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America and WWI Part C
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America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

Dec 23, 2015

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Page 1: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

America and WWIPart C

Page 2: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

1. When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do?• Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part

2. But how was American pubic opinion a complicated thing at the beginning of the war?• Some Americans had ethnic/ancestral connections to Germany, a Central

Powers nation• Many Americans had ethnic/ancestral connections to Great Britain, an

Allied nation• Yet some Irish-Americans saw WWI as an opportunity for Ireland to gain

independence from Great Britain• On the American political left, Socialists saw WWI as a war between

capitalist nations, namely Great Britain versus Germany

Page 3: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

3. But while most Americans seemingly wanted to stay out the war in a formal sense, the balance of American sympathy tended to be towards whom?• The Allied Powers, namely Great Britain and France

4. While the United States remained neutral, what did the U.S. do that helped the Allied side disproportionately?• American businesses sold all sorts of war supplies to Great

Britain and France, namely dynamite, cannon powder, submarines, copper wire and pipes, armored cars, etc.

Page 4: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

5. In terms of warfare, prior to WWI what had the United States never done?• The U.S. had never fought in a land war in Europe

6. Early in the war, what did Great Britain impose on Germany?• A naval blockade on Germany• Germany had a very difficult time importing

foodstuffs and fertilizers for crops

Page 5: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

7. Over time, what effect did the British blockade of Germany have on the German people?• Thousands starved, over the long haul

8. Initially, how did many Americans view the British blockade of Germany?• They viewed it negatively

Page 6: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

9. Regarding naval actions, what caused American public opinion to shift more in the direction of sympathizing with Great Britain?• German submarines (U-Boats) and their

attacks on Allied shipping on the high seas

Page 7: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

German U-Boat sinking a British Merchant Ship

Page 8: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

10. How did Germany respond to the British blockade of German ports?• Germany responded with a blockade of Britain,

namely with U-Boats

11. How did U-Boats sink ships?• Often by firing a torpedo (a propeller driven

bomb) through the water into the hull of a ship (below the waterline)

Page 9: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

12. What made German U-Boats particularly effective in WWI?• The U-Boat could submerge below the surface of the water

and wait upon a British (or other Allied vessel) ship to cross its path

• The U-Boat could watch the ship through a periscope (basically a telescope) and fire a torpedo through the water at the appropriate moment

• Some WWI U-Boats would surface near the ship, ( allow the crew to abandon ship in some cases), and then sink the ship with either a torpedo or cannon fire from the deck of the U-Boat

Page 10: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

13. What happened on May 7, 1915 that increasingly moved American public opinion towards the Allied side?• Near the coast of Ireland, a German U-Boat sank the

British ocean liner, Lusitania, killing 1,198 people, of which 128 were Americans

• The Germans claimed that the Lusitania was carrying ammunition as cargo, in addition to passengers

• But in general, American public opinion turned against Germany

Page 11: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

The Sinking of the LusitaniaMay 7, 1915

Page 12: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

14. In 1916, in response to American protests, Germany agreed to suspend what?• Unrestricted submarine warfare around the

British Isles against Allied shipping• Basically, under “unrestricted submarine

warfare” Germany claimed a right to attack any ship from an Allied country (e.g. Great Britain or France) that was a warship or a merchant ship carrying war material

Page 13: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

15. In 1916, while seeking re-election, what slogan did President Woodrow Wilson (Democrat) use during his campaign?• “He Kept Us Out of War”

16. Who was Woodrow Wilson’s Republican opponent in 1916?• Charles Evans Hughes

Page 14: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

17. What were the results of the 1916 Presidential election?• Woodrow Wilson was re-elected by a close

margin

18. What did Germany’s Kaiser Wilheim announce on January 31, 1917?• That German U-Boats would sink all ships in

British waters—hostile or neutral—on sight

Page 15: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

Unrestricted Submarine Warfare, 1917Darkened Areas show the operating zones for U-Boats

Page 16: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

19. How did President Wilson initially respond to Germany’s announcement of the resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare?• He knew that war with Germany was

imminent, but he waited for “actual overt acts” to trigger an American response

Page 17: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

20. What was the Zimmermann Telegram?• It was a message from the German foreign

minister to the German ambassador in Mexico in which Germany discussed the possibility of a German-Mexican alliance against the United States, an alliance which might restore to Mexico certain lands lost to the United States in the 1800s, such as “Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona.”

Page 18: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

21. How did the United States learn of the Zimmermann Telegram?• It was intercepted by British agents

22. What happened next that moved the United States towards war?• Germany sank four unarmed American

merchant ships, killing 36.

Page 19: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

23. What happened in March 1917 in Russia?• Czar Nicholas II abdicated the Russian imperial

throne• 300 years of rule by the Romanov family had

come to an end• In November 1917, the Bolsheviks, a Marxist

revolutionary group led by Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, seized power in Russia…and shook the world

Page 20: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

Nicholas II, the Last Czar of RussiaAbdication: March 1917

Page 21: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

24. In early April 1917, President Woodrow Wilson asked Congress to do what?• Declare war on Germany• A few days later, Congress declared war on

Germany, and in doing so, the United States had entered WWI on the Allied side

Page 22: America and WWI Part C. 1.When WWI began in August 1914, what did most Americans want to do? Stay out of the war and be neutral…for the most part 2. But.

Woodrow Wilson’s War AddressApril 2, 1917