Attack on Civil Liberties and Betrayal at Versailles

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
US History Review Ch 10 Test
Advertisements

Objectives Describe the problems Americans faced immediately after the war. Analyze how these problems contributed to the Red Scare. Understand how the.
The War at Home Congress gives Power to Wilson * War Industries Board
Affects of WWI. Spanish Flu of Estimates of 20 – 40 million deaths worldwide.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Effects of World War I in the United States.
Chapter 6 END OF Lesson 3: Wilson, War & Peace
Wilson at Versailles.  President Wilson and Colonel House studied the causes of the First World War in an effort to make WW I the “war to end all wars”
Ending the “War to End All Wars” …and setting the stage for WWII.
4/23 Take out your Graphic Organizer, index card, a clean sheet of paper #13 I can explain the discrepancies between the Treaty of Versailles and Fourteen.
The End of WWI The Start of Peace. Key Terms and Dates Ratify Treaty Armistice A temporary halt in fighting that allows peace talks to begin A formal.
The Yanks Are Coming! The Yanks Are Coming!. General John J. Pershing, commanding general of the AEF. Referred to as the Doughboys and Yanks. 2 million.
1. Define demobilization 2. Brainstorm some potential problems with demobilization after WWI.
Essential Question What was the impact of WWI on the United States?
Chapter 14 By Hunter Shughart Jake Gordon And Melinda Romito.
What year did World War I begin in Europe? What event was the spark that ignited the conflict?
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 4 Effects of the War Describe the problems Americans faced immediately after the war. Analyze how these.
World War I.
World War I AP U.S. History.
WWI
List the rights given by the 1st Amendment.
Making the Peace & Post-War Changes
America in World War I Period 7 – Part to 1920.
Mobilizing for War.
Objectives Describe the problems Americans faced immediately after the war. Analyze how these problems contributed to the Red Scare. Understand how the.
WWI was supposed to be “The War to End All Wars”
US Becomes a World Power
Objectives Understand how the United States military contributed to the Allied victory in the war. Describe the aims of the Fourteen Points. Analyze the.
Effects of World War I in the United States
On the Home Front and Its Conclusion
American Involvement in World War I
Objectives Describe the problems Americans faced immediately after the war. Analyze how these problems contributed to the Red Scare. Understand how the.
The postwar period proved a difficult readjustment period for the United States, in part because of economic turmoil and the fear of communism. THE WAR’s.
Effects of World War I.
Unit VIID AP United States History
Post War Politics.
WW1 and Beyond.
Unit VIID AP United States History
Ending the “War to End All Wars”
The Impact of WWI.
Do Now In your opinion, what should happen after a war is finished? Should one country be held responsible for what happened during the war, or should.
End of WW1.
The end of the war … and peace treaties
The War at Home and the End of WWI
End of WWI and Start of 1920’s
WWI: The Homefront and Lasting Effects
Ending the “War to End All Wars”
Objectives Understand how the United States military contributed to the Allied victory in the war. Describe the aims of the Fourteen Points. Analyze the.
Jeopardy World War I.
Effects of the War at Home
Wilson, War and Peace.
Bell Ringer Explain one reason why Germany might be resentful towards the rest of the world after World War 1.
American Involvement in World War I
America After the Great War
Objectives Describe the problems Americans faced immediately after the war. Analyze how these problems contributed to the Red Scare. Understand how the.
Chapter 12: The World War I Era
THE FIRST WORLD WAR 19-4.
America in World War I Period 7 – Part to 1920.
American Involvement in World War I
Effects of World War I in the United States
9-4: The Myth of Isolation
Objectives Understand how the United States military contributed to the Allied victory in the war. Describe the aims of the Fourteen Points. Analyze the.
Effects of World War I in the United States
World War I on the Home Front
Aim: How did life change in America during World War I?
Objectives Describe the problems Americans faced immediately after the war. Analyze how these problems contributed to the Red Scare. Understand how the.
Objectives Understand how the United States military contributed to the Allied victory in the war. Describe the aims of the Fourteen Points. Analyze the.
Attack on Civil Liberties and Betrayal at Versailles
The Home front.
A Republican decade.
Objectives Understand how the United States military contributed to the Allied victory in the war. Describe the aims of the Fourteen Points. Analyze the.
Presentation transcript:

Attack on Civil Liberties and Betrayal at Versailles WWI Aftermath Attack on Civil Liberties and Betrayal at Versailles

Attack on Civil Liberties Committee on Public Information propaganda effectively cast Germans as evil force in World War I. B. Espionage and Sedition Acts  Loosely worded laws which gave the government wide authority to prosecute war critics  Numerous arrests and convictions with long prison sentences for those seen as "disloyal"  Supreme Court upheld acts, using "clear and present danger" doctrine to limit free speech in time of war Persecution of radicals Wilson administration focused on WWI and Socialist Party as targets of suppression.

Protests, and Propaganda

The Red Scare Following Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, American hatred for Germany was transferred to Communist Russia. Wilson sent American troops to Russia in 1918 in attempt to undercut Bolshevik government. Following the war, a number of strikes, particularly in the steel industry, alarmed Americans. Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer exaggerated radical threat and created the Federal Bureau of Investigation to fight it.  Series of mail bombs set off panic among government officials  Palmer Raids, January 1920. With blatant disregard for civil liberties, federal officers raided suspected anarchists and aliens without search warrants  Palmer eventually lost credibility with his tactics, though the FBI survived and became the federal crime-fighting unit

The Versailles Peace Conference Hailed as a hero by the French, Wilson faced some major obstacles in implementing his 14 Points (League of Nations, freedom of the seas, etc.) Republicans had won control of Congress in 1918 and many were opposed to his plans  Allies were determined to impose a harsh peace of Germany. Wilson forced to accept compromises at Versailles Germany accepts sole responsibility for war  Germany ordered to pay massive reparations despite economic deprivation  League of Nations is established with collective security concept to stop aggression. American debate over treaty Treaty was criticized in Congress for Article X, which called for American troops to be placed under the command of League of Nations officers  In an attempt to win support from the country, Wilson embarked on a nationwide speaking tour. Suffered collapse and stroke.  Senate rejected the Treaty. Unwilling to give up tradition of nonalignment and to commit the U.S. to collective international action.

The Experience of War Exposed the heterogeneity of the American people and the divisions among them. Government intervened in the economic and influenced people's lives to an extent never done previously. U.S. is now the world's leading economic power and largest trading nation. International system that came into being was unstable, fragmented, and lacked American cooperation Civil liberties restricted in attempt to achieve unity Ended Progressivism and brought mood of cynicism and discouragement to American intellectuals