chapter 18 section 3 victoryineurope. axis surrender in north africa when france surrendered in...

20
Chapter 18 Chapter 18 Section 3 Section 3 Victory Victory In In Europe Europe

Upload: angeline-bumstead

Post on 31-Mar-2015

218 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

Chapter 18Chapter 18Section 3Section 3

Victory Victory

In In

EuropeEurope

Page 2: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

Axis surrender in North AfricaAxis surrender in North Africa• When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed

France’s territories in Africa under control of Vichy, France

• In November 1942 the {Allies planned Operation Torch. Commanded by General Dwight D. Eisenhower, the operation was a planned invasion of northern Africa}

• On Nov. 8th, 65,000 Allied troops landed at Casablanca in Morocco and at Oran and Algiers in Algeria

• As the soldiers established beachheads in Morocco and Algeria, Allied planes and ships cut Axis supply lines from Italy

• Allied troops came in from the east and the west forcing the Axis troops into a trap.

• After several battles in Tunisia, in May 1943 the Axis forces surrendered

Page 3: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under
Page 4: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

The Invasion of ItalyThe Invasion of Italy• {After the victory in Africa, the Allies decided to next invade

Sicily• Led by General George S. Patton the Allies won the island in

less than a month}• The Italian king ordered Mussolini's arrest and signed a truce

with the Allies • But the Germans came in and took Mussolini and set up a new

base for him in northern Italy• Pushing their troops northward through Italy proved difficult for

the allies • Small armies from more than 25 different countries joined the

Allies along the way• After months of brutal warring in the mountains, the Germans

occupying Italy were finally defeated• Soon after that Mussolini was captured and executed by Italian

rebels

Page 5: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

General Patton

Page 6: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

Sea and Air Assaults Sea and Air Assaults

• Meanwhile Germans U-boats in the Atlantic were taking their toll on Allied ships and supplies

• This Battle of the Atlantic took a turn for the better for the Allies with the improvements of sonar equipment, which uses wound waves to detect underwater objects

• {Between the sonar, faster boats and air bombs, by 1944 the Allies won the Battle of the Atlantic}

• In 1943 the Allies began to focus their air strikes on German military production facilities

• By 1944, the Allies had dropped hundreds of thousands of tons of explosives on German factories, supply lines and military centers

Page 7: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under
Page 8: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

Operation OverlordOperation Overlord

• U.S. Army chief of staff and Allied strategist, George C. Marshall led the planning for Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of German-occupied France

• General Eisenhower commanded the invasion• {On June 6, 1944, {led by Omar Bradley, almost 5,000

transports carrying some 150,000 men landed on the beach at Normandy.} Overhead, planes dropped more than 23,000 more troops. This is now known as D-Day}

• The Allied forces had leaked false information to the Germans that they would be attacking France in Calais, so Hitler did not send any reinforcements to Normandy

• After a hard earned victory in Normandy the Allied began their push eastward through France

• Paris was liberated on August 25, 1944.• Another Allied force was moving north through France from the

Mediterranean. Meanwhile, Soviet forces were pressing Germany from the east

Page 9: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

General Omar Bradley

Page 10: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under
Page 11: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

The HolocaustThe Holocaust• Nothing prepared the Allies for the horrors of the {Holocaust,

which was Nazi Germany’s slaughter of European Jews}• If Jews were not forced into groups and shot, they were sent to

concentration camps.• These camps were designed for the specific purpose of

{genocide- the deliberate annihilation of an entire race or culture}

• Jewish men, women and children were brought to the camps in sealed railroad cars

• They were then stripped and marched into large shower rooms were they were gassed. Their bodies were then cremated

• {About 6 million Jews, about 2/3 of the Jewish population in Europe, were murdered}

Page 12: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

Continued….Continued….

• {The Nazis also killed hundreds of thousands of Gypsies, Poles, mentally disabled people, and homosexuals}

• When the Allies liberated the death camps, they found thousands of emaciated survivors on the verge of death

• Some non-Jewish people in Nazi occupied countries either assisted the Nazi’s or failed to prevent them from sending the Jews to the camps

• Others worked heroically to save the lives of Jews.

Page 13: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under
Page 14: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

Defeating Germany Defeating Germany • By September 1944 the Allies crossed the German

border• While the Allied halted to regroup and bring in

supplies, Germany launched their final counter attack• In the Battle of the Bulge, 200,000 German troops

attacked the U.S. force of 80,000.• The U.S. 101st Airborne Division were completely

surrounded. When asked to surrender General Anthony McAuliff offered only one word in reply: “Nuts”

• But Allied generals rush in reinforcements and they were able to push the Germans back

• By January 1945 it was pretty clear the German offensive had failed

Page 15: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

Battle of the Bulge - New Year's Day, snow & frost-covered

Browning .30 caliber LMG,in position near Sourbrodt, Belgium,

Jan 1, 1944

Page 16: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

The Yalta ConferenceThe Yalta Conference

• Roosevelt was elected for an unprecedented fourth term with Harry S. Truman as his running mate

• {In February 1945, Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin met at the Yalta Conference to plan for post war peace.}

• At the conference Stalin pledged to declare war on Japan after they were done in Germany

• The Allied agreed to divide and occupy Germany after the war and outlined the plans for a new international peace organization

Page 17: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

The Race to BerlinThe Race to Berlin

• During the early months of 1945, Allied bombers continued to blast German cities

• In one massive two day attack on Dresden, Allied bombers created the worst firestorm of WWII.

• The civilian casualties at Dresden were estimated at between 40 and 60 thousand

• In March troops crossed the Rhine River into Germany, by then the Soviets occupied much of eastern Europe

• {On April 30 1945, Adolph Hitler committed suicide}. He was found in his bunker underneath the city of Berlin

• Germany surrendered on May 7th

Page 18: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

D

R

E

S

D

E

N

Before Feb. 1945 After the Bombing

Page 19: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under

The German city of The German city of Rothenburg now and Rothenburg now and

after it was after it was destroyed during destroyed during

WWIIWWII

Page 20: Chapter 18 Section 3 VictoryInEurope. Axis surrender in North Africa When France surrendered in 1940, Germany placed France’s territories in Africa under