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446 World War I and Its Aftermath 1914–1920 1915 The Lusitania is sunk 1913 Woodrow Wilson begins his first presidential term 1917 U.S. enters war 1915 Italy joins Allies in war Japan gains rights in Chinese territory 1914 Archduke Franz Ferdinand assassinated; war begins in Europe 1917 Bolshevik Revolution begins in October Balfour Declaration favors setting up a Jewish homeland in Palestine 1916 British suppress Easter Rebellion in Ireland Battle of the Somme begins in July Why It Matters The United States reluctantly entered World War I after German submarines violated American neutrality. After the war ended, President Wilson supported the Treaty of Versailles, believing its terms would prevent another war. The U.S. Senate, however, rejected the treaty. It did not want the country to be tied to European obligations. Instead, Americans turned their attention to the difficult adjustment to peacetime. The Impact Today The experience of World War I had a long-term effect on American history. The United States continues to be involved in European affairs. The horrors of the conflict helped reshape how people view warfare. The American Republic Since 1877 Video The Chapter 14 video, “Cousins: Royalty and World War I,” explains how royal marriages and complex political alliances contributed to the outbreak of war in Europe. 1913 1915 1917 Wilson 1913–1921
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Page 1: World War I and Its Aftermath - HOME & ANNOUNCEMENTS

446

World War I andIts Aftermath

1914–1920

1915• The Lusitania is sunk

1913• Woodrow Wilson begins his

first presidential term

1917• U.S. enters war

1915• Italy joins Allies

in war

• Japan gainsrights in Chineseterritory

1914• Archduke Franz

Ferdinandassassinated; warbegins in Europe

1917• Bolshevik Revolution

begins in October

• Balfour Declaration favors setting up a Jewishhomeland in Palestine

1916• British suppress

Easter Rebellion in Ireland

• Battle of the Sommebegins in July

Why It MattersThe United States reluctantly entered World War I after German submarines violated American

neutrality. After the war ended, President Wilson supported the Treaty of Versailles, believing itsterms would prevent another war. The U.S. Senate, however, rejected the treaty. It did not want

the country to be tied to European obligations. Instead, Americans turned their attention to thedifficult adjustment to peacetime.

The Impact TodayThe experience of World War I had a long-term effect on American history.

• The United States continues to be involved in European affairs.• The horrors of the conflict helped reshape how people view warfare.

The American Republic Since 1877 Video The Chapter 14 video, “Cousins: Royalty and World War I,” explains how royal marriages andcomplex political alliances contributed to the outbreak of war in Europe.

!!

"

! !

"

"

1913 1915 1917

Wilson1913–1921

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447

1920• British government

creates the NorthernIreland province

!1921• Irish Free State

established bysigned treaty

!

1918• Congress passes Sedition Act

• Battle of Argonne Forestbegins in September

• Armistice ends fighting onNovember 11

1919• Treaty of Versailles

conference begins

1918• Treaty of Brest-Litovsk

ends Russian-German war

1919• Race riots and strikes take place in

Northern cities

• Red Scare and Palmer raids targetCommunists in the U.S.

" "

!!

American soldiers in the 23rd Infantry fire on Germanpositions in the Argonne Forest.

HISTORY

Chapter OverviewVisit the American RepublicSince 1877 Web site at

and click on Chapter Overviews—Chapter 14 to preview chapterinformation.

tarvol2.glencoe.com1919 1921

Harding1921–1923

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April 1914U.S. Marines occupyVeracruz, Mexico

448 CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath

#1915 #1917

Edith O’Shaughnessy could not sleep on the rainy night of April 20, 1914. Living at theAmerican embassy in Mexico City, the wife of diplomat Nelson O’Shaughnessy was wellaware of the growing crisis between Mexico and the United States. Earlier that day, PresidentWilson had asked Congress to authorize the use of force against Mexico. In her diary,O’Shaughnessy described the tensions in the Mexican capital:

“I can’t sleep. National and personal potentialities [possibilities] are surging through mybrain. Three stalwart railroad men came to the Embassy this evening. They brought reports ofa plan for the massacre of Americans in the street to-night, but, strange and wonderful thing,a heavy rain is falling. . . . Rain is as potent as shell-fire in clearing the streets, and I don’tthink there will be any trouble.”

The next day, O’Shaughnessy reported that the conflict had begun: “We are in Mexico, infull intervention! . . . Marines are due to-day in Vera Cruz. . . .”

—adapted from A Diplomat’s Wife in Mexico

Woodrow Wilson’s DiplomacyAs president, Wilson resolved to “strike a new note in international affairs” and to see

that “sheer honesty and even unselfishness . . . should prevail over nationalistic self-seeking in American foreign policy.” Wilson strongly opposed imperialism. He also

The United StatesEnters World War I

#1916

June 1914Assassination of ArchdukeFranz Ferdinand

July 1914World War I begins

May 1915Sinking of theLusitania

April 1917United Statesenters the war

#1914

Raising the flag at Veracruz

Main IdeaAlthough the United States tried toremain neutral, events soon pushed thenation into World War I.

Key Terms and NamesPancho Villa, guerrilla, nationalism, self-determination, Franz Ferdinand,Allies, Central Powers, propaganda, contraband, U-boat, Sussex Pledge,Zimmermann telegram

Reading StrategyOrganizing As you read about the startof World War I, complete a graphicorganizer similar to the one below byidentifying the factors that contributed tothe conflict.

Reading Objectives• Discuss the causes and results of

American intervention in Mexico andthe Caribbean.

• Explain the causes of World War I andwhy the United States entered the war.

Section ThemeContinuity and Change Ties with theBritish influenced American leaders toenter World War I on the side of theAllies.

Factors Contributingto World War I

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believed that democracy was essential to a nation’sstability and prosperity, and that the United Statesshould promote democracy in order to ensure apeaceful world free of revolution and war. DuringWilson’s presidency, however, other forces at work athome and abroad frustrated his hope to lead theworld by moral example. In fact, Wilson’s first inter-national crisis was awaiting him when he took officein March 1913.

The Mexican Revolution From 1884 to 1911, a dicta-tor, Porfirio Díaz, ruled Mexico. Díaz encouraged for-eign investment in Mexico to help develop thenation’s industry. A few wealthy landowners domi-nated Mexican society. The majority of the peoplewere poor and landless, and they were increasinglyfrustrated by their circumstances. In 1911 a revolutionerupted, forcing Díaz to flee the country.

Francisco Madero, a reformer who appeared tosupport democracy, constitutional government, andland reform, replaced Díaz. Madero, however,proved to be an unskilled administrator. Frustratedwith Mexico’s continued decline, army officers plot-ted against Madero. Shortly before Wilson tookoffice, General Victoriano Huerta seized power inMexico, and Madero was murdered—presumably onHuerta’s orders.

Huerta’s brutality repulsed Wilson, who refusedto recognize the new government. Wilson was con-vinced that without the support of the United States,Huerta soon would be overthrown. Wilson thereforetried to prevent weapons from reaching Huerta, andhe permitted Americans to arm other political fac-tions within Mexico.

Wilson Sends Troops Into Mexico In April 1914,American sailors visiting the city of Tampico werearrested after entering a restricted area. Though theywere quickly released, their American commanderdemanded an apology. The Mexicans refused. Wilsonused the refusal as an opportunity to overthrowHuerta. He sent marines to seize the Mexican port ofVeracruz.

Although the president expected the Mexican people to welcome his action, anti-American riotsbroke out in Mexico. Wilson then accepted interna-tional mediation to settle the dispute. VenustianoCarranza, whose forces had acquired arms from theUnited States, became Mexico’s president.

Mexican forces opposed to Carranza were notappeased, and they conducted raids into the UnitedStates hoping to force Wilson to intervene. PanchoVilla (VEE·yah) led a group of guerrillas—an

armed band that uses surprise attacks and sabotagerather than open warfare—that burned the town ofColumbus, New Mexico, and killed a number ofAmericans. Wilson responded by sending morethan 6,000 U.S. troops under General John J.Pershing across the border to find and captureVilla. The expedition dragged on as Pershing failedto capture the guerrillas. Wilson’s growing concernover the war raging in Europe finally caused him torecall Pershing’s troops in 1917.

Wilson’s Mexican policy damaged U.S. foreignrelations. The British ridiculed the president’s attemptto “shoot the Mexicans into self-government.” LatinAmericans regarded his “moral imperialism” as noimprovement on Theodore Roosevelt’s “big stick”diplomacy. In fact, Wilson followed Roosevelt’sexample in the Caribbean. During his first term,Wilson sent marines into Nicaragua, Haiti, and theDominican Republic to preserve order and to set upgovernments that he hoped would be more stable anddemocratic than the current regimes.

Examining Why did PresidentWilson intervene in Mexico?

The Outbreak of World War IDespite more than 40 years of general peace, ten-

sions among European nations were building in 1914.Throughout the late 1800s and early 1900s, a number

Reading Check

CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath 449

History

Moral Imperialism President Wilson sentGeneral John Pershing (below) to stop PanchoVilla’s (right) raids into the United States.Why was Villa conducting these raids?

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of factors created problems among the powers ofEurope and set the stage for a monumental war.

The Alliance System The roots of World War Idate back to the 1860s. In 1864, while Americansfought the Civil War, the German kingdom ofPrussia launched the first of a series of wars tounite the various German states into onenation. By 1871 Prussia had united Germanyand proclaimed the birth of the German Empire.The new German nation rapidly industrializedand quickly became one of the most powerful nationsin the world.

The creation of Germany transformed Europeanpolitics. In 1870, as part of their plan to unifyGermany, the Prussians had attacked and defeatedFrance. They then forced the French to give up terri-tory along the German border. From that point for-ward, France and Germany were enemies. To protectitself, Germany signed alliances with Italy and withAustria-Hungary, a huge empire that controlledmuch of southeastern Europe. This became known asthe Triple Alliance.

The new alliance alarmed Russian leaders, whofeared that Germany intended to expand eastward intoRussia. Russia and Austria-Hungary were also com-peting for influence in southeastern Europe. Many ofthe people of southeastern Europe were Slavs—thesame ethnic group as the Russians—and the Russianswanted to support them against Austria-Hungary. Asa result, Russia and France had a common interest inopposing Germany and Austria-Hungary. In 1894 theysigned the Franco-Russian Alliance.

The Naval Race While the other major powers ofEurope divided into competing alliances, GreatBritain remained neutral. Then, in 1898, the Germansbegan to build a navy challenging Great Britain’s his-torical dominance at sea. By the early 1900s, an armsrace had begun between Great Britain and Germany,as both sides raced to build warships. The naval racegreatly increased tensions between Germany andBritain and convinced the British to establish closerrelations with France and Russia. The British refusedto sign a formal alliance, so their new relationshipwith the French and Russians became known as an“entente cordiale”—a friendly understanding.Britain, France, and Russia became known as theTriple Entente.

The Balkan Crisis By the late 1800s, nationalism,or a feeling of intense pride of one’s homeland, hadbecome a powerful idea in Europe. Nationalists place

primary emphasis on promoting their homeland’sculture and interests above those of other countries.Nationalism was one of the reasons for the tensionsamong the European powers. Each nation viewed theothers as competitors, and many people were willingto go to war to expand their nation at the expense ofothers.

One of the basic ideas of nationalism is the rightto self-determination—the idea that people whobelong to a nation should have their own countryand government. In the 1800s, nationalism led to acrisis in southeastern Europe in the region known asthe Balkans. Historically, the Ottoman Empire andthe Austro-Hungarian Empire had ruled theBalkans. Both of these empires were made up ofmany different nations. As nationalism became apowerful force in the 1800s, the different nationalgroups within these empires began to press forindependence.

Among the groups pushing for independencewere the Serbs, Bosnians, Croats, and Slovenes.These people all spoke similar languages and hadcome to see themselves as one people. They calledthemselves South Slavs, or Yugoslavs. The first ofthese people to obtain independence were theSerbs, who formed a nation called Serbia betweenthe Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian empires. Serbsbelieved their nation’s mission was to unite theSouth Slavs.

Russia supported the Serbs, while Austria-Hungary did what it could to limit Serbia’s growth.In 1908 Austria-Hungary annexed Bosnia, which atthe time belonged to the Ottoman Empire. The Serbswere furious. They wanted Bosnia to be part of theirnation. The annexation demonstrated to the Serbsthat Austria-Hungary had no intention of letting theSlavic people in its empire become independent.

A Continent Goes to War In late June 1914, theheir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, the ArchdukeFranz Ferdinand, visited the Bosnian capital

450 CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath

Fateful Couple Archduke Franz Ferdinand and wifeSophia visit Sarajevo the day of the assassination.

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of Sarajevo. As he and his wife rode through the city, a Bosnian revolutionary named GavriloPrincip rushed their open car and shot the couple todeath. The assassin was a member of a Serbiannationalist group nicknamed the “Black Hand.”The assassination took place with the knowledge of

Serbian officials who hoped to start a war thatwould bring down the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

The Austro-Hungarian government blamedSerbia for the attack and decided the time had cometo crush Serbia in order to prevent Slavic national-ism from undermining its empire. Knowing an

Lambert AzimuthalEqual-Area projection

500 kilometers

500 miles0

0

N

S

EW

0° 20°E 30°E 40°E

10°W

40°N

50°N

60°N

CorsicaFr.

SardiniaIt.

SicilyIt.

CreteGr.

CyprusU.K.

NorthSea

BalticSea

Black Sea

Mediterran ean Sea

ATLaNTICOCEaN

UNITEDKINGDOM

NORWAY

SWEDEN

DENMARK

NETH.

BELG.

FRANCE

SPAIN

PORTUGALITALY

SWITZ.

GERMANY

AUSTRIA-HUNGARY

RUSSIA

ROMANIA

BULGARIA

OTTOMANEMPIREGREECE

SERBIA

MONTENEGROALBANIA

LUX.

SPANISHMOROCCO

MOROCCOFr.

ALGERIAFr.

TUNISIAFr.

LIBYAIt. EGYPT

U.K.

St. Petersburg

Moscow

ConstantinopleRome

Sarajevo

BudapestVienna

Berlin

Paris

London

(Petrograd)

Italy refused to honorCentral Powers allianceand joined Allied Powerson May 23, 1915.

June 28, 1914Archduke Franz Ferdinandassassinated by Serb nationalist.

Greece did not enterthe war until 1917.

Bulgaria joined the CentralPowers in 1915. Romaniajoined the Allies in 1916.

June 28Assassination of ArchdukeFranz Ferdinand

July 30Russia begins mobilizingtroops in defense of Serbia

#July 1914

July 28Austria-Hungarydeclares war on Serbia

August 3Germany declares war on France,begins invasion of Belgium

August 6Austria-Hungary declares waron Russia

August 4Britain declareswar on Germany

August 12France and Great Britaindeclare war on Austria-Hungary

August 1Germany declareswar on Russia

European Alliances, 1914

Allied Powers

Central Powers

Neutral nations

Initial troop movementsof Central Powers

#August 1914

CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath 451

1. Interpreting Maps Which nations comprised theCentral Powers in 1914?

2. Applying Geography Skills What was the name of the southeastern European region that sparked thebeginning of the war?

MotionIn

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attack on Serbia might trigger a war with Russia,the Austrians asked their German allies for sup-port. Germany promised to support Austria-Hungary if war erupted.

Austria-Hungary then issued an ultimatum to theSerbian government. The Serbs counted on Russia toback them up, and the Russians, in turn, counted onFrance. French leaders were worried that they mightsomeday be caught alone in a war with Germany, sothey were determined to keep Russia as an ally. Theypromised to support Russia if war began.

On July 28, Austria declared war on Serbia. Russiaimmediately mobilized its army, including troopsstationed on the German border. On August 1,Germany declared war on Russia. Two days later, itdeclared war on France. World War I had begun.

Germany’s Plan Fails Germany had long been pre-pared for war against France and Russia. It immedi-ately launched a massive invasion of France, hopingto knock the French out of the war. It would then beable to send its troops east to deal with the Russians.

The German plan had one major problem. Itrequired the German forces to advance through neu-tral Belgium in order to encircle the French troops.The British had guaranteed Belgium’s neutrality.When German troops crossed the Belgian frontier,Britain declared war on Germany.

Those fighting for the Triple Entente were calledthe Allies. France, Russia, and Great Britain formedthe backbone of the Allies along with Italy, whichjoined them in 1915 after the other Allies promised tocede Austro-Hungarian territory to Italy after the war.What remained of the Triple Alliance—Germany andAustria-Hungary—joined with the Ottoman Empireand Bulgaria to form the Central Powers.

The German plan seemed to work at first. Germantroops swept through Belgium and headed intoFrance, driving back the French and British forces.Then, to the great surprise of the Germans, Russiantroops invaded Germany. The Germans had notexpected Russia to mobilize so quickly. They wereforced to pull some of their troops away from theattack on France and send them east to stop the

Russians. This weakened the Germanforces just enough to give the Allies achance to stop them. The Germansdrove to within 30 miles (48 km) ofParis, but stubborn resistance by Britishand French troops at the Battle of theMarne finally stopped the Germanadvance. Because the swift Germanattack had failed to defeat the French,both sides became locked in a bloodystalemate along hundreds of miles oftrenches that would barely changeposition for the next three years.

The Central Powers had greater suc-cess on the Eastern Front. German andAustrian forces stopped the Russianattack and then went on the offensive.They swept across hundreds of milesof territory and took hundreds of thou-sands of prisoners. Russia suffered 2 million killed, wounded, or capturedin 1915 alone, but it kept fighting.

Explaining Whatincident triggered the beginning of World War I?

American Neutrality When the fighting began, President

Wilson declared the United States tobe neutral in an attempt to keep the

Reading Check

452 CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath

i n H i s t o r yJeannette Rankin1880–1973

As he addressed the “Gentlemen ofthe Congress” on April 2, 1917,President Woodrow Wilson actually misspoke. Sitting in the chamber listen-ing to the president’s request for a dec-laration of war against Germany wasRepresentative Jeannette Rankin—thefirst woman ever elected to Congress.

Rankin was born in Missoula,Montana, in 1880. She became a socialworker and participated in the womansuffrage movement. In 1916 she waselected to the U.S. House ofRepresentatives from Montana—one ofthe few states at that time that allowedwomen to vote. As a representative,Rankin sponsored legislation to grantfederal voting rights for women and toprovide health services for them.

Apart from her title as the firstwoman in Congress, Rankin is remem-bered most for her strong pacifism. She was one of 56 legislators who votedagainst the nation’s entry into WorldWar I. “I want to stand by my country,”she said, “but I cannot vote for war.”

In 1940 Rankin ran again forCongress as a representative fromMontana. She ran on an isolationist pol-icy and won. In 1941 she was the onlymember of Congress to vote againstdeclaring war on Japan and enteringWorld War II.

After leaving Congress in 1943,Rankin continued working for peace. In 1968, at 87 years of age, she ledthousands of women in the March onWashington to oppose the Vietnam War.

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country from being drawn into a foreign war. “Wemust be impartial in thought as well as in action,”Wilson stated. For many Americans, however, thatproved difficult to do.

Americans Take Sides Despite the president’splea, many Americans showed support for one sideor the other. This was especially true for recent immi-grants from Europe. Many of the 8 million GermanAmericans, for example, supported their homeland.The nation’s 4.5 million Irish Americans, whosehomeland endured centuries of British rule, alsosympathized with the Central Powers.

In general, though, American public opinionfavored the Allied cause. Many Americans valuedthe heritage, language, and political ideals theyshared with Britain. Others treasured America’s his-toric links with France, a great friend to America dur-ing the Revolutionary War.

Pro-British Sentiment One select group of Amer-icans was decidedly pro-British: President Wilson’scabinet. Only Secretary of State William JenningsBryan favored neutrality. The other cabinet members,as well as Bryan’s chief adviser, Robert Lansing, andWalter Hines Page, the American ambassador toLondon, argued forcefully on behalf of Britain.American military leaders also backed the British.They believed that an Allied victory was the onlyway to preserve the international balance of power.

British officials worked diligently to win Americansupport. One method they used was propaganda, orinformation designed to influence opinion. Both theAllies and the Central Powers used propaganda, butGerman propaganda was mostly anti-Russian anddid not appeal to most Americans. British propa-ganda, on the other hand, was extremely skillful.Furthermore, Britain cut the transatlantic telegraphcable from Europe to the United States, limiting newsabout the war mainly to British reports. Storiesarrived depicting numerous German war atrocities,including the charge that Germans used corpses fromthe battlefield to make fertilizer and soap. Althoughmany such reports were questionable, enoughAmericans believed them to help sway Americansupport in favor of the Allies.

ECONOMICS

Business Links American business interests alsoleaned toward the Allies. Companies in the UnitedStates, particularly on the East Coast, had strong tieswith businesses in the Allied countries. As businessleader Thomas W. Lamont stated, “Our firm had

never for one moment been neutral: we did not knowhow to be. From the very start we did everything thatwe could to contribute to the cause of the Allies.”

Many American banks began to invest heavily in anAllied victory. American loans to the cash-hungryAllies skyrocketed. By 1917 such loans would totalover $2 billion. Other American banks, particularly inthe Midwest, where pro-German feelings werestrongest, also lent some $27 million to Germany. Evenmore might have been lent, but most foreign loansrequired the approval of William McAdoo, the secre-tary of the Treasury. McAdoo was strongly pro-Britishand did what he could to limit loans to Germany. As aresult, the country’s prosperity was intertwined withthe military fortunes of Britain, France, and Russia. If the Allies won, the money would be paid back; ifnot, the money might be lost forever.

Evaluating How was Americanprosperity intertwined with the military fortunes of the Allies?

Moving Toward WarAlthough most Americans supported the Allies and

hoped for their victory, they did not want to join theconflict. However, a series of events gradually erodedAmerican neutrality and drew the nation into the warfirmly on the side of the Allies.

The British Blockade Shortly after the war began,the British deployed their navy to blockadeGermany and keep it from obtaining supplies. TheBritish planted mines in the North Sea and forcedneutral ships into port for inspections in case theywere trying to transportvaluable materials to Ger-many or its neutral neigh-bors. British officials alsoexpanded their definition ofcontraband, or prohibitedmaterials, to prevent neutralcountries from shippingfood to Germany.

The Germans knew thatthe Allies depended on food,equipment, and other sup-plies from both the UnitedStates and their overseasempires. If Germany couldstrangle that trade, it couldstarve the British and French into surrendering. To getaround Britain’s blockade, the Germans deployedsubmarines known as U-boats—from the German

Reading Check

CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath 453

Student WebActivity Visit theAmerican RepublicSince 1877 Web site at

and click on StudentWeb Activities—Chapter 14 for anactivity on World War I.

HISTORY

tarvol2.glencoe.com

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word Unterseeboot (meaning “underwater boat”). InFebruary 1915, the Germans announced that theywould attempt to sink without warning any ship theyfound in the waters around Britain.

Germany’s announcement triggered outrage inthe United States and elsewhere. Attacking civilianvessels without warning violated an internationaltreaty stipulating that military vessels must revealtheir intentions to merchant ships and make provi-sions for the safety of the targeted ship’s crew andpassengers before sinking it. The Germans claimedthat many merchant ships were actually warships indisguise and that their U-boats would be placed atgreat risk if they revealed themselves before firing.

The issue reached a crisis on May 7, 1915.Despite warnings from Germany, the British pas-senger liner Lusitania entered the war zone. A sub-merged German submarine fired on the ship,killing nearly 1,200 passengers—including 128Americans. Many Americans were outraged andregarded the attack as an act of terrorism, not war.

Others argued that the passengers traveling onships of foreign nations did so at their own risk.

Wilson steered a middle course on the issue of theU-boats. He refused to take extreme measuresagainst Germany, saying that the United States was“too proud to fight.” Nevertheless, he sent severaldiplomatic notes to Germany insisting that its gov-ernment safeguard the lives of noncombatants in thewar zones.

Late in March 1916, Wilson’s policy was testedwhen a U-boat torpedoed the French passenger shipSussex, injuring several Americans on board. AlthoughWilson’s closest advisers favored breaking off diplo-matic relations with Germany immediately, the presi-dent, busy with the crisis in Mexico, chose to issue onelast warning. He demanded that the German govern-ment abandon its methods of submarine warfare orrisk war with the United States.

Germany did not want to strengthen the Allies bydrawing the United States into the war. It promisedwith certain conditions to sink no more merchantships without warning. The Sussex Pledge, as it wascalled, met the foreign-policy goals of both Germanyand President Wilson by keeping the United Statesout of the war a little longer.

Wilson’s efforts to keep American soldiers at homeplayed an important part in his re-election bid in1916. Campaigning as the “peace” candidate, hiscampaign slogan, “He kept us out of the war,”helped lead Wilson to a narrow victory over theRepublican nominee, Charles Evans Hughes.

The United States Declares War FollowingWilson’s re-election, events quickly brought thecountry to the brink of war. In January 1917, aGerman official named Arthur Zimmermann cabled

the German ambassador in Mexico, instruct-ing him to make an offer to the Mexican gov-ernment. Zimmermann proposed that Mexicoally itself with Germany in the event of warbetween Germany and the United States. Inreturn, Mexico would regain its “lost territoryin Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona” after thewar. Germany hoped Mexico would tie downthe American forces and prevent them frombeing sent to Europe. British intelligence inter-cepted the Zimmermann telegram. Shortlyafterward, it was leaked to American news-papers. Furious, many Americans now con-cluded war with Germany was necessary.

Then, on February 1, 1917, Germany resumedunrestricted submarine warfare. German militaryleaders believed that they could starve Britain into

454 CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath

The Sinking of the Lusitania In May 1915, German U-boats sankthe British passenger liner Lusitania. Among those who drowned were 128Americans. Here the Los Angeles Tribune reports the attack, and a newspaperadvertisement warns ship passengers to travel the Atlantic at their own risk.Why were the Germans sinking passenger liners?

History

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Writing About History

CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath 455

Checking for Understanding1. Define: guerrilla, nationalism,

self-determination, propaganda, contraband, U-boat.

2. Identify: Pancho Villa, Franz Ferdinand,Allies, Central Powers, Sussex Pledge,Zimmermann telegram.

3. Name the two alliances that Europe wasdivided into at the start of World War I.

Reviewing Themes4. Continuity and Change Why did most

of President Wilson’s cabinet memberssupport the British?

Critical Thinking5. Synthesizing How did European

nationalism contribute to the outbreakof World War I?

6. Organizing Use a graphic organizersimilar to the one below to identify theevents that led the United States toenter World War I.

Analyzing Visuals7. Analyzing Time Lines Examine the

time line on page 451. How does theorder in which countries declared warreflect the European alliance system?

8. Expository Writing Imagine that youare a Mexican citizen living in Mexicobetween 1914 and 1917. Write a scriptfor a radio newscast in which youexpress your feelings about Americanactions in Mexico. Include reasons foryour feelings.

U.S. Enters World War I

Events

“The world mustbe made safe for

democracy.”—Woodrow Wilson, April 1917

Americans Go to War Congressvoted heavily in favor of entering theEuropean war. Here, excited Americanswave from an Army recruitment truck.What events pushed the United Statesto finally declare war?

History

submission in four to six months if their U-boatscould return to a more aggressive approach of sink-ing all ships on sight. Although they recognized thattheir actions might draw the United States into thewar, the Germans did not believe that the Americanscould raise an army and transport it to Europe intime to prevent the Allies from collapsing.

Between February 3 and March 21, GermanU-boats sank six American merchant ships withoutwarning. Finally roused to action, President Wilsonappeared before a special session of Congress onApril 2, 1917, to ask for a declaration of war againstGermany.

“It is a fearful thing to lead this great peaceful people into war. . . . But the right is more precious

than peace, and we shall fight for the things which wehave always carried nearest to our hearts—fordemocracy, for the right of those who submit toauthority to have a voice in their own governments,for the rights and liberties of small nations. . . .”

—quoted in the Congressional Record, 1917

After a spirited debate, the Senate passed the reso-lution on April 4 by a vote of 82 to 6. The House con-curred 373 to 50 on April 6, and Wilson signed theresolution. America was now at war.

Summarizing How did Germany’suse of unrestricted submarine warfare lead to American entryinto World War I?

Reading Check

Study CentralTM To review this section, go toand click on Study CentralTM.tarvol2.glencoe.com

Page 11: World War I and Its Aftermath - HOME & ANNOUNCEMENTS

1917Selective Service Act andEspionage Act passed

456 CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath

Building Up the MilitaryWhen the United States declared war against Germany in April 1917, progressives

controlled the federal government. They did not abandon their ideas simply because awar had begun. Instead, they applied progressive ideas to fighting the war.

Selective Service When the United States entered the war in 1917, the army andNational Guard together had slightly more than 370,000 troops. Although many menvolunteered after war was declared, many felt more soldiers needed to be drafted.

After Congress declared war on Germany in April 1917, young men from across thenation swamped recruiting offices eager to volunteer for the war. Historian William Langer,who served in World War I, recalled the enthusiasm of the young recruits:

“What strikes me most, I think, is the eagerness of the men to get to France and above allto reach the front. One would think that, after almost four years of war, after the mostdetailed and realistic accounts of the murderous fighting . . . to say nothing of the day-to-dayagony of trench warfare, it would have been all but impossible to get anyone to serve withoutduress. But it was not so. We and many thousands of others volunteered. Perhaps we wereoffended by the arrogance of the German U-boat campaign, and convinced Kaiserism mustbe smashed, once and for all. Possibly we already felt that, in the American interest, Westerndemocracy must not be allowed to go under. But . . . most of us, young, were simply fasci-nated by the prospect of adventure and heroism. . . . Here was our one great chance forexcitement and risk. We could not afford to pass it up.”

—quoted in Doughboy War

The Home Front

World War Irecruiting poster

May 1918Sedition Act passed

September 1918Eugene Debs imprisoned

1919Schenck v. United States

#1918 #1919#1917

Main IdeaTo successfully fight the war, the UnitedStates had to mobilize the entire nation.

Key Terms and Namesconscription, War Industries Board,Bernard Baruch, victory garden, LibertyBond, Victory Bond, Committee on PublicInformation, espionage

Reading StrategyTaking Notes As you read about howthe United States mobilized for war, usethe major headings of the section to cre-ate an outline similar to the one below.

Reading Objectives• Analyze how the United States raised

an army and won support for WorldWar I.

• Explain how the economy was con-trolled to support the war.

Section Theme Government and Democracy To fightthe war, the federal government creatednew agencies to mobilize the economy,draft soldiers, and build public support.

The Home FrontI. Building Up the Military

A.B.C.

II.A.B.

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Many progressives believed that conscription—forced military service—was a violation of demo-cratic and republican principles. Realizing a draftwas necessary, however, Congress, with Wilson’ssupport, created a new system called selective serv-ice. Instead of having the military run the draft, theSelective Service Act of 1917 required all menbetween 21 and 30 to register for the draft. A lotteryrandomly determined the order they were calledbefore a local draft board in charge of selecting orexempting people from military service.

The thousands of local boards were the heart of thesystem. The members of the draft boards were civil-ians from local communities. Progressives believedlocal people, understanding community needs,would know which men to draft. Eventually about 2.8million Americans were drafted.

Volunteers for War Not all American soldierswere drafted. Approximately 2 million men volun-teered for military service. Some had heard stories ofGerman atrocities and wanted to fight back. Othersbelieved democracy was at stake. Many believed theyhad a duty to respond to their nation’s call. They hadgrown up listening to stories of the Civil War and theSpanish-American War. They saw this war as a greatadventure and wanted to fight for their country’scause. To soldiers such as Justin Klingenberger, “Warconsisted of following the flag over a shell-torn field,with fixed bayonet . . . pushing the Hun back fromtrench to trench. . . .” Although the horrors of the warsoon became clear to the American troops,their morale remained high, helping toensure an Allied victory.

African Americans in the War Of thenearly 400,000 African Americans who weredrafted, about 42,000 served overseas ascombat troops. African American soldiersencountered discrimination and prejudice inthe army. They served in racially segregatedunits almost always under white officers.

Despite these challenges, many AfricanAmerican soldiers fought with distinctionin the war. For example, the AfricanAmerican 92nd and 93rd Infantry Divisionsfought in bitter battles along the WesternFront. Many of them won praise from boththe French commander, Marshal HenriPétain, and the United States commander,General John Pershing. The entire 369thInfantry Regiment won the highly prizedFrench decoration, the Croix de Guerre(“war cross”), for gallantry in combat.

Women in the Military World War I was the firstwar in which women officially served in the armedforces, although only in noncombat positions. Womennurses had served in both the army and navy sincethe early 1900s, but as auxiliaries. Before World War I,nurses were not assigned ranks, and the women werenot technically enlisted in the army or navy.

As the military prepared for war in 1917, it faced asevere shortage of clerical workers because so manymen were assigned to active duty. Early in 1917, thenavy authorized the enlistment of women to meet itsclerical needs. By the end of the war, over 11,000women had served in the navy. Although most per-formed clerical duties, others served as radio opera-tors, electricians, pharmacists, and photographers.

The army still did not enlist women. Instead, ithired them as temporary clerical workers. The onlywomen to actually serve in the army were in theArmy Nursing Corps. Army nurses were the onlywomen in the military sent overseas during the war.Over 20,000 nurses served in the army during thewar, including more than 10,000 overseas.

Describing How did Congressensure that the military had enough troops to fight the war?

Organizing Industry The progressive emphasis on careful planning and

scientific management shaped the federal govern-ment’s approach to mobilizing the American war

Reading Check

Women and War Although not allowed in combat, many women served in auxiliary posi-tions, such as nursing. Here, Birmingham, Alabama, women collect money during a Red Crossparade in 1918. In what other capacities did women serve during the war?

History

CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath 457

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Propaganda Posters George Creel’sCommittee on Public Information encouragedAmericans to do all they could to support thewar effort. What is the general theme ofthese posters? Do you think the posterswere effective?

History

economy. To efficiently manage the relationshipbetween the federal government and private compa-nies, Congress created special boards. These boardsemphasized cooperation between big business and government. Business executives, professionalmanagers, and government representatives staffedthe boards. Their goal was to ensure the most efficientuse of national resources to further the war effort.

The War Industries Board One of the first agenciesestablished was the War Industries Board (WIB).Created in July 1917, the WIB’s job was to coordinatethe production of war materials. At first, PresidentWilson was reluctant to give the WIB much authorityover the economy, but by March 1918, he decidedindustrial production needed better coordination. TheWIB was reorganized and Bernard Baruch wasappointed to run it. Under this Wall Street stockbro-ker’s supervision, the WIB told manufacturers what toproduce. It controlled the flow of raw materials,ordered the construction of new factories, and occa-sionally, with the president’s approval, set prices.

Food and Fuel Perhaps the most successful govern-ment agency was the Food Administration, run byHerbert Hoover. This agency was responsible forincreasing food production while reducing civilianconsumption. Instead of using rationing, Hooverencouraged Americans to save food on their own.Using the slogan “Food Will Win the War—Don’tWaste It,” the Food Administration encouraged fami-

lies to “Hooverize” by “serving just enough” and by having Wheatless Mondays, Meatless Tuesdays,and Porkless Thursdays. Hoover also encouraged citizens to plant victory gardens to raise their own vegetables, leaving more for the troops.

While Hoover managed food production, the FuelAdministration, run by Harry Garfield, tried to man-age the nation’s use of coal and oil. To conserveenergy, Garfield introduced daylight savings timeand shortened workweeks for factories that did notmake war materials.

Paying for the War By the end of World War I, theUnited States was spending about $44 million aday—leading to a total expenditure of about $32 bil-lion for the entire conflict. To fund the war effort,Congress raised income tax rates. Congress alsoplaced new taxes on corporate profits and an extratax on the profits of arms factories.

Taxes, however, could not pay for the war. To raisemoney, the government borrowed over $20 billionfrom the American people by selling Liberty Bondsand Victory Bonds. By buying the bonds, Americanswere loaning the government money. The govern-ment agreed to repay the money with interest in aspecified number of years. Posters, rallies, and“Liberty Loan sermons” encouraged people to buythe bonds as an act of patriotism.

Summarizing What federal agen-cies helped control American industries during the war?

Reading Check

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Mobilizing the WorkforceWhile the WIB and other agencies tried to build

cooperation between the government and business,officials knew that they also needed workers to coop-erate if mobilization was to succeed. To preventstrikes from disrupting the war effort, the govern-ment established the National War Labor Board(NWLB) in March 1918. Chaired by William HowardTaft and Frank Walsh, a prominent labor attorney, theNWLB attempted to mediate labor disputes thatmight otherwise lead to strikes.

The NWLB frequently pressured industry to grantimportant concessions to workers, including wageincreases, an eight-hour workday, and the right ofunions to organize and bargain collectively. Inexchange, labor leaders agreed not to disrupt warproduction with strikes or other disturbances. As aresult, membership in unions increased by just overone million between 1917 and 1919.

Women Support Industry The war increasedwork opportunities for women, who filled industrialjobs vacated by men serving in the military. Theseincluded positions in the shipping, manufacturing,and railroad industries. These new jobs for women,however, were not permanent. After the war, whenthe servicemen returned home, most womenreturned to their previous jobs or stopped working.

The Great Migration Begins With the flow of immi-grants from Europe cut off and large numbers of whiteworkers being drafted, the war also opened new doorsfor African Americans. Wartime job openings and highwages drew thousands of African Americans to facto-ries producing war materials. Encouraged by recruit-ing agents promising high wages and plentiful work,between 300,000 and 500,000 African Americans leftthe South to settle in Northern cities. This massive pop-ulation movement became known as the “GreatMigration.” It greatly altered the racial makeup of suchcities as Chicago, New York, Cleveland, and Detroit.

Mexican Americans Head North African Amer-icans were not the only group to migrate north dur-ing the war. Continued political turmoil in Mexicoand the wartime labor shortage in the United Statesconvinced many Mexicans to head north. Between1917 and 1920, over 100,000 Mexicans migrated into Texas, Arizona, California, and New Mexico, pro-viding labor for the farms and ranches of theSouthwest.

Meanwhile, tens of thousands of MexicanAmericans headed north to Chicago, St. Louis,

Omaha, and other cities to take wartime factory jobs.Many Mexican Americans faced hostility and dis-crimination when they arrived in American cities.Like other immigrants before them, they tended tosettle in their own separate neighborhoods, calledbarrios, where they could support each other.

Evaluating How permanent werewomen’s advances in the wartime workplace?

Ensuring Public SupportProgressives in the government did not think

coordinating business and labor was enough toensure the success of the war effort. They alsobelieved that the government should take steps toshape public opinion and build support for the war.

Reading Check

CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath 459

Agency

War IndustriesBoard

RailroadAdministration

FoodAdministration

FuelAdministration

National WarLabor Board

Committee on PublicInformation

Purpose

Organized industry to increase efficiency, maximizing production

Assumed temporary control ofrail lines to modernize equipmentand increase operating efficiency

Supervised agricultural production,promoted food conservation andrationing

Increased production of coal and oil; maintained conservation of fuelwith such innovations as daylightsavings time

Maintained cooperation betweenindustry management and laborunions; acted as mediator to prevent and quickly settle disputes

Provided propaganda to rally citizen support for all aspects of the war effort

Federal Mobilization Agencies

1. Interpreting Charts Which agencyworked with manufacturers and laborunions?

2. Analyzing How did the Fuel Admini-stration’s daylight savings time planachieve its goal?

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460 CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath

Abrams v. United States, 1919The Espionage Act of 1917 made it a crime to “willfully

utter, print, write, or publish any disloyal, profane, scurrilousor abusive language about the government.” Although the actlimited First Amendment freedoms, many Americans believedwinning World War I was more important. ; (See page 962for more information on Abrams v. the United States.)

Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., dissenting:

It is only the present danger of immediate evil or an intentto bring it about that warrants Congress in setting a limit to theexpression of opinion where private rights are not concerned.Congress certainly cannot forbid all effort to change the mindof the country. Now nobody can suppose that the surreptitiouspublishing of a silly leaflet by an unknown man, without more,would present any immediate danger that its opinions wouldhinder the success of the government arms or have any appre-ciable tendency to do so.

In this case, sentences of twenty years’ imprisonment havebeen imposed for the publishing of two leaflets that I believethe defendants had as much right to publish as theGovernment has to publish the Constitution of the UnitedStates now vainly invoked by them. . . . I regret that I cannotput into more impressive words my belief that, in their convic-tion upon this indictment, the defendants were deprived oftheir rights under the Constitution of the United States.

Justice John H. Clarke delivered the majority opinion:

It is argued, somewhat faintly, that the acts chargedagainst the defendants were not unlawful because withinthe protection of that freedom . . . of speech and of thepress . . . and that the entire Espionage Act is unconstitutional. . . .

. . . the plain purpose of their propaganda was toexcite, at the supreme crisis of the war, disaffection, sedi-tion, riots, and, as they hoped, revolution, in this countryfor the purpose of embarrassing, and, if possible, defeat-ing the military plans of the Government in Europe. . . .[T]he language of these circulars was obviously intendedto provoke and to encourage resistance to the UnitedStates in the war, as the third count runs, and the defen-dants, in terms, plainly urged and advocated a resort to ageneral strike of workers in ammunition factories for thepurpose of curtailing the production of ordnance andmunitions necessary and essential to the prosecution ofthe war. . . . Thus, it is clear not only that some evidence,but that much persuasive evidence, was before the jurytending to prove that the defendants were guilty ascharged. . . .

Amendment I—Congress shall make no law respectingan establishment of religion, or prohibiting the freeexercise thereof ; or abridging the freedom of speech,or of the press; or the right of the people peaceablyto assemble, and to petition the Government for aredress of grievances.

C19 20C 664118

Selling the War A new government agency, theCommittee on Public Information, had the task of“selling” the war to the American people. The headof the CPI was journalist George Creel, who recruitedadvertising executives, commercial artists, authors,songwriters, entertainers, public speakers, andmotion picture companies to help sway public opin-ion in favor of the war.

The CPI distributed pamphlets and arranged forthousands of short patriotic talks, called “four-minutespeeches,” to be delivered at movie theaters and pub-lic halls and gathering places. The Four-Minute Menurged audiences to support the war in various ways,from buying war bonds to reporting draft dodgers tothe proper authorities.

Civil Liberties Curtailed In addition to using propa-ganda and persuasion, the government also passedlegislation to fight antiwar activities or enemies athome. Espionage, or spying to acquire secret govern-ment information, was addressed in the Espionage Actof 1917, which established penalties and prison termsfor anyone who gave aid to the enemy. This act alsopenalized disloyalty, giving false reports, or otherwiseinterfering with the war effort. The Post Office evenhired college professors to translate foreign periodicalsto find out if they contained antiwar messages.

The Sedition Act of 1918 expanded the meaningof the Espionage Act to make illegal any publicexpression of opposition to the war. In practice, itallowed officials to prosecute anyone who criticized

Learning From History1. What were the charges against the

defendants?2. On what key point did Holmes and

Clarke disagree?

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Writing About History

CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath 461

Checking for Understanding1. Define: conscription, victory garden,

espionage.2. Identify: War Industries Board, Bernard

Baruch, Liberty Bond, Victory Bond,Committee on Public Information.

3. Describe the contributions of AfricanAmericans during the war.

Reviewing Themes4. Government and Democracy How did

government efforts to ensure supportfor the war conflict with democraticideals?

Critical Thinking5. Analyzing How did World War I cause

the federal government to change itsrelationship with the business world?

6. Organizing Use a graphic organizersimilar to the one below to identify theeffects of the war on the Americanworkforce.

Analyzing Visuals7. Analyzing Posters Examine the

posters on page 458. How do theseimages encourage support for the war?How effective do you think they wouldbe today?

8. Persuasive Writing Imagine that youare working for the Committee onPublic Information. Write text for anadvertisement or lyrics to a song inwhich you attempt to sway public opin-ion in favor of the war.

Effects of War onU.S. Workforce

the president or the government. Combined, theselaws generated over 1,500 prosecutions and 1,000convictions.

A Climate of Suspicion The fear of spies andemphasis on patriotism quickly led to the mistreat-ment and persecution of German Americans. Toavoid German-sounding names, advertisers began tocall sauerkraut “Liberty cabbage” and hamburger“Salisbury steak.” Many schools dropped Germanlanguage classes from their curricula, and orches-tras stopped performing the music ofBeethoven, Schubert, Wagner, and otherGerman composers. Anti-German feelingssometimes led to violence. Some citizensbeat neighbors who were German-born.In Collinsville, Illinois, a mob lynched aGerman-born man whom they sus-pected of disloyalty.

German Americans were not the onlyones under suspicion. Mobs attackedlabor activists, socialists, and pacifists.Newspapers ads urged Americans tomonitor the activities of their fellow citi-zens. Americans even formed privateorganizations, such as the AmericanProtective League and the Boy Spies of America, tospy on neighbors and coworkers. Secretary of WarNewton Baker expressed concern about the growingintolerance:

“There is a growing frenzy of suspicion and hostil-ity toward disloyalty. I am afraid we are going to havea good many instances of people roughly treated onvery slight evidence of disloyalty. Already a number

of men and some women have been tarred andfeathered, and a portion of the press is urging withgreat vehemence more strenuous efforts at detectionand punishment.”

—quoted in Echoes of Distant Thunder

The Supreme Court Limits Free Speech Despiteprotests against the government’s tactics, however,the courts generally upheld the principle behind

them. Although the First Amendment specificallystates that “Congress shall make no law . . .

abridging the freedom of speech, or of thepress,” the Supreme Court decided other-wise, departing from a strict literal inter-pretation of the Constitution.

In the landmark case of Schenck v.the United States (1919), the SupremeCourt ruled that an individual’s free-dom of speech could be curbed whenthe words uttered constitute a “clearand present danger.” The Court usedas an example someone yelling “Fire!”in a crowded theater as a situation inwhich freedom of speech would besuperseded by the theater-goers’ right

to safety. The Court’s majority opinion stated,“When a nation is at war, many things that might besaid in times of peace are such a hindrance to itseffort that their utterance will not be endured solong as [soldiers] fight. . . .” ; (See page 965 for moreinformation on Schenck v. the United States.)

Explaining Why did Congress passthe Espionage Act in 1917?

Reading Check

George Creel

Study CentralTM To review this section, go toand click on Study CentralTM.tarvol2.glencoe.com

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Color My WorldSome bright spots in a dark decade:

! Color newspaper supplements (1914)

! 3-D films (1915)

! Nail polish (1916)

! Three-color traffic lights (1918)

! Color photography introduced by Eastman Kodak (1914)

N O T E B O O K

V E R B A T I MV E R B A T I M

World War FirstsHuman ingenuity goes to work in the service of war:

AERIAL COMBAT, 1914. War takes to the air. Two Allied aircraft chasetwo German planes across Britain.

GAS ATTACKS, 1915. The German High Command admits to usingchlorine gas bombs and shells on the field of combat. Deadly mustardgas is used in 1917.

GAS MASKS. Issued to Allied soldiers in 1915.

DONKEY’S EARS. A new trench periscope enables soldiers to observethe battleground from the relative safety of a trench without riskingsniper fire.

BIG BERTHA. Enormous howitzer gunbombards Paris. “Big Bertha,” namedafter the wife of its manufacturer, isthought to be located nearly 63 milesbehind German lines. Moving at nighton railroad tracks, the gun is difficultfor the Allies to locate.

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“My message was one of death for young men. How odd to applaud that.”WOODROW WILSON,

on returning to the White House after asking Congress for a

declaration of war, 1917

“Food is Ammunition—Don’tWaste It”POSTER FROM U.S. FOOD

ADMINISTRATION,administered by Herbert Hoover

“I have had a hard time gettingover this war. My old world died.”RAY STANNARD BAKER,

journalist

“Let us, while this war lasts,forget our special grievances and close our ranks shoulder to shoulder with our own whitefellow citizens and the alliednations that are fighting fordemocracy.” W.E.B. DU BOIS,

African American scholar and leader, 1918

“America has at one boundbecome a world power in a senseshe never was before.”BRITISH PRIME MINISTER

DAVID LLOYD GEORGE,on the U.S. entry into World War I, 1917

“In the camps I saw barrelsmounted on sticks on which zealous captains were endeavoringto teach their men how to ride a horse.” THEODORE ROOSEVELT,

on touring U.S. military training facilities, 1917

“The war was over, and it seemedas if everything in the world werepossible, and everything was new,and that peace was going to be allwe dreamed about.”FLORENCE HARRIMAN,

Red Cross volunteer, in Paris onArmistice Day, 1918

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American soldiers set sail for Europe.

One of the first color photographs

462 CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath

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MilestonesREPATRIATED, APRIL 10, 1917.VLADIMIR ILYICH LENIN, toRussia, after an 11-year absence.The leader of the leftist Bolshevikparty hopes to reorganize hisrevolutionary group.

SHOT DOWN AND KILLED,APRIL 22, 1918. “THE REDBARON,” Manfred von Richthofen,Germany’s ace pilot. Von Richthofendestroyed more than 80 Alliedaircraft. On hearing of the RedBaron’s death, English fighter pilotEdward Mannock said, “I hope he roasted all the way down.”

ELECTED, NOVEMBER 7, 1916.JEANNETTE RANKIN of Montana,to the U.S. Congress. The firstwoman congressionalrepresentative explained her victoryby saying that women “got the votein Montana because the spirit ofpioneer days was still alive.”

EXECUTED, OCTOBER 15, 1917.MATA HARI, in France, forespionage. The famous Dutchdancer was sentenced to deathfor spying for the Germans.

N U M B E R S 1 9 1 5N U M B E R S 1 9 1 5

A W A R T O E N D A L L W A R S : 1 9 1 4 – 1 9 1 8

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$1,040 Average annualincome for workers in finance,insurance, and real estate

$687 Average income for industrial workers (higher for union workers, lower for nonunion workers)

$510 Average income forretail trade workers

$355 Average income forfarm laborers

$342 Average income fordomestic servants

$328 Average income forpublic school teachers

$11.95 Cost of a bicycle

$1.15 Cost of a baseball

$1 Average cost of a hotel room

39¢ Cost of one dozen eggs

5¢ Cost of a glass of cola

7¢ Cost of a large roll of toilet paper

How to Make a DoughboyTake one American infantryman.

1. Arm with 107 pieces of fighting equipment,including:! rifle ! gas mask! rifle cartridges ! wire cutters! cartridge belt ! trench tool! steel helmet ! bayonet and scabbard! clubs ! grenades! knives

2. Add 50 articles of clothing, including 3 wool blankets and a bedsack.

3. Equip with eating utensils and 11 cooking implements.

4. Train well.

TOTAL COST: $156.30(not including training and transportation to Europe)

Jeannette Rankin

Vladimir Lenin

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General John J. Pershing, commander of the American forces in World War I, could nothelp but feel a sense of pride and excitement as he watched the Second Battalion of the FirstDivision’s 16th Infantry march through the streets of Paris on July 4, 1917:

“. . . The battalion was joined by a great crowd, many women forcing their way into theranks and swinging along arm in arm with the men. With wreaths about their necks and bou-quets in their hats and rifles, the column looked like a moving flower garden. With only asemblance of military formation, the animated throng pushed its way through avenues ofpeople to the martial strains of the French band and the still more thrilling music of cheeringvoices.”

—quoted in The Yanks Are Coming

While his men marched through Paris, Pershing raced to Picpus Cemetery, the burial placeof the Marquis de Lafayette, a French noble who had fought in the American Revolution. Oneof Pershing’s officers, Colonel Charles E. Stanton, raised his hand in salute and acknowledgedthe continuing American-French relationship by proclaiming, “Lafayette, we are here!”

A Bloody Conflict

July 1916Battle of theSomme begins

464 CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath

#1917 #1919

Combat in World War IBy the spring of 1917, World War I had devastated Europe and claimed millions of

lives. Terrible destruction resulted from a combination of old-fashioned strategies andnew technologies. Despite the carnage Europeans had experienced, many Americansbelieved their troops would make a difference and quickly bring the war to an end.

John J. Pershing

#1915

November 1917Communists seizepower in Russia

March 1918Treaty of Brest-Litovsk ends warbetween Russia and Germany

September 1918Beginning of Battle of theArgonne Forest

November 1918Armistice ends war

Main IdeaAfter four years of fighting, the war inEurope ended in November 1918.

Key Terms and Names“no man’s land,” convoy, Vladimir Lenin,Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, armistice,Fourteen Points, League of Nations,Treaty of Versailles, reparations

Reading StrategyOrganizing As you read about the battles of World War I, complete agraphic organizer similar to the onebelow by listing the kinds of warfare andtechnology used in the fighting.

Reading Objectives• Discuss the fighting techniques used in

World War I.• Characterize the American response to

the Treaty of Versailles.

Section ThemeIndividual Action American troopsplayed a major role in helping end thewar, while President Wilson played amajor role in the peace negotiations.

Warfare and Technology

Used in World War I

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Trench Warfare The early offensives of 1914quickly demonstrated that the nature of warfare hadchanged. Troops that dug themselves in and reliedupon modern rifles and a new weapon—the rapid-fire machine gun—could easily hold off the attackingforces. On the Western Front, troops dug a networkof trenches that stretched from the English Channelto the Swiss border. The space between the opposingtrenches was known as “no man’s land,” a rough,barren landscape pockmarked with craters fromartillery fire.

To break through enemy lines, both sides beganwith massive artillery barrages. Then bayonet-wielding soldiers would scramble out of theirtrenches, race across no man’s land, and hurlgrenades into the enemy’s trenches. The results wereoften disastrous. The artillery barrages rarelydestroyed the enemy defenses, and troops crossingno man’s land were easily stopped by enemymachine guns and rifle fire. These kind of assaultscaused staggeringly high casualties. In major battles,both sides often lost several hundred thousand men.

These battles produced horrific scenes of death anddestruction, as one American soldier noted in his diary:

“Many dead Germans along the road. One heapon a manure pile . . . Devastation everywhere. Ourbarrage has rooted up the entire territory like aploughed field. Dead horses galore, many of themhave a hind quarter cut off—the Huns [Germans]need food. Dead men here and there.”

—quoted in The American Spirit

New Technology As it became clear that chargingenemy trenches could bring only limited success atgreat cost, both sides began to develop new technolo-gies to help them break through enemy lines. In April1915, the Germans first used poison gas in the SecondBattle of Ypres. The fumes caused vomiting, blindness,and suffocation. Soon afterward the Allies also beganusing poison gas, and gas masks became a necessarypart of a soldier’s equipment.

In 1916 the British introduced the tank into battle.The first tanks were very slow and cumbersome,mechanically unreliable, and fairly easy to destroy.They could roll over barbed wire and trenches, butthere were usually not enough of them to make a

An American Hero

Although the brutal trenchwarfare of World War I led tomany acts of astonishingbravery, the heroism of oneAmerican, Corporal Alvin York,captured the nation’s imagina-tion. Born in 1887, York grew uppoor in the mountains of Tennessee,where he learned to shoot by hunting wild game.

On October 8, 1918, during the Battle of theArgonne Forest, York’s patrol lost its way and ended upbehind enemy lines. When a German machine gunemplacement on a fortified hill fired on the patrol andkilled nine men, York took command and charged themachine gun. Although the details of the battle areunclear, when it ended, York had killed between 9 and25 Germans, captured the machine guns, and taken132 prisoners. For his actions, he received the Medal ofHonor and the French Croix de Guerre. After returninghome, he used his fame to raise money for the AlvinYork Institute—a school for underprivileged Tennesseechildren.

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difference. While tanks did help troops, they did notrevolutionize warfare in World War I.

World War I also saw the first use of airplanes incombat. At first, planes were used mainly to observeenemy activities. Soon, the Allies and CentralPowers used them to drop small bombs. As technol-ogy advanced, they also attached machine guns toaircraft to engage in deadly air battles known asdogfights.

Describing What new technologieswere introduced in World War I?

The Americans and VictoryWave upon wave of American troops marched

into this bloody stalemate—nearly 2 million beforethe war’s end. These “doughboys,” a nickname forAmerican soldiers, were largely inexperienced, butthey were fresh, so their presence immediatelyboosted the morale of Allied forces.

Winning the War at Sea No American troopshipswere sunk on their way to Europe—an accomplish-ment due largely to the efforts of American AdmiralWilliam S. Sims. For most of the war, the British pre-ferred to fight German submarines by sending war-ships to find them. Meanwhile, merchant ships wouldrace across the Atlantic individually. The Britishapproach had not worked well, and submarines hadinflicted heavy losses on British shipping.

Sims proposed that merchant ships and trooptransports be gathered into groups, called convoys,and escorted across the Atlantic by warships. If sub-marines wanted to attack a convoy, they would haveto get past the warships protecting it. The convoy sys-tem greatly reduced shipping losses and ensured thatAmerican troops arrived safely in Europe. Theyarrived during a pivotal time in late 1917.

Russia Leaves the War In March 1917, riots brokeout in Russia over the government’s handling of thewar and over the scarcity of food and fuel. On March

Reading Check

466 CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath

EasternFront

WesternFront

PalestinianCampaign

CaucasusCampaign

MesopotamianCampaign

Balkan Campaign

ItalianFront

Lusitania sunkMay 7, 1915

Battle of the SommeJuly–Nov. 1916

First Battleof the MarneSept. 1914

Battles of YpresOct.–Nov. 1914Apr.–May 1915

Battle of VerdunFeb.–Dec. 1916

TannenbergAug. 1914

CaporettoOct.–Dec. 1917

GallipoliApr. 1915–Jan. 1916

1

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Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area projection500 kilometers0

500 miles0

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10°W 0° 20°E

AtlanticOcean

M e d i t e r r a n e a n S e a

Black Sea CaspianSea

Baltic

SeaNorthSea

Adriatic Sea

SPAIN

PORTUGAL

FRANCE

ITALY

SWITZ.

UN I T EDK INGDOM

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NETH.

LUX.GERMANY

AUSTRIA-HUNGARY

DENMARK

SWEDENNORWAY

RU S S I A

ROMANIA

BULGARIA

O T TOMANEMP I R E

PERSIA

GREECE

ALBANIA

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EGYPTLIBYA

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ALGERIAMOROCCO

MONTE-NEGRO

SPANISHMOROCCO

London

Paris

Rome

Berlin

Petrograd(St. Petersburg)

ViennaBudapest

Sarajevo

Constantinople

Baghdad

Jerusalem

X

Battles of World War I, 1914–1918

Allied Powers

Central Powers

Neutral nations

German unrestrictedsubmarine warfare zoneAllied offensivesCentral Powers'offensivesFarthest advanceof Central PowersLine of trenchwarfare, 1915–1917Allied victory

Central Powers' victory

Indecisive battle

MotionIn

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15, Czar Nicholas II, the leader of the RussianEmpire, abdicated his throne. Political leadership inRussia passed into the hands of a provisional, or tem-porary, government, consisting largely of moderaterepresentatives who supported Russia’s continuedparticipation in World War I. The government, how-ever, was unable to adequately deal with the majorproblems, such as food shortages, that were afflictingthe nation.

The Bolsheviks, a group of Communists, sooncompeted for power in Russia. In November 1917,Vladimir Lenin, the leader of the Bolshevik Party,overthrew the Russian government and established aCommunist government.

Germany’s military fortunes improved with theBolshevik takeover of Russia. Lenin’s first act afterseizing power was to pull Russia out of the war andconcentrate on establishing a Communist state. Heaccomplished this by agreeing to the Treaty ofBrest-Litovsk with Germany on March 3, 1918.Under this treaty, Russia lost substantial territory,

giving up Ukraine, its Polish and Baltic territories,and Finland. However, the treaty also removed theGerman army from the remaining Russian lands.With the Eastern Front settled, Germany was nowfree to concentrate its forces in the west.

The German Offensive Falters On March 21, 1918,the Germans launched a massive attack along theWestern Front, beginning with gas attacks and a bom-bardment by over 6,000 artillery pieces. Germanforces, reinforced with troops transferred from theRussian front, pushed deeply into Allied lines. Byearly June, they were less than 40 miles (64 km) fromParis.

American troops played an important role in con-taining the German offensive. In late May, as theGerman offensive continued, the Americans launchedtheir first major attack, quickly capturing the villageof Cantigny. On June 1, American and French troopsblocked the German drive on Paris at the town ofChâteau-Thierry. On July 15, the Germans launched

CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath 467

50 kilometers0

50 miles0

Albers Conic Equal-Area projection

N

S

EW

52°N

4°E

St. MihielSept. 1918Argonne Forest

Sept.–Nov. 1918

GuiseAug. 1914

Chˆateau–ThierryMay–June 1918

First Battleof the MarneSept. 1914

Belleau WoodJune 1918

AntwerpSept. 1914

YpresOct.–Nov. 1914Apr.–May 1915July 1917

MonsAug. 1914

MorhangeAug. 1914

Le CateauAug. 1914

NeuveChapelle

Mar. 1915

SommeJuly–Nov. 1916

Somme Offensive1918

Aisne Offensive1918

VerdunFeb.-Dec. 1916

Rhine R

.Eng

lis

h Channel

SeineR

.

Somm e R.

NETHERLANDS

BELGIUMGERMANY

LUX.

F R ANC EParis

Russia1,700,000

British Empire908,400

France1,385,000

World War I Military Deaths*

Italy650,000

United States107,000

Others74,200

Germany1,773,000Austria-Hungary

1,200,000

OttomanEmpire325,000

Bulgaria87,500

Romania335,700 Allies

Central Powers

* Figures are approximate

Western Front, 1914–1918

Allied offensivesCentral Powers'offensivesFarthest advanceof Central PowersLine of trenchwarfare, 1915–1917Armistice Line, 1918

Allied victory

Central Powers' victory

Indecisive battle

Allied Powers

Central Powers

Neutral nations 1. Interpreting Maps Where did the majority of WorldWar I battles occur?

2. Interpreting Charts Which nation suffered the largestnumber of military deaths during World War I?

MotionIn

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one last massive attack in a determined attempt totake Paris, but American and French troops held theirground.

The Battle of the Argonne Forest With theGerman drive stalled, French Marshal FerdinandFoch, supreme commander of the Allied forces,ordered massive counterattacks all along the front. Inmid-September, American troops drove backGerman forces at the battle of Saint-Mihiel. Theattack was a prelude to a massive American offensivein the region between the Meuse River and theArgonne Forest. General Pershing assembled over600,000 American troops, some 40,000 tons of sup-plies, and roughly 4,000 artillery pieces for the mostmassive attack in American history.

The attack began on September 26, 1918. Slowly,one German position after another fell to the advanc-ing American troops. The Germans inflicted heavycasualties on the American forces, but by earlyNovember, the Americans had shattered the Germandefenses and opened a hole in the German lines.

The War Ends While fighting raged along theWestern Front, a revolution engulfed Austria-Hungary, and the Ottoman Turks surrendered. Facedwith the surrender of their allies and a naval mutinyat Kiel in early November, the people of Berlin rose inrebellion on November 9 and forced the Germanemperor to step down. At the 11th hour on the 11thday of the 11th month, 1918, the fighting stopped.Germany had finally signed an armistice, or cease-fire, that ended the war.

Explaining What was VladimirLenin’s first goal after controlling Russia in 1917?

A Flawed Peace In January 1919, a peace conference began in Paris

to try to resolve the complicated issues arising fromWorld War I. The principal figures in the negotiationswere the “Big Four,” the leaders of the victoriousAllied nations: President Wilson of the United States,British prime minister David Lloyd George, Frenchpremier Georges Clemenceau, and Italian prime min-ister Vittorio Orlando. Germany was not invited toparticipate.

Wilson had presented his plan, known as theFourteen Points, to Congress in January 1918. TheFourteen Points were based on “the principle of jus-tice to all peoples and nationalities.” In the first fivepoints, the president proposed to eliminate the gen-eral causes of the war through free trade, disarma-ment, freedom of the seas, impartial adjustment ofcolonial claims, and open diplomacy instead of secretagreements. The next eight points addressed theright of self-determination. They also required theCentral Powers to evacuate all of the countriesinvaded during the war, including France, Belgium,and Russia. The fourteenth point, perhaps the mostimportant one to Wilson, called for the creation of a“general association of nations” known as theLeague of Nations. The League’s member nationswould help preserve peace and prevent future warsby pledging to respect and protect each other’s terri-tory and political independence. ; (See page 956 for thetext of the Fourteen Points.)

The Treaty of Versailles As the peace talks pro-gressed in the Palace of Versailles (vehr·SY), itbecame clear that Wilson’s ideas did not coincidewith the interests of the other Allied governments.They criticized his plan as too lenient towardGermany.

Despite Wilson’s hopes, the terms of peace wereharsh. The Treaty of Versailles, signed by Germanyon June 28, 1919, had weakened or discarded manyof Wilson’s proposals. Under the treaty, Germanywas stripped of its armed forces and was made topay reparations, or war damages, in the amount of$33 billion to the Allies. This sum was far beyondGermany’s financial means. Perhaps most humiliat-ing, the treaty required Germany to acknowledgeguilt for the outbreak of World War I and the devas-tation caused by the war.

The war itself resulted in the dissolution of fourempires: the Russian Empire, the Ottoman Empire,which lost territory in the war and fell to revolutionin 1922, the German Empire after the abdication ofthe emperor and loss of territory in the treaty, and

Reading Check

American Artillery This photo shows some of the materials used to fightWorld War I. Artillery shells are piled at the feet of these American soldiers.What American battle demanded the largest amount of supplies andartillery pieces?

History

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Writing About History

CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath 469

Checking for Understanding1. Define: convoy, armistice, reparations.2. Identify: “no man’s land,” Vladimir

Lenin, Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, FourteenPoints, League of Nations, Treaty ofVersailles.

3. List the four nations that dominated theParis peace conference in 1919.

Reviewing Themes4. Individual Action Why did President

Wilson propose his Fourteen Points?

Critical Thinking5. Analyzing What impact did John J.

Pershing and the Battle of the ArgonneForest have on World War I?

6. Organizing Use a graphic organizer tolist the results of World War I.

Analyzing Visuals7. Analyzing Maps and Charts Examine

the map and chart on page 467.Prepare a quiz with questions based oninformation from both. Give the quiz tosome of your classmates.

8. Descriptive Writing Imagine that youare an American soldier fighting inEurope during World War I. Write a let-ter home describing your situation, andexplain why you are there.

Austria-Hungary, which was split into separatecountries. Furthermore, nine new countries wereestablished in Europe, including Yugoslavia, Poland,and Czechoslovakia.

While Wilson expressed disappointment in thetreaty, he found consolation in its call for the creationof his cherished League of Nations. He returnedhome to win approval for the treaty.

The U.S. Senate Rejects the Treaty The Treatyof Versailles, especially the League of Nations,faced immediate opposition from numerous U.S.lawmakers. A key group of senators, nicknamed“the Irreconcilables” in the press, assailed theLeague as the kind of “entangling alliance” thatWashington, Jefferson, and Monroe had warnedagainst. These critics feared that the League mightsupersede the power of Congress to declare warand thus force the United States to fight in numer-ous foreign conflicts.

A larger group of senators, known as the“Reservationists,” was led by the powerful chairmanof the Foreign Relations committee, Henry CabotLodge. This group supported the League but wouldratify the treaty only with amendments that wouldpreserve the nation’s freedom to act independently.Wilson feared such changes would defeat the basicpurpose of the League and insisted that the Senateratify the treaty without changes.

Convinced that he could defeat his opposition bywinning public support, Wilson took his case directlyto the American people. Starting in Ohio in September1919, he traveled 8,000 miles and made over 30 majorspeeches in three weeks. The physical strain of histour, however, proved too great. Wilson collapsed inColorado on September 25 and returned to the White

House. There, he suffered a stroke and was bedriddenfor months, isolated from even his closest advisers butdetermined not to compromise with the Senate.

The Senate voted in November 1919 and again inMarch 1920, but it refused to ratify the treaty. AfterWilson left office in 1921, the United States negoti-ated separate peace treaties with each of the CentralPowers. The League of Nations, the foundation ofPresident Wilson’s plan for lasting world peace, tookshape without the United States.

Examining What major issues didWilson’s Fourteen Points address?

Reading Check

Results of World War I

Global WarAlthough World War I was fought mainly in Europe,

it touched the lives of peoples throughout the world,including those in Africa and India. By the time the warbroke out, much of Africa and India was under the control of European nations. While the British controlledmuch of India, no less than seven European powers had divided up Africa among themselves. As a result of living under the rule of Europeans, Africans andIndians took part in the great war. About one millionIndians fought for the British in Europe, while nearly as many Africans served in the French army. The fight-ing also spread to Africa, as the Allies fought to seizecontrol of Germany’s African colonies. Why is it accurate to characterize World War I as a globalconflict?

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Critical Thinking

Analyzing Information

470

Why Learn This Skill?The ability to analyze information is important in

deciding your position on a subject. For example,you need to analyze a political decision to deter-mine if you should support it. You would also ana-lyze a candidate’s position statements to determineif you should vote for him or her.

Learning the Skill To analyze information, use the following steps:

• Identify the topic that is being discussed.

• Examine how the information is organized. Whatare the main points?

• Summarize the information in your own words,and then make a statement of your own based onyour understanding of the topic and on what youalready know.

Practicing the SkillRead the following infor-

mation taken from HenryCabot Lodge’s On theLeague of Nations speech.Use the steps listed aboveto analyze the informationand answer the questionsthat follow.

I am as anxious as anyhuman being can be to have the United States renderevery possible service to the civilization and the peace of mankind. But I am certain that we can do it best bynot putting ourselves in leading strings, or subjectingour policies and our sovereignty to other nations. Theindependence of the United States is not only more pre-cious to ourselves, but to the world, than any single possession.

I will go as far as anyone in world service that thefirst step to world service is the maintenance of theUnited States. You may call me selfish if you will, con-servative or reactionary, or use any other harsh adjectiveyou see fit to apply. But an American I was born, an

American I’ve remained all my life. I can never be any-thing else but an American, and I must think of theUnited States first. And when I think of the UnitedStates first in an argument like this, I am thinking ofwhat is best for the world. For if the United States fails,the best hope of mankind fails with it. I have never hadbut one allegiance; I cannot divide it now. I have lovedbut one flag and I cannot share that devotion and giveaffection to the mongrel banner invented for a league.Internationalism, illustrated by the Bolshevik and by themen to whom all countries are alike, provided they canmake money out of them, is to me repulsive. National Imust remain and in that way I, like all Americans, canrender the amplest service to the world.

The United States is the world’s best hope, but if youfetter her in the interest through quarrels of othernations, if you tangle her in the intrigues of Europe, youwill destroy her powerful good, and endanger her veryexistence.

1 What topic is being discussed?

2 What are the main points of this excerpt fromSenator Lodge’s speech?

3 Summarize the information in this excerpt, andthen provide your analysis based on this infor-mation and what you know from the rest of thechapter.

Skills AssessmentComplete the Practicing Skills questions on

page 477 and the Chapter 14 Skill ReinforcementActivity to assess your mastery of this skill.

Applying the SkillAnalyzing Information Find a short, informative pieceof news, such as a political candidate’s position paper,an editorial in a newspaper, or an explanation of a newlaw that will be enacted soon. Analyze the informationand make a statement of your own.

Glencoe’s Skillbuilder Interactive WorkbookCD-ROM, Level 2, provides instruction andpractice in key social studies skills.

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On August 20, 1919, Mary Harris Jones, also known as “Mother” Jones, wasthrown in jail in Homestead, Pennsylvania. The 89-year-old had just finisheddelivering a fiery, impassioned speech in an attempt to gain support for steelunions. Referring to the owners of the big steel companies, she said:

“Our Kaisers sit up and smoke seventy-five cent cigars and have lackeys withknee pants bring them champagne while you starve, while you grow old atforty, stoking their furnaces. You pull in your belts while they banquet. Theyhave stomachs two miles long and two miles wide and you fill them. . . . If Gary[chair of U.S. Steel] wants to work twelve hours a day, let him go in the bloom-ing mill and work. What we want is a little leisure, time for music, playgrounds,a decent home, books, and the things that make life worthwhile.”

—quoted in Labor in Crisis

1917Riots erupt in EastSt. Louis, Illinois

An Economy in TurmoilThe end of World War I brought great upheaval to American society. When the war

ended, government agencies removed their controls from the American economy. Thisreleased pent-up demand in the economy. People raced to buy goods that had beenrationed, while businesses rapidly raised prices they had been forced to keep low duringthe war. The result was rapid inflation. In 1919 prices rose at an average of more than 15percent. Inflation greatly increased the cost of living—the cost of food, clothing, shelter,and other essentials that people need to survive.

The War’s Impact

1918House approves Nineteenth Amendmentgiving women the right to vote

1919Race riots and strikes erupt innumerous northern cities

1920Red Scare andPalmer raids

CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath 471

“Mother” Jones

#1917 #1918 #1919 #1920

Main IdeaAs American society moved from war topeace, turmoil in the economy and fearof communism caused a series of domes-tic upheavals.

Key Terms and Namescost of living, general strike, Red Scare, A. Mitchell Palmer, J. Edgar Hoover,deport

Reading StrategyOrganizing As you read about the war’saftermath, complete a graphic organizersimilar to the one below to list the effectsof the end of World War I on theAmerican economy.

Reading Objectives:• Describe the effects of the postwar

recession on the United States.• Discuss the causes of and reaction to

the Red Scare.

Section ThemeContinuity and Change The postwarperiod proved a difficult readjustmentperiod for the United States, in partbecause of economic turmoil and the fear of communism.

Effects of World War Ion Economy

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Inflation Leads to Strikes Many companies hadbeen forced to raise wages during the war, but infla-tion now threatened to wipe out all the gains workershad made. While workers wanted higher wages tokeep up with inflation, companies wanted to holddown wages because inflation was also driving uptheir operating costs.

During the war, the number of workers in unionshad increased dramatically. By the time the war ended,workers were better organized and much more capableof organizing strikes than they had been before. Manybusiness leaders, on the other hand, were determinedto break the power of the unions and roll back the gainslabor had made. These circumstances led to an enor-mous wave of strikes in 1919. By the end of the year,more than 3,600 strikes involving more than 4 millionworkers had taken place.

The Seattle General Strike The first major striketook place in Seattle, when some 35,000 shipyardworkers walked off the job demanding higher wagesand shorter hours. Soon other unions in Seattle

joined the shipyard workers and organized a generalstrike. A general strike is a strike that involves allworkers living in a certain location, not just workersin a particular industry. The Seattle general strikeinvolved more than 60,000 people and paralyzed thecity for five days. Although the strikers returned towork without making any gains, their actions wor-ried many Americans because the general strike wasa common tactic used in Europe by Communists andother radical groups.

The Boston Police Strike Perhaps the most famousstrike of 1919 took place in Boston, when roughly 75percent of the police force walked off the job. Riotsand looting soon erupted in the city, forcing the gov-ernor of Massachusetts, Calvin Coolidge, to send inthe National Guard. When the strikers tried to returnto work, the police commissioner refused to acceptthem. He fired the strikers and hired a new policeforce instead.

Despite protests, Coolidge agreed the men shouldbe fired. He declared, “There is no right to strike

472 CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath

MOMENTinHISTORYHERO’S HOMECOMINGA wounded soldier of the 369th Regiment, the Harlem“Hell-Fighters,” accepts con-gratulations during a victoryparade through New York Cityin 1919. Facing discriminationwithin their own army, AfricanAmerican soldiers at the frontreceived a warm receptionfrom their French allies.“I have never before experi-enced what it meant really tobe free, to taste real liberty,”one soldier wrote home,“in aphrase,‘to be a man.’ ” TwoAfrican American infantry divisions suffered some 6,000casualties, but at war’s end,they still came home to a segregated American society.

MOMENTinHISTORY

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against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, any-time.” Coolidge’s response brought him to nationalattention and earned him widespread public support.It also convinced the Republicans to make Coolidgetheir vice presidential candidate in the 1920 election.

The Steel Strike Shortly after the police strikeended, one of the largest strikes in American historybegan when an estimated 350,000 steelworkers wenton strike for higher pay, shorter hours, and recogni-tion of their union. Elbert H. Gary, the head of U.S.Steel, refused even to talk to union leaders. Instead,the company set out to break the union by using anti-immigrant feelings to divide the workers.

Many steelworkers were immigrants. The com-pany blamed the strike on foreign radicals and calledfor loyal Americans to return to work. Meanwhile, thecompany hired African Americans and Mexicans asreplacement workers and managed to keep its steelmills operating despite the strike. Clashes betweencompany guards and strikers were frequent, and inGary, Indiana, a riot left 18 strikers dead. In earlyJanuary of 1920, the strike collapsed. The failure of thestrike set back the union cause in the steel industry.Steelworkers remained unorganized until 1937.

Explaining What caused the waveof strikes in 1919?

Racial UnrestAdding to the nation’s economic turmoil was the

return of hundreds of thousands of American sol-diers from Europe who needed to find employment.

Many African Americans who had moved north dur-ing the war were also competing for jobs and hous-ing. Frustration and racism combined to produceviolence. In the summer of 1919, over 20 race riotsbroke out across the nation.

The worst violence occurred in Chicago. On a hotJuly day, African Americans went to a whites-onlybeach. Both sides began throwing stones at each other.Whites also threw stones at an African Americanteenager swimming near the beach to prevent himfrom coming ashore, and he drowned. A full-scale riotthen erupted in the city. Angry African Americansattacked white neighborhoods while whites attackedAfrican American neighborhoods. The riot lasted forseveral days. In the end, 38 people died—15 white and23 black—and over 500 were injured.

Analyzing Why did the end of thewar lead to race riots?

The Red ScareThe wave of strikes in 1919 helped to fuel fears

that Communists were conspiring to start a revolu-tion in the United States. Americans had beenstunned when Lenin and the Bolsheviks seizedpower and withdrew Russia from the war.Americans had become very anti-German as the warprogressed, and when the Communists withdrewRussia from the war, they seemed to be helpingGermany. American anger at Germany quicklyexpanded into anger at Communists as well.Americans began to associate communism withbeing unpatriotic and disloyal.

Reading Check

Reading Check

CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath 473

Effects of World War I on the United States

Developments in the War Effects on U.S.

Interpreting Why did the destruction of European economiescause an industrial boom in the United States?

World War I had profound effects on the United States.

• Boom in U.S. economy; emergence of U.S. asworld industrial leader

• “Red Scare” in postwar U.S.; suspicionof immigrants

• Internal migration in U.S., especially AfricanAmerican migration to Northern cities

• Failure to join League of Nations

• War-torn economies of Europe• Russian Revolution• Industrial demand of wartime• Sacrifices of wartime; disappointment with Versailles

Peace Treaty

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474 CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath

Terror in the Streets After the House of Morgan—a bank in New York City—was damaged by a bomb in 1920,Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer instituted raids on antigovernment activists and many immigrants, often violatingtheir civil liberties in the process. Whom did Palmer appoint to coordinate these investigations?

History

Americans had long been suspicious of Communistideas. Throughout the late 1800s, many Americans hadaccused immigrants of importing radical socialist andCommunist ideas into the United States and blamedthem for labor unrest and violence. Now Communistshad seized control of an entire nation, and fears surgedthat they would try to incite revolutions elsewhere.These fears seemed to be confirmed in 1919, when theSoviet Union formed the Communist International—an organization for coordinating the activities ofCommunist parties in other countries.

The Red Scare Begins As strikes erupted acrossthe United States in 1919, the fear that Communists,or “reds,” as they were called, might seize power ledto a nationwide panic known as the Red Scare.Seattle’s mayor, Ole Hanson, spoke for others whenhe condemned the leaders of the Seattle generalstrike as revolutionaries who wanted to “take posses-sion of our American government and try to dupli-cate the anarchy of Russia.”

In April the postal service intercepted more than30 parcels addressed to leading businesspeople and

politicians that were triggered to explode whenopened. In June eight bombs in eight cities explodedwithin minutes of one another, suggesting a nation-wide conspiracy. One of them damaged the home ofUnited States Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmerin Washington, D.C. Most people believed the bomb-ings were the work of Communists or other revolu-tionaries trying to destroy the American way of life.

The Palmer Raids Declaring that a “blaze of revo-lution” was “burning up the foundations of society,”Palmer took action. He established a special divisionwithin the Justice Department, the GeneralIntelligence Division, headed by J. Edgar Hoover.This division eventually became the Federal Bureauof Investigation (FBI). From late 1919 to the spring of1920, Palmer organized a series of raids on the head-quarters of various radical organizations. Althoughevidence pointed to no single group as the bombers,Palmer’s agents focused on foreign residents andimmigrants. The authorities detained thousands ofsuspects and deported, or expelled from the country,approximately 500 of them.

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Palmer’s agents often disregarded the civil liber-ties of the suspects. Officers entered homes andoffices without search warrants. People were mis-treated and jailed for indefinite periods of time andwere not allowed to talk to their attorneys.

For a while, Palmer was regarded as a nationalhero. His raids, however, failed to turn up any hardevidence of revolutionary conspiracy. When his direprediction that violence would rock the nation onMay Day 1920—a popular European celebration ofworkers—proved wrong, Palmer lost much of hiscredibility and soon faded from prominence.

The Red Scare greatly influenced people’s atti-tudes during the 1920s. Americans often linked radi-calism with immigrants, and that attitude led to a callfor Congress to limit immigration.

Examining After World War I, whywere Americans suspicious of some union leaders?

An End to ProgressivismEconomic problems, labor unrest, and racial ten-

sions, as well as the fresh memories of World War I, allcombined to create a general sense of disillusionmentin the United States. By 1920 Americans wanted anend to the upheaval. During the 1920 campaign, OhioGovernor James M. Cox and his running mate,Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt,ran on a platform of keeping alive Woodrow Wilson’sprogressive ideals. The Republican candidate, WarrenG. Harding, called for a return to “normalcy.” Heurged that what the United States needed was a returnto the simpler days before the Progressive Era reforms:

“[Our] present need is not heroics, but healing; notnostrums, but normalcy; not revolution, but restora-tion; not agitation, but adjustment; not surgery, butserenity; not the dramatic, but the dispassionate; . . .not submergence in internationality, but sustainmentin triumphant nationality.”

—quoted in Portrait of a Nation

Harding’s sentiments struck a chord with voters,and he won the election by a landslide margin ofover 7 million votes. Americans were weary of morecrusades to reform society and the world. Theyhoped to put the country’s racial and labor unrestand economic troubles behind them and build a moreprosperous and stable society.

Explaining How was Harding ableto win the presidential election of 1920?

Reading Check

Reading Check

Writing About History

CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath 475

Checking for Understanding1. Define: cost of living, general strike,

deport.2. Identify: Red Scare, A. Mitchell Palmer,

J. Edgar Hoover.3. Describe the conditions that African

Americans faced after the end of WorldWar I.

Reviewing Themes4. Continuity and Change Why did

Republican Warren G. Harding win theelection of 1920?

Critical Thinking5. Analyzing How did the Palmer raids

deprive some citizens of their civilrights?

6. Organizing Use a graphic organizersimilar to the one below to list thecauses of the Red Scare in the UnitedStates.

Analyzing Visuals7. Analyzing Photographs Study the

photograph on page 472. How mightparades such as this one mobilizeAfrican Americans to work for an end to discrimination?

8. Descriptive Writing Imagine that youare a European immigrant working in a factory in the United States in 1919.Write a letter to a relative in Europeexplaining economic conditions inAmerica and why workers are striking.

Red Scare

Causes

A. Mitchell Palmer and J. Edgar Hoover

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Page 31: World War I and Its Aftermath - HOME & ANNOUNCEMENTS

Reviewing Key Facts16. Identify: Pancho Villa, Franz Ferdinand, Zimmermann

telegram, Bernard Baruch, Committee on Public Information,“no man’s land,” Vladimir Lenin, Fourteen Points, League ofNations, A. Mitchell Palmer, J. Edgar Hoover.

17. What factors contributed to the start of World War I inEurope?

18. What role did American women play in the war effort duringWorld War I?

19. What did the American government do to solve the problemof supplying its troops?

20. What were the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles?21. What were the Palmer raids?

Critical Thinking22. Analyzing Themes: Government and Democracy Do you

think government action to suppress opposition to WorldWar I was justified? Why or why not?

23. Interpreting Primary Sources On September 12, 1918,Socialist leader Eugene V. Debs was convicted of violating theEspionage Act. Debs later spoke to the court at his sentenc-ing. Read his speech and answer the questions that follow.

“I look upon the Espionage laws as a despotic enact-ment in flagrant conflict with democratic principles andwith the spirit of free institutions. . . . I am opposed tothe social system in which we live. . . . I believe in fundamental change, but if possible by peaceful andorderly means. . . .

I am thinking this morning of the men in the millsand factories, . . . of the women who for a paltry wage

1. guerrilla

2. nationalism

3. self-determination

4. propaganda

5. contraband

6. U-boat

7. conscription

8. victory garden

9. espionage

10. convoy

11. armistice

12. reparations

13. cost of living

14. general strike

15. deport

Reviewing Key TermsOn a sheet of paper, use each of these terms in a sentence.

• Congress passed Selective Service Act which required young men ages 21–30 to register for the draft

• Employed women in non-combat roles

Armed Forces

Mobilizing for War

• War Industries Board controlled warmaterials and production

• Committee on Public Informationcreated war propaganda

• Government worked with employersand labor to ensure production

• Congress passed Espionage and Sedition Acts to limit opposition to the war

• Congress increased taxes and sold Liberty Bonds to pay for war

Domestic Front

• Cost of living greatly increased• Economic problems led to racial violence and

widespread strikes• Fear of communism led to Red Scare and Palmer raids

Postwar Problems

Page 32: World War I and Its Aftermath - HOME & ANNOUNCEMENTS

are compelled to work out their barren lives; of the littlechildren who in this system are robbed of their child-hood and . . . forced into industrial dungeons. . . . Inthis high noon of our twentieth century Christian civi-lization, money is still so much more important than theflesh and blood of childhood. In very truth, gold isgod. . . .”

—quoted in Echoes of Distant Thunder

a. According to Debs, what were some problems inAmerican society at this time? How did he believe changeshould be brought about?

b. How did Debs seem to feel about the Espionage Act? Doyou agree with him? Why or why not?

24. Organizing Use a table like the one below to list the significant events of each year from 1914 to 1918.

Practicing Skills 25. Analyzing Information Read the subsections titled “The

Treaty of Versailles” and “The U.S. Senate Rejects the Treaty”on pages 468 and 469. Using the information on thesepages, write an analysis of the effects of the treaty in theform that it was finally accepted.

Geography and History 26. The map on this page shows the geographical changes in

Europe after World War I. Study the map and answer thequestions below. a. Interpreting Maps After World War I, what new coun-

tries were formed using territory that had belonged toAustria-Hungary?

b. Applying Geography Skills What countries acquired territory from the former Russian Empire?

Writing Activity27. Persuasive Writing Take on the role of a newspaper editor

in 1919. Write an editorial favoring or opposing ratification ofthe Treaty of Versailles.

Chapter Activity28. Research Project Both the British and the American govern-

ments used propaganda to garner support for the war. Usethe library and other resources to find examples of thesepropaganda techniques. Compile your research in an illus-trated and captioned poster, and display it in the classroom.

Directions: Choose the best answer to thefollowing question.

Which of the following was one of the primary causes ofWorld War I?F A complex set of alliances among European nationsG The exile of Mexican General Victoriano HuertaH The dissatisfaction of Russian peasantsJ The breakup of the Austro-Hungarian Empire

Test-Taking Tip: Eliminate answers you know are incorrect.For example, the breakup of Austria-Hungary took placeafter World War I, so you can eliminate that answer.Similarly, the exile of Huerta occurred in Mexico, which hadlittle effect on European nations. You also can eliminate thatanswer.

Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area projection500 kilometers

500 miles0

0

0° 20°E

40°N

50°N

10°E

N

SE

W

Balearic Is.Sp.

CorsicaFr.

SardiniaIt.

SicilyIt.

CreteGr.

DodecaneseIsland It.

Alsace-Lorraine Rhineland

SAARLUX.

Tirol

Bessarabia

Byelorussia

E. Prussia

ATLaNTICOCEaN

NorthSea Baltic

Sea

Mediterranean Sea

RUSSIA

FINLANDSWED

EN

NORW

AY

ESTONIA

LATVIALITHUANIA

POLANDGERMANY

CZECH.

AUSTRIAHUNGARY

YUGOSLAVIA

ROMANIA

BULGARIA

TURKEYGREECE

ALBANIA

ITALYSWITZ.

FRANCE

SPAIN

PORTUGAL

UNITEDKINGDOMIRELAND

NETH.

BELG.

DENMARKIndep. 1922

Helsinki

Tallinn

Riga

Kaunas

Warsaw

StockholmOslo

Copenhagen

Berlin

PragueVienna

Budapest

Bucharest

Sofia

Belgrade

TiranaConstantinople

Athens

Danzig

Rome

Bern

Amsterdam

Brussels

Paris

Dublin

MadridLisbon

London

Europe After World War I, 1920

Year Event Significance19141915191619171918

Former German boundary

Former Austria-Hungaryboundary

Former Russian boundary

National boundary

Capital city

CHAPTER 14 World War I and Its Aftermath 477

Self-Check QuizVisit the American Republic Since 1877 Web site at

and click on Self-Check Quizzes—Chapter 14 to assess your knowledge of chapter content.

HISTORY

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