Top Banner
World War I: New Technology and U.S. Involvement The History Channel on 'Trench Warfare' * Today’s focus will be on the use of new methods and technology in World War I and the United States’ Involvement on the Western Front *
28

World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

Feb 23, 2016

Download

Documents

ALEXA

World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement. * Today’s focus will be on the use of new methods and technology in World War I and the United States’ Involvement on the Western Front * . The History Channel on 'Trench Warfare'. German trenches at the right, British at the left. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

World War I: New Technology and U.S. Involvement

The History Channel on 'Trench Warfare'

* Today’s focus will be on the use of new methods and technology in World War I and the United States’ Involvement on the Western Front *

Page 2: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement
Page 3: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement
Page 4: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

German trenches at the right, British at

the left.

Page 5: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement
Page 6: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement
Page 7: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement
Page 8: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement
Page 9: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement
Page 10: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

* “Going over the top”

Page 11: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

* Problems in the trenches

Page 12: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

* Problems in the trenches: “Trench Foot” and “Trench Mouth”

Page 13: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement
Page 14: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

* Problems in the trenches: Rats

Page 15: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

* Problems in the trenches: Body Lice

Page 16: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

* Problems in the trenches: Snipers

Page 17: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement
Page 18: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

* New Weapons: Tanks

Page 19: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement
Page 20: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement
Page 21: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

* New Weapons: Poison Gas

* Chlorine, Mustard Gas

Page 22: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

* New Weapons: Poison Gas

Page 23: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

* New Weapons: Poison Gas

Page 24: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

* New Weapons: Flamethrower

Page 25: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

* New Weapons: Barbed Wire

Page 26: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

Americans Arrive on the Western Front * Arrival of Americans changed course of war and helped Allies pull off a “victory” *

* The U.S. troops were escorted by a convoy system across the Atlantic *

* June – July 1917, American troops supplemented Allied powers on the Western Front (“doughboys”)

* July 1917, John J. Pershing and the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) arrive in Paris – Pershing’s VIEWS on the U.S. involvement were different than other Allied Powers’…

* AEF troops arrived at the rate of 10,000 a day, Germans could NOT sustain fighting!

* Different tech. from the British

Page 27: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement

Americans Arrive on the Western Front * Germans launch HUGE offensive in March 1918 (July) – AEF troops played large role in preventing Central powers from taking Paris *

*September 1918, AEF under Pershing launch the Meuse-Argonne Offensive – aka the Battle of Argonne Forest * Argonne Forest was CRUCIAL to the Allied war effort because it caused the Germans to begin their final retreat!

* November 11, 1918 – Armistice Day signaled the end of World War I *

* By October 1918, the Central powers had fallen apart (Ger., A-H, Ott.)

Battle of Argonne - "Trench Warfare"

Page 28: World War I : New Technology and U.S. Involvement