the home front

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The Home Front & The Aftermath of the War

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Page 1: The home front

The Home Front&

The Aftermath of the War

Page 2: The home front

USSR• Leningrad – under siege for 900 days

• Battle of Machines – entire factories were moved to the interior and produced war munitions.

• Soviet women worked in industries, mines, railroads, some served in the military as snipers and aircrew.

Page 3: The home front
Page 5: The home front

Germany• To maintain morale Hitler refused to cut

consumer goods production or to increase the production of armaments

• 1942 order massive increase in armaments, Albert Speer was put in charge (too late)

• 1944 Schools, theaters, and cafes were closed

• Women were encouraged to enter the work force, few did

Page 6: The home front

Japan• Wartime Japan was

highly mobilized

• Young Japanese men were encouraged to volunteer in suicide mission against the U.S. (kamikaze)

• Female employment increased in farming and the textile industry– Chinese and Korean labors

were brought in to meet the labor shortage

Kamikaze attack on the LST534

Page 7: The home front

Bombing of Cities• Most thought that bombing civilian populations

would be an effective way to force governments to make peace.

• Battle of Britain – proved this theory wrong!• British began bombing German cities

– Destruction of Dresden

• Incendiary bomb create firestorms• 500,000 civilians die in bombing – survivors

were not more determined to fight to the death• Bombing did not slow down production of war

goods

Page 8: The home front

Bombing of Cities cont.

• The bombing of civilians reached a new level with the first atomic bomb.

U.S. B-29 Superfortress

Page 9: The home front

Harry Truman• Harry Truman – U.S. Pres after FDR dies

– Has to decide if U.S. should use atomic bomb

Page 10: The home front

Atomic Bomb

• Use of Atomic Bomb– Allow U.S. to avoid invasion of Japan

• Estimated 90% casualty rate to invade JAP – Aug 6 – 1st bomb dropped on Hiroshima– Aug 9 – 2nd bomb dropped on Nagasaki

• Both cities leveled• Hiroshima: 71,379 instantly killed, 70,000 die

later from radiation poisoning.• Nagasaki: 25,000 instantly killed, 45,000 die

by end of year from radiation poisoning

Page 11: The home front

Atomic Bomb cont.

• Almost everything within a one-mile radius of the explosion’s center spontaneously combusted.

• Granite stone melted

• People vaporized left ghostly images imprinted on stone walls & sidewalks.

*Information from Everything World War II

Page 13: The home front

End of the War

• Aug 14 – Emperor Hirohito surrendered– 17 million dead in battle– 20 million dead civilians– Some estimate total dead 50 million

– Immediately after the war, Russia and the U.S. went their separate ways

– This rivalry between east & west was known as the Cold War

Page 14: The home front

End of the War in Europe• Allies pushed inland & broke Ger defenses•August 1944 –Allies liberated Paris•Russians defeated Germans at Battle of Kursk•Soviets move on to occupy Warsaw–Jan 1945•March 1945 – crossed Rhine River into Germany•End April 1945 – Allies in N. Germany moved toward Elbe R & linked w/Soviets•Allies entered Berlin April 23, 1945

•Hitler committed suicide April 30, 1945-2 days later Mussolini is killed•May 7, 1945-Germans surrendered -VE Day

Page 15: The home front

• Nuremberg Trials– Dachau Trials –

Prosecutor Colonel Denson (Bham, AL)

– Alleged former Nazi deported to Austria from U.S.

Nuremberg Trials

Page 16: The home front

• West thought Soviets were pushing Communism world-wide

• Soviets viewed the West especially America pushed global capitalism

• March 1946 “Iron curtain” divided EU into two hostile camps