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Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

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Page 1: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Freedom Project

World War I WorkshopUniversity of Delaware

February 24-25, 2012

Page 2: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Assassination of Franz Ferdinand (June 28, 1914)

Young Serbian – Gavrio Prinzip - assassinates the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne.

Page 3: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Austria invades Serbia (July 29, 1914)

Allies choose sides & a small conflict spreads.

Page 4: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Germany Invades Neutral Belgium (August 4, 1914)

British reactions US reactions

Page 5: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Wilson declares neutrality (August 19, 1914)

“The United States must remain neutral in fact as well as in name…”

Page 6: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Britain Blockades Germany (January 31, 1915)

British mine the North Sea and authorize the use of neutral flags on British merchant ships.

Page 7: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Germany Establishes War Zone Around Britain (February 4, 1915)

Try to stop Americans from trading with Allies (Britain, France etc.).

Page 8: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

“Thrasher Incident” (March 1, 1915)

German sub torpedoes British passenger ship. First passenger

ship sunk during WWI. Leon Thrasher, a passenger on the

Falaba, became the 1st US citizen killed.

Page 9: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Lusitania Sunk (May 7, 1915)

German sub torpedoes British passenger ship Lusitania killing 128 Americans

Page 10: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Great Migration Begins (1915-1950)

Artist Jacob Lawrence illustrates the movement of millions of African-Americans from south to Northern cities. Labor shortages opened

factory jobs in the North.

Page 11: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Sussex Pledge (May 14, 1916)

After U-boats torpedo the ferry boat “Sussex,” Germany promises to not sink passenger ships. Merchant ships would not be sunk unless contraband found and provisions made for safety

of passengers and crew.

Page 12: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Germany Suspends Submarine Assaults (August 31, 1916)

Page 13: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Election of 1916(November 7, 1916)

Wilson wins re-election: “He Kept Us Out of War”

Electoral Results

Red - Democratic (Wilson) Blue = Republican (Charles Hughes)

Page 14: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Jeanette Rankin Elected to Congress (November 7, 1916)

Rankin becomes the 1st woman elected to Congress. Voted against American entrance into WWI and WWII.

Page 15: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Germany Resumes Unrestricted Submarine Warfare (Jan 31, 1917)

Germany breaks its Sussex Pledge not to attack passenger or merchant ships. Germans hoped to win the war with one last

offensive.

Page 16: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

US Breaks Off Relations with Germany (February 3, 1917)

“…the Government of the United States can have no choice but to sever

diplomatic relations with the German Empire altogether.”

Page 17: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Zimmermann telegram released (March 1, 1917)

German diplomat secretly offers Mexico guns, money, and its “lost territory in Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona” if Mexico attacks the United States when Germany goes to war with the United States.

Page 18: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

1st Russian “February” Revolution Begins (February 22, 1917)

Leads to the overthrow of Tsar Nicholas II’s autocratic government. A second “October”

revolution leads to communist take-over of Russia.

Page 19: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Russian Revolution Begins (March 8, 1917)

Vladimir Lenin led the successful “Bolshevik” or communist revolution.

Page 20: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Propaganda Used to Rally Support for the Allies

Page 21: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

US military enters Mexico in pursuit of Pancho Villa (March 1916)

Villa’s forces attacked US citizens and soil after the US lends support to his rival in the struggle for control of

Mexican government.

Page 22: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Wilson asks Congress to declare war on Germany (April 2, 1917)

“The world must be made safe for democracy.”

Page 23: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

A World War

Page 25: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Army Intelligence Testing Begins (May 1917)

Robert Yerkes leads committee that develops Army’s Alpha and Beta Tests which were administered to 1.7 million US Army

recruits during WWI. IQ testing becomes popular and factors into 1920 debates on immigration quotas and school

placements.

Page 26: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Selective Service Act (May 18, 1917)

2.8 million Americans between ages of 18-45 drafted.

Page 27: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

First US Troops Arrive in France (June 26, 1917)

French children watch the arrival of US “doughboys.”

“Lafayette, we are here!”

Page 28: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

War Revenue Act (October 13, 1917)

Lowest Tax Rate Highest Tax Rate

6% 77%

Graduated income tax funds 1/3rd of US war costs.

Page 29: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (March 3, 1918)

Leon Trotsky

Russians sign separate peace with Germany & withdraw from the war.

Page 30: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Influenza Pandemic Begins (March 11, 1918)

Albert Mitchell was the first reported case at Fort Riley, Kansas. Lasted 16 months.

Total dead worldwide = 25 million; US = 600,000.

Page 31: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Daylight Savings Time Introduced (March 31, 1918)

Designed to conserve energy and increase

productivity. Repealed after 7 months in 1919.

Page 32: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Armistice Signed (Nov 11, 1918)

WWI ends

Page 33: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

18th Amendment Ratified (January 16, 1919)

Prohibited the manufacture, sale, or consumption of alcoholic beverages. Era of Prohibition begins.

Page 34: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Schenck v US (March 13, 1919)

“The question in every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and

are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger…When a nation is at war many things that might be said in time of peace…will

not be endured…” Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes

Page 35: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Treaty of Versailles Signed (June 28, 1919)

The “Big 4” met in Paris to negotiate terms of a peace agreement.

Lloyd George of Britain, Orlando of Italy, Clemenceau of France, and Woodrow Wilson of the U.S.

Page 36: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Wilson Submits Treaty of Versailles to US Senate (July 10, 1919)

“The United States is the world's best hope, but if you fetter her in

the interests and quarrels of other nations, if you tangle her in the intrigues of Europe, you will destroy her powerful good, and endanger her very existence.”

“Dare we reject it and break the heart of the

world?”

President Wilson Senator Henry Cabot Lodge

The debate erupts

Page 37: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Wilson Cancels Speaking Tour(September 25, 1919)

Route of Wilson’s 8,000 mile speaking tour on which he tried to rally support for the Treaty of Versailles. President collapses in

Pueblo, Colorado.

Page 38: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Wilson Suffers a Stroke (October 2, 1919)

“Petticoat presidency” begins?

Page 39: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Red Scare(January 1, 1920)

US Attorney General leads raids on alleged radical centers and arrests more than 6,000 suspected communists and

radicals.

A. Mitchell Palmer

Page 40: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Final Defeat of Treaty of Versailles in Senate (March 19, 1920)

US eventually signed a separate peace agreements with Germany, Austria, Hungary after Warren Harding takes office.

Page 42: Freedom Project World War I Workshop University of Delaware February 24-25, 2012

Europe’s New Boundaries

1914

Before WWI

1922

After WWI