page 8: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The United States Enters the War

• A Continent Goes to War• In June 1914 the Archduke Franz Ferdinand visited the

Bosnian capital of Sarajevo where he and his wife were assassinated

• The assassination was from Serbian officials who wanted to bring down the Austro-Hungarian Empire

• The A-Hs knew that an attack on Serbia might trigger a war with Russia so they asked for support from Germany

• July 28th A-H declares war on Serbia, Russia mobilizes (including the German border) and asks France for help, August 1st, Germany declared war on Russia, and on the 3rd France

• World War I had begun

Page 9: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The United States Enters the War

• The German’s plan was to attack France, knock them out of the war then head east to attack Russia• The problem is they had to go through Belgium, a British

protectorate, to get to France• When Germany goes through Belgium, Great Britain declares

war on Germany• France, Russia and Great Britain are going to be called the

Allies (Italy would join in 1915); Germany, Austria-Hungary, and now the Ottoman Empire, and Bulgaria form the Central Powers

• Germany’s plan was working to drive France back, but they didn’t expect Russia to attack, when that happened they had to rally to attack them in the east

• The Battle of Marne will stop German advancement in France• The area is going to be locked in a bloody stalemate for the

next three years

Page 10: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The United States Enters the War

• Wilson declared that “we must be neutral in thought as well as in action” which would prove difficult

• Most Americans supported the Allied forces, but due to the large amount of immigrants in the US you see groups that support the Central Powers

• Pro-British Sentiment is going to be furthered due to propaganda• Both sides used propaganda, but the British

aimed theirs more towards Americans while Germany’s was anti-Russia

Page 11: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The United States Enters the War

• Many businesses were pro-Britain• Many American banks had loans tied to the allies,

leading to a necessity for the Allies to win in order to get the money back

• Issues heat up between the US and Germany when the Lusitania, a British passenger liner carrying Americans was sunk• Wilson said we were “too proud to fight” but sent

diplomatic messages to Germany• In March 1916 Germany attacked the Sussex which harmed

Americans forcing Germany into the Sussex Pledge-promising to not sink merchant ships in exchange for the US staying out of the war

• This helped Wilson win the election at home with the slogan “he kept us out of the war”

Page 12: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The United States Enters the War

• Germany made a fateful mistake of having Arthur Zimmerman propose that Mexico ally with Germany and in return Mexico would get TX, NM and AZ back

• British intelligence intercepted the Zimmermann telegram, the news made America realize war was immanent

• Between Feb 3rd and Mar 21st Germany had sunk six American merchant ships

• Between these two events, Congress declared war on April 6, 1917

Page 13: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The Home Front

• Progressives controlled the federal government when the US entered the war

• They did not abandon their idea, but rather they applied them to fighting the war

• When the war started, the Army and National Guard had just a little more than 30,000 people• Since Progressives were against conscription—

forced military service—they came up with a less harsh system called selective service

• Selective Service is men age 21-30 who register for the draft, but rather than everyone having to go, there is a lottery to determine who is selected

• 2.8 million were drafted, 2 million volunteered

Page 14: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The Home Front

• African Americans are going to serve in the war• 400,000 were drafted; 42,000 fought

overseas as combat troops

• For the first official time, women also served in a war—many filled positions as clerics; the only ones to serve over seas were the Army Nursing Corps

Page 15: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The Home Front

• The War Industries Board was established to coordinate the production of war materials• Led by Bernard Bunch the WIB controlled the flow of raw

materials, ordered the construction of new factories and occasionally set prices

• The Food Administration, run by Hoover, encourage reducing consumption while increasing production• They were asked to “Hooverize” by serving just enough and

having “wheatless Mondays”, “meatless Tuesdays” and “porkelss Thursdays”

• He asked them to plant victory gardens-raising veggies for themselves and save farmer’s produce for soldiers

• To conserve energy, Daylight savings time was created

Page 16: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The Home Front

• By the end of the war the US was spending 33 million per day—total of $42B

• To raise money, Congress passed new taxes• Those taxes were not enough so the

government sold Liberty Bonds and Victory Bonds

Page 17: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The Home Front

• The National War Labor Board• Lead by William Howard Taft and Frank

Walsh; it attempted to mediate labor disputes that might otherwise lead to strikes

• Women will take the jobs that men left to go to war, but when the war is over they will stop working to let the men have their jobs back

Page 18: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The Home Front

• With fewer immigrants in the states and men being shipped off, African Americans will find more opportunities• The Great Migration occurred when

southern African Americans migrated to the north to take factory work

• Mexicans will also migrate into the southwest to take jobs that were left by draftees

Page 19: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The Home Front

• The Committee on Public Information had the job of “selling” the war to the public, trying to get support for the war

• The Espionage Act established penalties and prison terms for anyone who aided the enemy

• The Sedition Act made it illegal to publicly express opposition to the war

• German sounding words were dropped, changing sauerkraut to “liberty cabbage” and hamburger to “Salisbury steak”

• Schools dropped German from their curricula and orchestra’s stopped playing music by German composers like Beethoven and Schubert

• In Schenck v. United States the Supreme Court ruled that free speech could be limited when the words uttered constitute “clear and present danger” such as saying “fire” in a crowded theater• This was expanded to the war efforts saying that things said in

time of war could cause danger to the soldiers

Page 20: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

Assignment

• Should the government be allowed to restrict your freedom of speech in times of war to keep the country safe? • In your response:

• Compare freedom of speech limitations to the limitations you experience at the airport (removing shoes, x-ray searches, etc.).

• Discuss the Espionage and Sedition Acts passed during WWI

• Discuss Schenck v. United States (p. 380)• Your response should be 300-400 words long (put

the word count at the bottom of the page).• Your response should be scholarly with cited

information.• Due Thursday.

Page 21: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

Bell Ringer

• Who should be responsible for keeping the world safe from dictators and other “bad guys”?

Page 22: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

A Bloody Conflict

• Warfare was different in this war compared to past wars—soldiers would hide in trenches until the artillery barrages were complete, then they would rush the other side, with bayonets• Typically the other side would use

machine guns to hold off attacks• It was not uncommon for both sides of the

attacks to lose several hundred thousand men

Page 23: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

A Bloody Conflict

• It became apparent that technology was what would help win the war• Germans introduced poison gas• British introduced tanks• Planes are also going to be used, mostly to

observe enemy activity; eventually they started using them to drop bombs too

• The “doughboys”, a nickname for American soldiers, were inexperienced by fresh which improved morale significantly among Allied forces

Page 24: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

A Bloody Conflict

• American Admiral William Sims ensured the safety of merchant ships and soldiers by creating the convoy system, where merchant ships were surrounded by warships

• Russia had political crisis at home with food and fuel shortages, which leads to Vladimir Lenin, leader of the Bolsheviks (Communists), becoming head of Russia• His first act was to withdraw Russia from the war

by signing the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany—the treaty gave the Ukraine, Polish and Baltic territory to Germany, and withdrew German troops from the remaining Russian territory

Page 25: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

A Bloody Conflict

• American troops forced a stall of German advancement into France• Gen. Pershing lead the most massive attack in US

history leading to the fall of many German positions

• A-H and Ottoman Turks become engulfed in a revolution, forcing them to drop from the war which leads the citizens of Germany to demand the Emperor step down

• On the 11th hour of 11th day of the 11th month Germany signed an armistice ending the war

Page 26: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

A Bloody Conflict

• In January,1919 a peace conference met in Paris• Wilson (US), David Lloyd George (Br.) Georges Clemenceau

(Fr.) and Vittorio Orlando (It.) were called the “Big Four”• Germany was not invited

• Wilson had presented his “Fourteen Points” to Congress the year before which included five points free trade, disarmament, freedom of the seas, impartial adjustment of colonial claims, and open diplomacy instead of secret agreements

• The next eight addressed self-determination, including Central Powers evacuating all areas invaded during the war

• The Fourteenth Point was the establishment of the League of Nations to prevent war by pledging to respect peace and protect each other’s territory and political independence

Page 27: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

A Bloody Conflict

• The Allied forces criticized Wilson’s ideas as being too lenient toward Germany

• At the Treaty of Versailles Germany was stripped of their armed forces and forced to pay reparations ($33 B) to Allied forces; Germany also had to accept responsibility for WWI

• The war resulted in the dissolution of four empires: Russian, Ottoman, German, Austro-Hungarian

• Three new countries were created: Yugoslavia, Poland, and Czechoslovakia

Page 28: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

A Bloody Conflict

• Wilson found some hope when others agreed to a League of Nations and the Treaty, but he had to get support at home for the US to join

• It met opposition at home immediately, Senators said it was the type of “entangling alliance” the Founding Fathers had warned about

• Other Senators said they would agree if there was a clause keeping the US free to make their own decisions regarding war, Wilson feared this would change the purpose of the League

• Wilson took his case to the people, but had a stroke and was bedridden for months, the Senate would oppose the League and Treaty twice before Wilson left office

• After he left, Congress negotiated a new treaty with the Central Powers and the League of Nations would form without the United States

Page 29: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The War’s Impact

• Make sure you read this section! I am only giving you a few pieces of information for the section

• The Boston Police Strike—Calvin Coolidge, Gov. MA, had to send in National Guard when police went on strike• After the strike was over, the police who went on

strike were fired which Coolidge supported since it was against public safety (Coolidge would be asked to run for VP after this event)

Page 30: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The War’s Impact

• Red Scare evolves after the war• Red Scare was the fear the Communists would try

to gain power in the country and turn it into another Russia

• Packages with bombs were sent to business leaders and politicians homes including one sent to A. Mitchell Palmer, US Attorney Gen.

• The General Intelligence Division (later became the FBI) was lead by J. Edgar Hoover

• Palmer organizes raids to search radicals property which lead to thousands detained and some deported

Page 31: Bell Ringer Under what circumstances do you believe it would be appropriate for the U.S. to go to war?

The War’s Impact

• Progressivism ends in the 1920 election• James M. Cox (OH. Gov.) runs with

Assistant Sec. of the Navy, FDR on the platform of keeping Wilson’s ideas going

• Warren G. Harding ran on the platform “return to normalcy” or the simpler days before progressivism

• Harding won by a landslide