Fiche de révision : American History: From WWI to Cold War

📋 Course Outline

  1. World War I causes and escalation
  2. Trench warfare and new military technology
  3. U.S. entry in World War I
  4. Roaring Twenties and cultural change
  5. Great Depression and New Deal reforms
  6. World War II battles and home-front impacts
  7. Cold War institutions and civil rights

📖 1. World War I causes and escalation

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Militarism : Militarism is the aggressive buildup of a nation’s military and war readiness through larger forces and more weapons.
  • Alliances : Alliances are agreements where nations promise to support and defend one another during conflict.
  • Imperialism : Imperialism is when powerful states control weaker territories to gain resources, trade advantages, and power.
  • Nationalism : Nationalism is strong pride and loyalty to one’s country, often paired with beliefs of superiority over others.
  • Assassination of Archduke Ferdinand of Austria : The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand is the 1914 killing of the Austria-Hungary heir by a Serbian nationalist that triggered WWI.

📝 Essential Points

  • Militarism increased suspicion and paranoia among European countries, making violence more likely.
  • Alliances created a domino effect where war declarations spread and expanded the conflict into a world war.
  • Imperialism intensified global competition for territories and wealth.
  • Nationalism pushed countries toward glory and power even at the expense of other countries.
  • The Archduke Ferdinand assassination set off a chain of war declarations that began World War I.
  • The source links escalation to both political commitments (alliances) and aggressive preparation (militarism).

💡 Memory Hook

Militarism + Alliances + Imperialism + Nationalism + Assassination = WWI spark and spread.

📖 2. Trench warfare and new military technology

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Trench Warfare : Trench warfare is fighting from deep trenches for protection, especially in WWI due to machine guns.
  • Stalemate : Stalemate is a war condition where neither side can gain an advantage or make progress.
  • Machine Gun : A machine gun is a rapid-fire weapon that made attacks across open ground extremely deadly.
  • No Man’s Land : No Man’s Land is the dangerous space between enemy trenches that highlights the terror of trench warfare.
  • Tanks : Tanks are armored WWI vehicles designed to cross trenches and resist bullets.

📝 Essential Points

  • Trench warfare was used primarily in WWI because machine guns made traditional attacks lead to massive casualties.
  • Trench warfare produced stalemate because neither side could gain land.
  • Trench warfare caused PTSD and widespread suffering among troops.
  • Trenchfoot is a painful condition from standing in wet, cold trenches for long periods.
  • Tanks helped end trench warfare by withstanding machine-gun fire and crossing trenches.
  • No Man’s Land illustrated both the stalemate and the terrifying nature of the fighting.

💡 Memory Hook

Machine guns create stalemate; trenches create suffering; tanks break the deadlock.

📖 3. U.S. entry in World War I

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • U-Boat : A U-boat is a German submarine used in WWI to sink ships.
  • Lusitania : The Lusitania is a British passenger ship sunk by Germany in 1915.
  • Zimmerman Note : The Zimmerman Note is a secret German message urging Mexico to ally with Germany against the U.S.
  • AEF : AEF means American Expeditionary Forces, the U.S. troops sent to Europe in WWI.
  • John J. Pershing : John J. Pershing is the AEF commander who insisted American forces stay unified.

📝 Essential Points

  • U-boats were among Germany’s deadliest tactics in WWI and provoked America.
  • The sinking of the Lusitania in 1915 angered the United States.
  • Over 100 Americans died when the Lusitania was sunk.
  • The Zimmerman Note was described as the “last straw” that helped bring the U.S. into WWI.
  • The AEF made America’s entry a unified force that made a dramatic difference in WWI.
  • Pershing insisted America remain a single, unified army rather than sending reinforcements to Europe piecemeal.

💡 Memory Hook

U-boats (threat) + Lusitania (anger) + Zimmerman Note (last straw) → U.S. enters; Pershing keeps AEF unified.

📖 4. Roaring Twenties and cultural change

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Roaring 20s : The Roaring 20s is a period of economic prosperity and major cultural change in the 1920s in America.
  • Flapper : A flapper is a young woman of the 1920s known for modern fashion and independence.
  • Jazz : Jazz is a popular music style created largely by African American musicians.
  • Ford Model T : The Ford Model T is an affordable car made by Henry Ford using assembly-line production.
  • Radio : Radio is a new home technology used for news, music, and entertainment.

📝 Essential Points

  • The Roaring 20s combined economic growth with intense cultural change in America.
  • Flappers demonstrated changing roles for women and increased female independence.
  • Jazz represented rebellion, new dance styles, and growth of urban entertainment.
  • The Ford Model T made cars accessible to most Americans and changed transportation.
  • Radio became a major family activity and a key source of information at home.
  • The source links cultural change to mass media and consumer technology (radio, cars).

💡 Memory Hook

Flappers (women), Jazz (music), Model T (cars), Radio (home info) = Roaring 20s change.

📖 5. Great Depression and New Deal reforms

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Buying on Margin : Buying on margin is purchasing stocks using borrowed money.
  • Black Tuesday : Black Tuesday is the stock market crash on October 29, 1929.
  • Great Depression : The Great Depression is a severe 1930s economic crisis marked by unemployment and poverty.
  • New Deal : The New Deal is a set of programs and reforms created by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to help the economy recover.
  • Social Security Act : The Social Security Act is a law creating pensions and aid for elderly and unemployed Americans.

📝 Essential Points

  • Buying on margin helped cause panic in the stock market and contributed to Black Tuesday.
  • Black Tuesday occurred on October 29, 1929 and set the Great Depression in motion.
  • About 1/4 of Americans were unemployed during the Great Depression.
  • The Great Depression led to the New Deal and long-lasting government programs.
  • New Deal reforms created jobs and improved infrastructure such as highways and parks.
  • The Social Security Act shifted responsibility toward government helping citizens rather than only families and charities.

💡 Memory Hook

Margin borrowing → panic → Black Tuesday → Great Depression → New Deal → Social Security.

📖 6. World War II battles and home-front impacts

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Axis Powers : The Axis Powers are Germany, Italy, and Japan during World War II.
  • Allied Powers : The Allied Powers are nations including the U.S., Britain, and the Soviet Union fighting against the Axis Powers.
  • Pearl Harbor : Pearl Harbor is the Japanese attack on a U.S. naval base in Hawaii on December 7, 1941.
  • Internment : Internment is the forced relocation and imprisonment of Japanese Americans during WWII.
  • Holocaust : The Holocaust is the systematic murder of six million Jews and millions of others by Nazi Germany.

📝 Essential Points

  • The Axis Powers were defeated in WWII.
  • The Allied Powers were the victors of WWII.
  • Pearl Harbor brought America into WWII.
  • Internment was based on suspicion and prejudice after Pearl Harbor.
  • D-Day was the Allied invasion of Normandy, France on June 6, 1944.
  • The source states the atomic bomb ended WWII and became the deadliest weapon used in warfare.

💡 Memory Hook

Pearl Harbor → U.S. enters; D-Day → Europe retaken; internment shows prejudice; Holocaust shows genocide.

📖 7. Cold War institutions and civil rights

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • United Nations : The United Nations is an international organization formed after WWII to promote peace.
  • NATO : NATO is a military alliance between democratic nations formed after WWII for mutual defense.
  • Iron Curtain : The Iron Curtain is the division between communist Eastern Europe and democratic Western Europe.
  • Cold War : The Cold War is the political and military tension between the U.S. and Soviet Union after WWII.
  • 14th Amendment : The 14th Amendment is a constitutional amendment guaranteeing citizenship, due process, and equal protection.

📝 Essential Points

  • The United Nations encouraged cooperation and attempted to prevent future wars.
  • NATO was created for mutual defense and prevention of war.
  • The Iron Curtain symbolized the divide between Soviet influence and Western democracies.
  • The Cold War represented the struggle between communism and democracy.
  • The 14th Amendment has been used repeatedly to expand civil rights and equality in America.
  • The GI Bill helped grow the American middle class, but African Americans benefited less.

💡 Memory Hook

UN for peace, NATO for defense, Iron Curtain for division, Cold War for rivalry, 14th Amendment for rights.

📅 Key Dates

DateEvent
1914Assassination of Archduke Ferdinand of Austria
1915Sinking of the Lusitania
November 11, 1918WWI armistice signed
October 29, 1929Black Tuesday stock market crash
1941Pearl Harbor attack on U.S. naval base in Hawaii
December 7, 1941Pearl Harbor attack on U.S. naval base in Hawaii
June 6, 1944D-Day Allied invasion of Normandy
1948Israel established

📊 Synthesis Tables

WWI escalation mechanisms

FactorWhat it did
MilitarismIncreased aggressive preparation and made violence more likely
AlliancesSpread war declarations and expanded conflict into a world war
ImperialismCreated global competition for territory and wealth
NationalismDrove countries toward glory and power at others’ expense

WWII sides

GroupWho they included
Axis PowersGermany, Italy, Japan
Allied PowersU.S., Britain, Soviet Union

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Confusions

  1. Confusing militarism (buildup for war) with nationalism (pride and loyalty) because both increase tension but operate differently.
  2. Thinking stalemate means a ceasefire; in the source it means neither side can gain an advantage or progress.
  3. Assuming the Lusitania incident alone caused U.S. entry; the source presents multiple triggers including U-boats and the Zimmerman Note.
  4. Mixing up Black Tuesday (stock crash date) with the Great Depression (the broader 1930s crisis).
  5. Believing the 14th Amendment guarantees rights only once; the source says it has been used repeatedly to expand civil rights.
  6. Mixing up Axis and Allied Powers when identifying WWII victors and who fought whom.

✅ Exam Checklist

  1. Identify militarism, alliances, imperialism, nationalism, and the Archduke Ferdinand assassination as WWI escalation causes.
  2. Explain why trench warfare led to stalemate and suffering, including the role of machine guns and the meaning of No Man’s Land.
  3. Describe how U-boat warfare, the Lusitania sinking, and the Zimmerman Note contributed to U.S. entry into WWI.
  4. State what the AEF is and how Pershing’s leadership shaped American involvement in WWI.
  5. Connect Roaring 20s cultural change to flappers, jazz, the Ford Model T, and radio.
  6. Explain buying on margin, Black Tuesday’s date, and how these relate to the Great Depression.
  7. Summarize key New Deal reforms and how the Social Security Act changed government responsibility.
  8. Distinguish Axis Powers from Allied Powers and list major WWII home-front impacts such as internment and the Holocaust.
  9. Recall Cold War institutions (UN, NATO) and concepts (Iron Curtain, Cold War) and connect the 14th Amendment to civil rights expansion.

Testez vos connaissances

Testez vos connaissances sur American History: From WWI to Cold War avec 14 questions à choix multiples avec corrections détaillées.

1. How did the Ford Model T affect American life in the 1920s?

2. Which institution was formed after World War II to encourage peace and cooperation among nations?

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Révisez avec les flashcards

Mémorisez les concepts clés de American History: From WWI to Cold War avec 14 flashcards interactives.

WWI causes — key factors?

Militarism, alliances, imperialism, nationalism, assassination.

Trench warfare — primary feature?

Fighting from deep trenches for protection.

U-Boat — role in WWI?

German submarines sinking enemy ships.

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