North Africa to Italy to France to Germany

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
MAJOR BATTLES War in Europe & Africa. Battle of the Atlantic German U-Boats sank any supply ship in the Atlantic  1 st seven month of ’42 = 681 ships.
Advertisements

US History. War Plans -Roosevelt and British leader Churchill meet -Germany is top priority -only an unconditional surrender is acceptable -Battle of.
WWII: The US War in Europe. War on Two Fronts After Pearl Harbor, Germany and Italy declared war on the United States. The USA now had to fight a war.
The War for Europe & North Africa
War Plans -Roosevelt and British leader Churchill meet -Germany is top priority -only an unconditional surrender is acceptable -Battle of the Atlantic.
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute March 31, 2011 U.S. History Mr. Green.
Winston Churchill British Prime Minister Joseph Stalin Russian Leader Franklin Delano Roosevelt US President Allied Powers Not pictured: Charles de Gaulle.
Part I: 16.4 Allied Victory in Europe Ms. Bielefeld Spring 2012.
“The European Theater”
Hitler betrays the non-aggression pact with Stalin and invades S.U. in the summer of 1941 Hitler wants Germany to invade S.U. to acquire oil and Stalingrad.
The War for Europe and North Africa
Defeating the Axis Powers Strategy. Europe
War for Europe and North Africa October 22, 2007.
Date____Page____ Title: Victory in Europe Warmup: 1.Write down five facts about the events and results of the North African campaign and Hitler’s invasion.
Chapter 17 Section 2 The War for Europe and north Africa.
Chapter 17 Section 2 The War for Europe and north Africa.
D-Day & Battle of the Bulge December 10, Summary –1942 to 1943 Axis powers from OFFENSIVE to DEFENSIVE –1944 to 1945 Final crushing of Axis powers.
World War II D-Day to Unconditional Surrender. Europe Four stages of Attack: 1.North Africa 2.Italy and Eastern Europe 3.France and Western.
World War II Victory. The Big Three USSR –Joseph Stalin U. S. –Franklin D. Roosevelt Great Britain –Winston Churchill.
Pushing the Axis Back.  Casablanca Conference  Strategic Bombing  Striking at the “Soft Underbelly” ◦ Italy was considered to be the weak area of Europe.
AMERICA TURNS THE TIDE THE UNITED STATES IN WORLD WAR II.
Chapter 26 Section 3 War in Africa and Europe. Allied Advances How did the Allies turn the tide in Europe and North Africa? How did the Allies turn the.
Chap 25 Sec 3 B. North Africa and Italy 1. Erwin Rommel (Desert Fox) lead German Afrika Korps 2. Tried to take Egypt & Suez Canal 3. British General.
WAR IN AFRICA AND EUROPE Section 3. ALLIED ADVANCES Churchill convinced the Americans to push the Axis out of Africa before invading Europe Churchill.
World War II, Part 5: War in the European Theater Goal 10.
The European Theater.
The Allies  After Pearl Harbor was bombed by the Japanese the US entered the war  FDR & Ghurchill meet, decide on a two front war  They target North.
WORLD WAR II WAR IN EUROPE.
17.2 The War for Europe and North Africa. The United States and Britain Join Forces  Their first major decision was to make the defeat of Germany the.
War Plans -Roosevelt and British leader Churchill meet *Dec Germany is top priority over Japan -only an unconditional surrender is acceptable.
The War for Europe And North Africa Chapter 17 Section 2.
World War II European Theatre. The Soft Underbelly Sicily Anzio Stalingrad Leningrad Normandy Battle of the Bulge Battle of the BulgeEgypt Morocco Tunisia.
WWII European Theatre Mr. Wells – Winkler MS.
Chapter 25.2 Notes.
Vocabulary Words blitzkrieg: lightning war amphibious: operating on land or water Luftwaffe: German Air Force.
The War in Europe.
Standard and Objective
D-Day & Battle of the Bulge
Increasing Pressure on Germany
The War for Europe and North Africa
The War for Europe & North Africa
WORLD WAR II 1. WWII IN EUROPE Allies vs Axis Powers
The Allies are Victorious
World War II Part #3.
Operation Overlord By 1942 the Americans and the British were considering the possibility of a major Allied invasion across the English Channel. Operation.
Part One: The European Theater
D-Day. D-Day Instead of a full attack on Japan, the u. s Instead of a full attack on Japan, the u.s. decided to concentrate on germany first…Why?
IX. Operation Overlord: D-Day June 6,1944
D-DAY June 6, 1944 Stokes Letters Activity Stokes Letters Activity.
World War II European Theatre.
The War in Europe.
War in Europe.
Ending WWII.
European Theater Pacific Theater
Ch. 14 Sec. 1 U.S. Fighting in Europe
Allied Turning Points in WWII
Allies Turn the Tide.
Chapter 17 Part 2 Pages
War for Europe & North Africa
16.4 The Allies Are Victorious
D-Day Unit 8.
The War for Europe and North Africa
The Allies are Victorious
Ending the War in Europe
The Tide Turns: Germany’s Defeat
World War II European Theatre.
WORLD WAR II 1. WWII IN EUROPE Allies vs Axis Powers
USH2 Unit 5: America and the World
The Tide Turns: Germany’s Defeat
The War for Europe and North Africa
Presentation transcript:

North Africa to Italy to France to Germany War in Europe North Africa to Italy to France to Germany

North Africa Stalin wants an invasion of Western Europe to relieve pressure England & USA invade North Africa instead November 1942: 107,000 troops land in North Africa Led by Dwight D. Eisenhower May 1943: German’s surrender General Erwin Rommel “The Desert Fox” goes to Europe See him again on D-Day

Italian Campaign 1943: FDR & Churchill meet in Casablanca FDR wants cross channel invasion of France and push through to Germany Churchill wants to attack “Europe’s soft underbelly”: Italy Allies invade & capture island of Sicily July 1943: King of Italy strips Mussolini of his power Italians rejoice that the war is over Hitler disagrees & seizes control of Italy & reinstates Mussolini 18 more months of fighting to drive Germany out of Italy Mussolini is captured April 1945 & executed & body hung upside down in Milan

D-Day – June 6, 1944 General Eisenhower organizes massive invasion of France American & British Paratroopers land behind German lines to prevent reinforcements 156,000 troops, 4,000 landing craft, 600 warships, 11,000 planes 5 beach heads: American: Omaha, Utah English/Canadian: Gold, Sword, Juno 10,000 casualties Allies hold onto beachhead and break out in July Liberate Paris in July September 1944: Germans driven out of France, Belgium, Luxembourg & Netherlands

Battle of the Bulge October 1944: Allies invade Germany Hitler plans one final attack to stop invasion Americans ignore intelligence reports of attack December 1944: 300,000 German troops attack American lines The dent in the line resembles a bulge or bubble American units surrounded and hold on for a month 101st Airborne refuses surrender Germany finally pushed back Lost 120,000 men, 600 tanks and 1,600 planes Nothing to do but retreat

Unconditional Surrender April 25 1945: Soviets storm Berlin Deserting Germans are executed Soviet soldiers rape & murder civilians April 29 1945: Hitler marries Eva Braun, write farewell blaming Jews for the war and generals for losing it & kills himself Bodies are removed from bunker & burned A week later Germany surrenders unconditionally to Eisenhower May 8: VE Day