26
World War II

26 world war ii

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: 26 world war ii

World War II

Page 2: 26 world war ii

Europe in the 1930’s

• Adolph Hitler– Rise because of

WWI– Criticized rather

than submitted a plan for progress

– Forced his way into the chancellorship

Page 3: 26 world war ii

Europe in the 1930’s

• Austria– Hitler threatened invasion– Merged with Germany

• Czechoslovakia– German-speaking area turned over– Meeting in Munich

• Peace declared

– Non-aggression pact with Stalin

Page 4: 26 world war ii
Page 5: 26 world war ii

Germany’s Attack in Europe

• Polish invasion– Sept. 1, 1339– Blitzkrieg– Warsaw Ghetto

Page 6: 26 world war ii

"The Nazi occupation of Poland was horrific. Twenty percent of the Polish people died in forced labor, of hunger, or from fighting. Resistance was impossible. Even the feeblest opposition brought devastating, over-whelming reprisals. Drs. Lazowski and Matulewicz decided to resist anyway, and their solution was brilliant. They knew that the Germans were terrified of a typhus outbreak. So they injected dead typhus bacteria into various patients, then sent blood samples to the German authorities. The blood tested positive for typhus. The Germans conducted more tests, and most were also positive. The occupation authorities quarantined the area. The people were not deported for slave labor and German troops stayed away. Drs. Lazowski and Matulewics spared their neighbors the worst of World War II, because even impossible problems have solutions."– Thorpe, Scott, How to Think Like Einstein, Barnes & Noble

Books, Inc., 2000, p. 127.

Page 7: 26 world war ii

Germany’s Attack in Europe

• Denmark, Holland• Norway (Quisling)• Belgium and France

– Dunkirk

• Britain– Winston Churchill

Page 8: 26 world war ii

Dunkirk

Page 9: 26 world war ii

“...We shall not flag or fail. We shall go on to the end...We shall fight in the seas and oceans...We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing-grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender...”

— Winston Churchill

Page 10: 26 world war ii

“We have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat.”

— Winston Churchill

Page 11: 26 world war ii

“Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties, and so bear ourselves that, if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will say, ‘This was their finest hour.’”

— Winston Churchill

Page 12: 26 world war ii

“Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.”

— Winston Churchill

Page 13: 26 world war ii

Germany’s Attack in Europe

• Balkans• Russia• US isolation

Page 14: 26 world war ii

Maximum Axis Control (Sept 1942)

Page 15: 26 world war ii

Allied Counterattacks in Europe

• Soviet• North Africa• Italy • Normandy• Battle of the

Bulge

Page 16: 26 world war ii
Page 17: 26 world war ii

Allied Counterattacks in Europe

• Surrender– Stalin, Churchill,

Roosevelt

• The Marshall Plan

Page 18: 26 world war ii

"Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing happened."

– Churchill, Winston, quoted in Thorpe, Scott, How to Think Like Einstein, Barnes & Noble Books, Inc., 2000, p.119.

Page 19: 26 world war ii

Japan’s Invasion

• China– Blockade

• Pearl Harbor• Southeast Asia

Page 20: 26 world war ii

Allied Counterattacks in the Pacific

• Midway• Southeast Asia• Island hopping• Japanese main

islands

Page 21: 26 world war ii

Pacific War

Page 22: 26 world war ii
Page 23: 26 world war ii

Creativity

• How was creativity affected by the war?

• What was the center of creativity?

Page 24: 26 world war ii

"I am tired and sick of war. Its glory is all moonshine...

War is hell."

– William Tecumseh Sherman (quoted in John Keegan, A History of Warfare, 1993, 6)

Page 25: 26 world war ii

“If a man does his best, what else is there?”

-General George S. Patton(1885-1945)

Page 26: 26 world war ii

Thank You