Top Banner
What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?
30

What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Dec 18, 2015

Download

Documents

Matthew Poole
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: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Page 2: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

The Attack on Pearl Harbor

Page 3: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Hawaii and Japan.

Page 4: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Not only Pearl Harbor, but every military installation on the island of Oahu (Ohwahoo) was attacked on December 7, 1941.

Page 5: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?
Page 6: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Pearl Harbor from Above

Page 7: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Chart 1: December 7, 1941 lossesPersonnel Killed United States JapanNavy 1998 64Marine Corps 109 Army 233 Civilian 48 Personnel Wounded Navy 710 UnknownMarine Corps 69 Army 364 Civilian 35 Ships Sunk or beached * 12 5Damaged 9 Aircraft Destroyed 164 29Damaged 159 74

Of the total number of men killed at Pearl Harbor, approximately 1,177 were sailors and marines serving on the USS Arizona. Approximately 333 men aboard the USS Arizona survived the attack.

Page 8: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Background

The attack on Pearl Harbor was the culmination of a decade of deteriorating relations between Japan and the United States over the status of China and the security of Southeast Asia. This breakdown began in 1931 when Japanese army extremists, in defiance of government policy, invaded and overran the northern-most Chinese province of Manchuria. Japan ignored American protests, and in the summer of 1937 launched a full-scale attack on the rest of China. Although alarmed by this action, neither the United States nor any other nation with interests in the Far East was willing to use military force to halt Japanese expansion.

Page 9: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Over the next three years, war broke out in Europe and Japan joined Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy in the Axis Alliance. The United States applied both diplomatic and economic pressures to try to resolve the Sino-Japanese conflict. The Japanese government viewed these measures, especially an embargo on oil, as threats to their national security. By the summer of 1941, both countries had taken positions from which they could not retreat without a serious loss of national prestige. Although both governments continued to negotiate their differences, Japan had already decided on war. The attack on Pearl Harbor was part of a grand strategy of conquest in the western Pacific.

Page 10: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

The objective was to immobilize the Pacific Fleet so that the United States could not interfere with invasion plans. The principal architect of the attack was Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, Commander-in-Chief of the Japanese Combined Fleet. Though personally opposed to war with America, Yamamoto knew that Japan's only hope of success in such a war was to achieve quick and decisive victory. If there were a prolonged conflict, America's superior economic and industrial power would likely tip the scales in her favor.

Page 11: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

• Pearl Harbor advance-knowledge conspiracy theory

• Pearl Harbor movie

Page 12: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Battle of the Atlantic and the Gulf of St. Lawrence

Page 13: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

• The Battle of the Atlantic was the longest single campaign of the Second World War. As the countries of Europe fell to the control of the Axis Power, less and less territory on the continent became accessible to the Allies and choked off what resources these territories could provide. As a consequence of this, access to munitions and supplies from North America and beyond became increasingly important.

• The system of convoys, particularly from the port of Halifax, was crucial to continuing access to supplies to Britain. Canada's merchant marine formed an important part of the system of supply vessels. The Royal Canadian Navy (RCN) also played a significant role in the protection and shepherding of the merchant marine convoys on their way to Britain.

Page 14: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

• As the war progressed, the battle spread closer and in a more concentrated form towards North America and the Caribbean. Throughout the North Atlantic, German U-boats patrolled further and further, and made increasing numbers of sinkings in the North Atlantic. By 1943, the success of the RCN in limiting the effectiveness of the German U-boats in disrupting supply lines had begun to escalate. Between 1940 and 1942, the number of tonnes of supplies lost in sunk merchant vessels in the North Atlantic had doubled to over 6 million tonnes. By 1943, the tonnage lost was less than 10% of the 1942 lost tonnage, and by 1944, had dropped to almost 5% of the 1942 tonnage. By the end of the war, the RCN had helped over 25,000 ships cross the frigid North Atlantic and had become the third largest navy in the world.

Page 15: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Hundreds of corvettes like this one escorted freighters from Halifax to European ports in World War II, helping to combat preying German submarines.

Page 16: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

• The Battle of the Gulf of St. Lawrence was a part of the Battle of the Atlantic. In this part of the Battle of the Atlantic, the threat posed by German U-boats approached within 300 km of Quebec City. As a result, Canada's ability to ship supplies was at risk, since shipping out of Quebec City, along with Montreal and Trois-Rivieres, accounted for nearly 50% of the tonnage exported during the war. This threat became sufficiently large that on September 9, 1942, trans-Atlantic shipping through the Gulf was halted by the Canadian government, leaving only domestic shipping to ports such as Sydney, Nova Scotia available. The Gulf stayed closed until 1944.

Page 17: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

A convoy of Allied Ships

Page 18: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

HMCS HAIDA

Page 19: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

The Raid on Dieppe

Page 20: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Class Activity – Cause and Effect Organizer

• You will be put into groups of appox. 4 and review read page 118 of the textbook.

• Decide on who will be the recorder and create the following chart on a piece of paper.

Causes of the Raid Why it Failed Effects

Page 21: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

• 3 names will be selected at random.

• If a member of your group appears, then you will present a column from your cause and effect organizer.

• Only 3 groups will have to present their findings.

• Write your names on the chart and hand it in to me at the end of class.

• http://classtools.net/education-games-php/fruit_machine/

Page 22: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Class List – Period 1

SummerDaciaAlexGabeGrahamJamie D.JuanesAdamLoganColinDustinSalmaSam S.

Page 23: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?
Page 24: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

The Dieppe Beachfront

Page 25: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?
Page 26: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?
Page 27: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Corpses on the beach next to two Churchill tanks of the 14th Armoured Regiment (Calgary) stuck in pebbles. Behind them, thick smoke coming from LCT 5.

Department of National Defence / National Archives of Canada C-014160.

Page 28: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Officer and soldiers examining a Churchill tank stuck on the beach in front of the boardwalk after the battle, its left track broken. Wounded men lying on the ground are about to be evacuated. Dieppe, August 19th, 1942.

Page 29: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

"The second the boat scraped the beach, I jumped out and started to follow the sappers through the barbed wire. My immediate objective was a concrete pillbox on top of a 12-foot parapet about 100 yards up the beach. I think I had taken three steps when the first one hit me. You say a bullet or a piece of shrapnel hits you but the word isn't right. They slam you the way a sledgehammer slams you. There's no sharp pain at first. It jars you so much you're not sure exactly where you've been hit-or what with."- Lt-Col Dollard Ménard, Fusiliers Mont-Royal

Page 30: What is happening in this photo? Can you identify what significant event in U.S. history is taking place?

Canadian prisoners escorted by German guards marching through Dieppe, August 19th, 1942.