chapter 36 over there: the united states and the first world war 1914–1918

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Chapter 36 Chapter 36 Over There: The United States and the First World War 1914–1918

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Page 1: Chapter 36 Over There: The United States and the First World War 1914–1918

Chapter 36Chapter 36

Over There: The United States and the

First World War 1914–1918

Page 2: Chapter 36 Over There: The United States and the First World War 1914–1918

Wilson, the World, and MexicoWilson, the World, and Mexico

Wilson’s moral diplomacy Criticizes Roosevelt gunboat diplomacy Criticizes Taft’s dollar diplomacy Influenced by Christian pacifism Believes in negotiation, not war

Wilson: the missionary Had Southern prejudices Wanted to prescribe good behavior Ordered Marines into Haiti

Page 3: Chapter 36 Over There: The United States and the First World War 1914–1918

Wilson, the World, and Mexico Wilson, the World, and Mexico (cont.’d)

Mexican civil war erupts U.S. sent troops at Vera Cruz to avenge insulted

American honor Even U.S.-supported Carranza condemns U.S. U.S. and Mexico barely avoid war

Pancho Villa attacks Americans Raids into U.S. Carranza offers to capture Villa Wilson sends troops into Mexico instead

John J. Pershing Villa outwits American military

Page 4: Chapter 36 Over There: The United States and the First World War 1914–1918

The Great WarThe Great War

Towards war Assassination of Franz Ferdinand Arms race, nationalism, alliances escalate war Central Powers: Germany, Austria-Hungary, Turkey Allied Powers: Britain, France, Russia (later Italy)

American reaction Respond with disbelief and disgust Believe U.S. above such savagery Wilson declares U.S. neutral Most agree with neutral stance

Page 5: Chapter 36 Over There: The United States and the First World War 1914–1918

The Great WarThe Great War (cont.’d)

Sympathy with the Allies Many see Britain as motherland U.S. business interest with Allies France helped U.S. in revolution

Sympathy for the Central Powers Many descendants of Germany, Austria Many Irish hate Great Britain Jews remember Russian cruelty

Page 6: Chapter 36 Over There: The United States and the First World War 1914–1918

The Great WarThe Great War (cont.’d)

Stalemate Germany’s Schlieffen Plan Plan fails due to Belgian resistance Germans stop Russia at Tannenberg Stalemate at Western Front

New technology of killing Airplane, mustard gas, tanks new weapons Machine guns make biggest difference Attack into machine fire leads to high casualties Tanks introduced

Page 7: Chapter 36 Over There: The United States and the First World War 1914–1918

The Great WarThe Great War (cont.’d) War at Sea

Main purpose economic Britain blockades Germany Americans rely little on German trade Germany gets new weapon: U-boat British Isle waters become war zoned Do not guarantee neutral ships’ safety Submarines must strike without warning American lives lost aboard Lusitania

1,198 killed Carried 4,200 cases of small arms

Germans did not stop unrestricted submarine warfare Germans wanted to keep U.S. out of war Germans sank Sussex, made Sussex Pledge

Page 8: Chapter 36 Over There: The United States and the First World War 1914–1918

America Goes to WarAmerica Goes to War

War potentially inevitable Wilson begins military buildup Some Congressional critics hold back Wilson settles for compromise

Election of 1916 Wilson: “He kept us out of the war” Republicans run Charles Evans Hughes Roosevelt labels Republicans as pro-war Wilson wins with narrow margin

Page 9: Chapter 36 Over There: The United States and the First World War 1914–1918

America Goes to WarAmerica Goes to War (cont.’d)

Wilson attempts “peace without victory” Germans resume unrestricted submarine warfare Germans: defeat Britain before U.S. mobilizes U.S. Congress declares war Economics part of reasoning

Page 10: Chapter 36 Over There: The United States and the First World War 1914–1918

American Goes to WarAmerican Goes to War (cont.’d)

Hun and his Kultur Americans perceive Germans as barbaric “Rape of Belgium” creates evil image British propaganda German saboteurs create suspicion Zimmerman telegram in 1917

American contribution Germans winning in early 1917 Allies provide navy escort for merchant ships Allies set up convoy for crossing Atlantic Submarine warfare loses effectiveness

Page 11: Chapter 36 Over There: The United States and the First World War 1914–1918

American Goes to WarAmerican Goes to War (cont.’d)

Over there John Pershing keeps U.S. troops separate Russia pulls out of war; hurts Allies By Spring 1918 Allies winning

Chateau-Thierry Germans surrender November 11, 1918

Armistice Americans celebrate American sacrifice minor compared to other Allies

Page 12: Chapter 36 Over There: The United States and the First World War 1914–1918

Discussion QuestionsDiscussion Questions

Examine Wilson’s dealings with Mexico. Why did the United states end up sending forces into Mexico? How was the situation finally resolved

What were the causes of the Great War? Was this war inevitable?

Was the United States truly a neutral power during the start of the Great War? What influence did our position have on the war?

What factors brought America into the Great War? Why did we join the side of the Allies? Did we ultimately save Europe, or make things worse?