Germany attacked France and cornered Allied forces at Dunkirk, but bad weather allowed the British navy to rescue troops across the English Channel. Germany then bombed Britain for over 3 months but failed to break the Royal Air Force. Hitler invaded the Soviet Union to seize its resources but faced scorched earth tactics, and later turned his attention to the Pacific by attacking islands like the Philippines. Several key events turned the tide of war, including Germany fighting on two fronts after invading the USSR, the US entering the war after Japan's attack, Italy surrendering following the Allied invasion of Sicily, and the Allied D-Day invasion of France leading ultimately to Germany's defeat on V-E Day in 1945, after which the US dropped atomic
3. Dunkirk
• Germany attacked France and cornered them
at Dunkirk
• German airforce (Luftwaffe) was to come and
wipe them out
• Weather was bad
• British came to the rescue and ferried them
across the English Chanel
4.
5.
6.
7. Bombing of Britain
• Germany began bombing to prepare for a land
invasion
• The RAF (Royal Air Force) destroyed German
bombers
• Every day for 113 days
• Hitler grew impatient and abandoned the plan
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16. Russia
• Hitler wanted to take advantage of Russia’s
natural resources
• Russians used a “scorched earth policy” –
Russians destroyed everything that could be
used by the Nazis.
23. Philippines
• Japanese attacked a number of islands in the
Pacific including the Philippines
• President Roosevelt ordered Douglas
MacArthur to leave to avoid capture
26. Midway Island
• Americans had an important naval base on
this island
• Americans were outnumbered, but the
Americans attacked and forced the Japanese
to retreat
30. 2. Japan attacked the United States
• The US declared war on Japan, and then
Germany and Italy declared war on the US
31. 3. Italy surrendered
• Dwight D. Eisenhower, the US General, led
troops into Sicily and forced the Italian
government to surrender
32.
33. 4. D-Day
• Allied leaders had to decide where to attack
• Decided on France
• June 6, 1944
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39. 5. Germany surrendered
• Germany tried one last time to break through
the Allied forces at the Battle of the Bulge
• V-E Day was May 8, 1945
• Victory in Europe Day
40.
41.
42. 6. Dropping of the atomic bomb
• Harry Truman ordered Japan to surrender
• They refused
• Dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima on
August 6, 1945
• Japan refused to surrender
• Dropped an atomic bomb on Nagasaki on
August 9, 1945
• Japan surrendered
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48. • War was officially over on September 2, 1945
Notas do Editor
Nearly 60 countries participated in WWIIHitler attacked: Austria, Sudetenland, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Denmark & Norway, Belgium/Netherlands/Luxembourg, France, Bulgaria/Yugoslavia/Greece, Russia
Small boats are towed down theThames to Dunkirk. These wereused to ferry troops from thebeach to larger ships offshore.
Hope to kill civilians and destroy British morale
People shelter and sleep on the platform and on the train tracks, in Aldwych Underground Station, London, after sirens sounded to warn of German bombing raids, on October 8, 1940
Hundreds of people, many of whom have lost their homes through bombing, now use the caves in Hastings, a south-east English town as their nightly refuge. Special sections are reserved for games and recreation, and several people have "set up house", bringing their own furniture and sleeping on their own beds. Photo taken on December 12, 1940.
A German aircraft drops its load of bombs above England, during an attack on September 20, 1940.
These London schoolchildren are in the midst of an air raid drill ordered by the London Board of Education as a precaution in case an air raid comes too fast to give the youngsters a chance to leave the building for special shelters, on July 20, 1940. They were ordered to go to the middle of the room, away from windows, and hold their hands over the backs of their necks.
A formation of low-flying German Heinkel He 111 bombers flies over the waves of the English Channel in 1940
Oil…wanted to attack them before they attacked himScorched earth policy Temperatures 40 below zeroMost german equipment could not work in such weather
Russian men and women rescue their humble belongings from their burning homes, said to have been set on fire by the Russians, part of a scorched-earth policy, in a Leningrad suburb on October 21, 1941
German soldiers, supported by armored personnel carriers, move into a burning Russian village at an unknown location during the German invasion of the Soviet Union, on June 26, 1941.
German soldiers remove one of many Soviet national emblems during their drive to conquer Russia on July 18, 1941. (
A flood of Russian armored cars move toward the front, on October 19, 1941
This trainload of men was described by German sources as Soviet prisoners en route to Germany, on October 3, 1941. Several million Soviet soldiers were eventually sent to German prison camps, the majority of whom never returned alive.
The remaining soldiers were treated with great brutality and hundreds diedMacArthur returned later and Americans retook the islands…
Italy has signed an unconditional armistice with the Allies, General Dwight D Eisenhower has announced.
Churchill, Roosevelt and StalinWithin 3 weeks, 1 million allied soldiers, 500,000 tons of supplies and nearly 200,000 vehicles had landed in FranceBritish – 2700, Canadians 946, US 6603…Axis 9,000
U.S. soldiers approach Omaha Beach, their weapons wrapped in plastic to keep them dry, June 1944
Aerial view of part of the Allied force off the coast of France, on D-Day, 1944
Allied soldiers, vehicles and equipment swarm onto the French shore during the Normandy landings, June 1944.
Germany and Italy had both surrendered…British, French and American forces pushed German forces out of one country after another
Either surrender or suffer terrible consequencesHiroshima – killed 70,000 and 70,000 injuredNagasaki – killed 40,000 and 40,000 injured
Undated handout photo courtesy of the U.S. National Archives shows the aftermath of the atomic bomb which was dropped on Nagasaki on August 9,1945. A Roman Catholic cathedral can be seen on the hill in the background
1945 Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and NagasakiThe ground crew of the B-29 "Enola Gay" which atom-bombed Hiroshima, Japan on August 6, 1945 poses for a photo with the aircraft at their base in Tinian, Mariana Islands in this undated U.S. Air Force handout image. Colonel Paul Tibbets, the pilot, stands in the center