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Wilson’s Fourteen Points To End All Wars r point created by Robert Martinez ary content material obtained from History Alive! ographs and Illustrations as cited.
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Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Mar 19, 2016

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Wilson’s Fourteen Points. To End All Wars. Power point created by Robert Martinez Primary content material obtained from History Alive! Photographs and Illustrations as cited. On January 8, 1918, President Woodrow Wilson went before Congress to explain his war aims. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Wilson’s Fourteen PointsTo End All Wars

Power point created by Robert MartinezPrimary content material obtained from History Alive!Photographs and Illustrations as cited.

Page 2: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

• On January 8, 1918, President Woodrow Wilson went before Congress to explain his war aims.

• Although the war was still raging, he stated an ambitious program to make the world “fit and

safe to live in.”• He called his blueprint for peace the Fourteen

Points.

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Page 3: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

End Causes of War• The 1st goal of Wilson’s peace plan was

to eliminate the causes of wars.

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Page 4: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Self-Determination• A 2nd goal was to ensure the right to self-

determination for ethnic groups so they could control their own political futures.

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Street in Paris, France

Page 5: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

League of Nations• The last goal called for setting up an

international organization called the League of Nations to ensure world peace.

• Member nations would agree to protect one another’s independence and territorial

integrity.

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Page 6: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Territorial Integrity• Under the principle of territorial integrity, nations respect one another’s borders and

do not try to gain another country’s territory by force.

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Page 7: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Fourteen Points 1• Point One- Countries would not make

secret treaties and alliances. • Secret alliances had been a cause of

WW I.

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Page 8: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Fourteen Points 2• Ships would be able to travel freely in

times of war.• U-boat attacks on shipping had drawn

the United States into WWI.

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Page 9: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Fourteen Points 3• Free trade among countries would promote economic growth and reduce trade conflicts that could draw nations

into war.

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Page 10: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Fourteen Points 4• Countries would reduce their

stockpiles of weapons. • Militarism had been a cause of WW I.

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Page 11: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Fourteen Points 5• The desires of colonial peoples would be taken into consideration in creating a more

peaceful world. • Imperialism and competition for colonies had

been a cause of WW I.

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Page 12: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Fourteen Points 6-13• Restoring land taken from countries by war

would restore respect for international law.• Redrawing borders on the basis of self-

determination would reduce conflicts among ethnic groups.

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Page 13: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Fourteen Points 14• Countries would work together in the

League of Nations to resolve conflicts before those conflicts escalated into

war.

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Page 14: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

The Treaty of Versailles• The Treaty of Versailles negotiated in Paris

redrew the map of Europe, granting self-determination to some groups.

• Some Allies sought revenge on Germany, insisting on a war-guilt clause and

reparations from Germany.

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Page 15: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

The Big Four• When the heads of the 4 major Allies-

France, Great Britain, Italy, and the United States (The Big Four) – met in Paris for peace talks, they were more

focused on self-interest than on Wilson’s plan.

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Page 16: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Wilson’s Plan Crumbles France was concerned with security.

France hoped to weaken Germany to the point that it could never threaten France again by greatly reducing its

army.

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Page 17: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

“Hang the Kaiser”• Lloyd George of England, insisted that Germany accept responsibility for starting

the war by inclusion of the war-guilt clause.• The treaty required Germany to pay $33

billion in reparations to the Allies.

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Page 18: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Reparations• Reparations are payments demanded

of a defeated nation by the victor in a war to offset the cost of the war.

• Germans resented both the war-guilt clause and reparations, fearing that the payments would cripple their economic

recovery.

Page 19: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Wilson CompromisesThe other countries had lost many lives and property, and they expected compensation.

The Allies had borrowed huge sums form American banks to finance the war. They

hoped to repay these debts with reparations from Germany.

Wilson reluctantly agreed to the harsh treatment of Germany.

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Page 20: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Dividing the Spoils• Parts of Germany were given to France,

Poland, Denmark, and Belgium, with little thought about the desires of the people living

there.• Britain, France, Italy, and Japan grabbed German colonies in China, the Pacific, and

Africa.

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Page 21: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

League of Nations Charter• Wilson hoped that including the League of Nations in the final treaty would make up for

his compromises on other issues. • He believed that by providing collective security and a framework for peaceful talks,

the League would fix many problems the treaty had created.

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Page 22: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Collective Security• Wilson believed that the League would

maintain peace by providing collective security for its members.

• Collective security is a commitment by many countries to join together to deal with a

nation that threatens peace.

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Ratifying the Versailles Treaty

• Wilson required a 2/3 majority vote from the U.S. Senate to ratify the treaty.

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Page 24: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Opposition• Reservationists, such as Senator Henry Cabot

Lodge, were concerned with Article 10 of the League’s charter. This article focused on collective

security.• It required member nations to work together, and

even supply troops, to keep peace.• Reservationists feared this would draw the U.S. into

wars without approval from Congress.

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Page 25: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Taking It to the People• President Wilson decides to gain public

support directly by planning a nationwide speaking tour.

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Wilson’s Tour• The president embarked on a 8,000–mile speaking tour of the West. He spoke up to 4

times a day.• On September 25, 1919, the president

collapses in Pueblo, Colorado.• His doctor stopped the tour, and Wilson’s

train sped back to Washington D.C.

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Page 27: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Assistant President –1st American Woman

President ?• A few days after returning to the White

House, Wilson has a major stroke that leaves him paralyzed (dying months later.)

• Wilson’s wife, Edith, is called the “assistant president,” for making decisions on behalf of

her husband.

President Wilson’s FuneralFirst Lady Edith Wilson

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Page 28: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Partisanship defeats the Treaty

• In the end, Partisan politics and Wilson’s refusal to compromise led to the treaty’s rejection and ended Wilson’s hopes for U.S. membership in the League of Nations.

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Page 29: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Inflation and Unemployment• Issues closer to home occupy most American concerns, including inflation

and unemployment.

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Page 30: Wilson’s Fourteen Points

The Big Question ?Could World War II have been avoided if the

U.S. had joined the League of Nations ?

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