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End of WWII 3.29.16.

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Presentation on theme: "End of WWII 3.29.16."— Presentation transcript:

1 End of WWII

2 Looking Forward Today: End of the war & Study guide Tomorrow: review
Thursday: Unit 8 Test Friday: Unit 9 – The Early Cold War

3 D-Day: Success! After 2 weeks, 500,000 Allied soldiers in France
In 4 weeks, 1 million

4 The Allies Liberate Paris
The Allies make it to Paris in August 1944. By September, the Allies liberated France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and much of the Netherlands.

5 The Battle of the Bulge Hitler’s Last Offensive
Hitler is now faced with the Soviets on the east and the Allies on the west.

6 The Battle of the Bulge Allied airpower provided support - Germans eventually retreated The Allies rolled into Germany as the Soviets approached from the east.

7 The Battle of Dresden Allied attack on Dresden
4,000 tons of explosives Example of total war

8 Hitler commits suicide
Hitler and his wife, Eva Braun, commit suicide as the Allies close in on Berlin.

9 Russian and American soldiers meet at the Elbe

10 V-E Day Victory in Europe Day: The Allies accept the Germany’s unconditional surrender on May 8, 1945 US President Roosevelt died a month before and Truman took his place.

11 Europe in Ruins 40 million dead (2/3 civilians)—more deaths than any conflict in history. Hundreds of cities destroyed No water, no electricity, little food Factories destroyed so no jobs to earn $

12 End of WWII

13 Atomic Bombs Bombing of Hiroshima: Aug. 6, 1945
Bombing of Nagasaki: Aug. 9, 1945 6 days after Nagasaki, Japan announced their surrender

14 Dropping the Atomic Bomb
Arguments for dropping it Arguments against Necessity of ending the war – this accomplished that Concerns that Japanese wouldn’t surrender Sending in troops on the ground would lead to many more American deaths Ended the war quickly Possibly fewer deaths than the other options Importance of giving other countries a fair chance to surrender Should have warned Japan of new weapon Surrender could have ended the war with even fewer deaths Brutality & terrorism of this weapon

15 V-J Day August 15, 1945 Emperor Hirohito urged his people to accept the surrender, blaming the use of the “new and most cruel bomb” on Hiroshima and Nagasaki for the country’s defeat. Official end of all WWII fighting

16 Questions for the future:
What should happen to Germany after WWII? How will countries recover from yet another war? What type of governments will they choose? Can communism and capitalism exist in the same world?

17 A Day to Remember Read & take notes on what the end of the war was like for Americans When you finish: Trade me the reading for a study guide Start studying for Thursday’s test!


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