End of the War

žEnd of the War




The Russians were hungry & tired of the war
žIn 1917, Communist revolutionaries led an uprising in which the ruler, Czar Nicholas II was overthrown

http://www.learn360.com/ShowVideo.aspx?ID=130899     (Video about Czar Nicholas II )
žRussia surrendered to Germany
žThis ended the battle on the Eastern Front
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ž  Nicholas II
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The USA declared war on Germany in 1917 because some US ships were sunk by U-boats, especially the LUSITANIA

http://www.learn360.com/ShowVideo.aspx?ID=227024




žGermany moved all troops to Western Front to try to win the war before the Americans could land
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žThe Hundred Days
žFront line moved back and forth
žRobert Borden thought war would last until 1920
žArthur Currie led Canadian Army to win many battles
ž48,000 Canadian casualties, 9000 dead
žAllies captured lots of land in Belgium & France
ž25% of German army defeated by Canada
Australians Soldiers

Canadian Soldiers

žBy November, the Allies had pushed the Germans back almost to Germany, and Germany officially surrendered
žThe armistice, the agreement to end fighting was at 11:00am on November 11th 1918
žWWI deaths 

         35 million casualties in total

         (15 million dead, 20 million wounded)

         60,661 Canadian’s Died


         One of the deadliest conflicts in human history

         WWI was called: “The war to end all wars”
Soldier Cemetery











Treaty of Versailles
 
žTreaty of Versailles was one of the peace treaties at the end of World War I.
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ž It ended the state of war between Germany and the Allied Powers.
žFrom left, UK Prime Minister David Lloyd George, Italian Prime Minister Vittorio Orlando, French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau, and US President Woodrow Wilson


David Lloyd George - UK Prime Minister

Italian Prime Minister - Vittorio Olando
French Prime Minister - Georges Clemenceau

US President - Woodrow Wilson

žCountries who signed:  
ž  Germany     British Empire
                      France
                      Italy
                     Japan
                     United States
Land that Germany lost after WWI

Germany & Austria-Hungary before the War and with after WWI borders

žmost important and controversial part of the treaty required Germany to accept sole responsibility for causing the war
ž“War Guilt Clause”
žGermany had to disarm, give away land and pay money to certain countries
žHow much? 132 billion Marks
žToday that would cost:
žThat is a lot of money!!!!

žLeague of Nations  1919–1946
žCanada became member of the “League of Nations
žOrganization of many countries that wanted to peace and prevent future wars







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žToday we have the United Nations


United Nations Logo

žAfter the War
žCanada entered as a colony, came out an independent country




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žWomen recognized as voters
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žMore women in the workforce






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žProblems!
žVeterans in conflict with civilians
žImmigrants unpopular with many Canadians
žWorkers in conflict with employers
žFrench Canadians unhappy with conscription
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žVeterans came home to NO JOBS!



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žThey felt rejected, unappreciated
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žUnemployment led to humiliation



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žVeterans wanted jobs women and enemy aliens had
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žSome veterans assaulted new immigrants in the streets
žUnions & Strikes
ž1919 Veterans began to support Unions
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žCapitalists were the real enemy Union Leaders said
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žWorkers wanted right to form unions and have higher pay ($$$)
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žGeneral Strikes in several cities
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žBiggest strike in Winnipeg in 1919
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žWinnipeg General Strike
ž35,000 went on strike
žConstruction
žPolice
žPostal Workers



Winnipeg General Strike

Winnipeg General Strike
žStrikers called “communists”
žNorth West Mounted Police called to stop strike



žOne man shot dead 31 injured
žWorkers called off the strike
žAfter the War

ž        Robert Borden retires


Robert Borden
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žNew Prime Minister: Arthur Meighen


Arthur Meighen
ž1920-1921
žConservative
žSupported conscription plan in 1917
žFrench Canadians hated him!



ž1921 Federal Election
žWorkers, Farmers, French Canadian’s voted against Meighen & Conservatives
žWilliam Lyon Mackenzie King & Liberal Party win.


William Lyon Mackenzie King

ž1921-1926

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Life in the Trenches

http://jspivey.wikispaces.com/file/view/3.JPG/132644221/3.JPG
Trench warfare
ÒAs WWI began, Germany invaded Belgium on their way to France
ÒIn Belgium the Allies stopped them
ÒGermans couldn’t continue, but Allies couldn’t push them back.
ÒStalemate
ÒBoth side dug defensive trenches in the ground
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ÒTrenches
ÒTrenches - excavation or depression in the ground
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ÒEarly 1915, the first Canadian soldiers arrived in France as part of the British army
ÒThey dug and lived in Trenches
ÒThe line of trenches went from the North Sea to the Swiss Alps
ÒThe “Western Front”
ÒCentral Powers also fought Russians on the Eastern Front
ÒFighting also in Africa, Asia, and South America
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ÒTrench
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ÒBarbed wire was placed in front of the trenches
ÒThe area between the enemy trenches was called no man’s land
ÒTrench life
ÒIt rained a lot
ÒSoldiers were often wet, cold and dirty
ÒThey had to work, eat, sleep in the water or mud
ÒWhen not fighting, soldiers lived in holes in the ground called : dug out’s
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ÒTrench foot
Òmedical condition caused by prolonged exposure of the feet to damp, unsanitary and cold conditions
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ÒTrench life
ÒTwo big problems: Rats and Lice
ÒTrench life
ÒRats would eat the bodies of dead soldiers in no man’s land
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ÒDisease and infections were everywhere because of rats, lice and flies
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ÒDying soldiers cried, dead & rotting bodies smelled, the guns never stopped firing on the trenches
ÒTrench life
ÒSoldiers had to climb out of the trench to attack the enemy.  This was called “going over the top
ÒSoldiers knew they were going to die
ÒShellshock: when you become mentally ill from fighting
ÒMany soldiers wanted the war to end.
ÒChristmas Day 1914 British & German soldiers played football and spoke about peace.
ÒBodies of more than 11,000 Canadian soldiers were never recovered


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ÒCANADA’S CONTRIBUTION

ÒCanada’s first major battle was at Second Battle of Ypres, Belgium

ÒApril 1915

ÒNew German surprise weapon: Chlorine Gas

ÒSome allies ran away, Canadians stayed!

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ÒWhere is Belgium?

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ÒBattle of the somme

ÒJuly 1st 1916 – British launched major attack near the Somme River in France

ÒGermans were ready

ÒTerrible bloodbath for both sides

Ò60,000 British casualties on the 1st day

ÒBattle of the somme

ÒFirst use of the tank

ÒAttack lasted 5 months

Ò24,000 Canadians killed

Ò624,000 Allied soldiers killed

ÒGained 545 kilometres

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ÒCanadian army’s biggest victory was in April 1917.

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ÒVimy Ridge memorial

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ÒVimy ridge

ÒThe Allies tried to capture the hill many times, but failed

Ò200,000 soldiers died trying

ÒCanadians planned the attack

ÒThey tunnelled under the hill + used explosive mines.

ÒCanadians were successful!

ÒSome say we became an independent country because of Vimy Ridge

ÒArthur Currie

ÒCanadian General

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ÒCanadian Flag during WWI

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Ò20,000 Canadians joined the RAF (Royal Air Force)

ÒAirplanes were a new invention

ÒMost famous Canadian WWI

    pilot was: Billy Bishop

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ÒPlanes were not strong, crashed easily

ÒMachine guns were put on planes

Ò“Dog-Fights” – fights between planes

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ÒCanada now had respect for it’s help in the war

ÒCanada was now seen as a country, not a colony