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TECHNOLOGY IN WWI An Arms Auction
44

An Arms Auction. To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

TECHNOLOGY IN WWI

An Arms Auction

Page 2: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Goals

To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

To explore the group’s decisions in depth and compare their findings to actual information about each weapon.

Page 3: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Procedure

1. I will assign you a number between 1-6. Once each student has a number, join your number group. Your group will be assigned a country. You will become the

military consultants for that country.

Triple Alliance: Austria-HungaryGermanyItaly

Triple Entente: BritainFranceRussia

Page 4: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Procedure (continued)

2. Assign each group member a job: Financial controller – keeps track of the money

(you will begin with $35,000) Public representative – presents the bids Weapons accountants – tracks the items

purchased

Page 5: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Procedure (continued)

3. Before round one of the auction you will hear a brief description of each item. As a group discuss the benefits and

drawbacks of each item. Try to develop a purchase strategy. What items will you focus on? Why? How

much are you willing to spend on them?

Page 6: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

ROUND ONEThe sale of single

weapons

Page 7: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

LET THE AUCTION BEGIN!

Page 8: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Airplane

Page 9: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Artillery

Page 10: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Tank

Page 12: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Chlorine Gas

Page 14: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Flame Thrower

Page 15: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Submarine

Page 16: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Machine Gun

Page 17: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Repeating Rifle(Bolt Action Rifle)

Page 18: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

ROUND TWOThe sale of weapon

pairs

Page 19: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Airplane (x 2)

Page 20: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Artillery (x 2)

Page 21: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Tank (x 2)

Page 23: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Chlorine Gas (x 2)

Page 25: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Flame Thrower (x 2)

Page 26: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Submarine (x 2)

Page 27: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Machine Gun (x 2)

Page 28: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Repeating Rifle (x 2) (Bolt Action Rifle)

Page 29: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

ROUND THREEThe sale of weapons in

triplicate

Page 30: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Airplane (x 3)

Page 31: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Artillery (x 3)

Page 32: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Tank (x 3)

Page 34: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Chlorine Gas (x 3)

Page 36: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Flame Thrower (x 3)

Page 37: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Submarine (x 3)

Page 38: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Machine Gun (x 3)

Page 39: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Repeating Rifle (x 3) (Bolt Action Rifle)

Page 40: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

THE AUCTION IS OVER!

Count how many of each weapon you have

Page 41: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Point Values Airplane...………………………………………………….………..75 pts each   Artillery…………………………………………………………….500 pts each   Cavalry………………………………………………………………25 pts each   Chlorine Gas………………………………………………………...50 pts each   Dreadnought………………………………………………………..75 pts each     Flame thrower.……………………………………………………100 pts each   Machine gun.……………….……………………………………1,000 pts each   Repeating rifle…………………….……………………………….250 pts each   Submarine……………………….…………………………………100 pts each   Tank…………………………..……………………………………..200 pts each

Page 42: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Explanation In 1914

airplanes were still very primitive Tanks not invented at start of the war Trenches were vulnerable to artillery (bomb)

attacks Machine guns were useful when solders “went

over the top” and crossed “no mans land” – the area in between trenches Canadian Ross Rifle – failure as it often jammed

in muddy conditions. Machine guns were main reasons for stalemate.

Firing machine guns meant leaving trenches = sudden death

Page 43: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

Key definitions:

Stalemate – when neither side has enough offensive power remaining to achieve a victory

Attrition - attrition warfare is a military strategy in which a side wins the war by wearing down their enemy to the point of collapse through continuous losses of personnel and material. The war will usually be won by the side with greater amount of these materials.

Page 44: An Arms Auction.  To work together to identify and ‘acquire’ weapons that the group thinks would benefit soldiers engaged in trench warfare during WWI.

DELVE DEEPER

Independently, complete the Technology in WWI – The Basics Worksheet