Top Banner
Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell
16

Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Dec 27, 2015

Download

Documents

Griselda Pierce
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D

Blitzkrieg and the Battles

Ms. Pannell

Page 2: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Topic 4 Blitzkrieg: Blitzkrieg –

Lightening War

Relentless Nazi air and ground attack using Stuka dive-bombers, tanks and mobilized infantry

Was quick and took the enemy by surprise

Page 3: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Sept 1939, Spring 1940

Sept 1939 - crushed: Poland > 1 month

The Phoney War (Winter 1940) when no fighting took place

Spring 1940 - Crushed: Denmark - 1 day Norway - 2 days The Netherlands – 5 days Belgium – 18 days France – 6 weeks

Page 4: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Spring 1940 - DunkirkFall of France

British and French troops pushed back to the English Chanel by advancing German soldiers – town of Dunkirk

Britain could not afford to have any naval ships sunk during an attempted rescue

Fisherman, ferry boats and pleasure sailors rescued trapped British soldiers.

350 000 rescued, equipment left behind

Page 5: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Blitzkrieg – the strategy Air attack

Take out strategic sites Create chaos in civilian

population Paratroopers secure

strategic sites

Armored tank attack – break through into towns (create an entry ‘column’)

Infantry attack (troops arrive in truck loads – enter after tanks

City surrenders

Page 6: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

“blood, toil, tears, and sweat”

Summer 1940 Britain stood alone in

Europe

Winston Churchill – Britain’s new P.M. “blood, toil, tears, and sweat”

Halifax – assembling convoys (food, weapons, soldiers)

Eiffel Tower – 1889 centennial of French Revolution

Page 7: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Battle of Britain British air force

(RAF) and navy controlled the 50km Channel, separating Britain from France

1. Germany needed to control the skies over the Channel before its planned invasion fleet could sail

Page 8: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Battle of Britain continued July 10, 1940

German air force Luftwaffe set out to clear the skies

Targeted radar stations, airfields, ports and factories

Slowly the first RAF planes were wiped out

Page 9: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Battle of Britain continued August – RAF

bombed Berlin

commander of the German air force, Herman Goering retaliated with the “blitz” - bombing cities with the intention of terrorizing the civilian population into surrendering

London bombed 57 consecutive nights. By the end of May 1941, over 43,000 civilians had been killed by bombing, ½ in London

Page 10: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Battle of Britain continued Londoners responded

by moving into air-raid shelters, subway stations, reopening their stores every day and just “carrying on”

British resistance grew stronger, not weaker

Page 11: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Battle of Britain continued London raids allowed

few remaining spitfires and Hurricanes to regroup:

i. new pilots were trainedii. Planes came off

assembly lines at about 500/month

Sept 15, 1940: Luftwaffe attacked but the RAF was ready. The Luftwaffe was decidedly beaten!

Page 12: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Battle of Britain continuedBattle of Britain won by a

few hundred pilots: Canadians Poles Britons South Africans New Zealanders

RAF lost 915 planes, Luftwaffe lost 1,722 planes

Page 13: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

WW2, a new direction for Hitler

If Hitler could not wipe out Britain, he would turn against the Soviet Union

Page 14: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

WWII overview

Sept 1939Invasion of Poland

Spring 1940W. Europe BlitzkriegFall of: Denmark, Norway, Netherlands, Belgium, France- Miracle at Dunkirk

Summer 1940Battle of Britain

June 1941O. BarbarossaNazi invasion ofthe Soviet Union

Dec 1941Japanese invasionof Pearl HarborHong, Kong, andMany islands in The PacificU.S. join the war

Aug.1942Cdn. Dieppe Raid

Sept. 1943– end of warItalian Campaign

June 1944D-Day – alliedInvasion of W. Europe “O. Overlord”

May 1945V.E. DayUSSR Land Grab

Aug 1945V.A. DayAtom Bomb

Page 15: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Operation Barbarossa, June 1941 Hitler redirects his

attack eastward

Breaks the non-aggression pact with the Soviet Union

Attacks the Soviet Union

The Allies and Soviets now united over a common enemy - Hitler

Over 4.5 million troops of the Axis powers invaded the USSR along a 2,900 km front

Page 16: Unit 3 WWII – CHC2P/D Blitzkrieg and the Battles Ms. Pannell.

Operation Barbarossa continued The Nazi would advance

into the Soviet Union until the winter 1942.

Hitler overestimated the strength of soviet tanks and manpower

Soviets would eventually push the Germans back

This marks the beginning of the end for the Nazis