The United States in World War II: a documentary history
"World War II was the largest and most devastating conflict in recorded human history. The nations involved fought a total war on virtually every continent and ocean, in the air and underwater as well as on land and the seas. The war was fought against civilians as well as their uniformed armed...
Gespeichert in:
Weitere Verfasser: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Indianapolis ; Cambridge
Hackett Publishing Company, Inc.
[2018]
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | "World War II was the largest and most devastating conflict in recorded human history. The nations involved fought a total war on virtually every continent and ocean, in the air and underwater as well as on land and the seas. The war was fought against civilians as well as their uniformed armed forces. The result was a staggering and unprecedented death toll of approximately 60 million people. In the end, the war gave birth to a new international order that would survive into the 21st century. Equally important, the total war effort transformed the economy, politics and culture of almost every society involved.This volume brings together first-hand accounts from leaders, soldiers, and civilians engaged in the war effort, for or against it."--Provided by publisher |
Beschreibung: | xxxviii, 347 Seiten 24 cm |
ISBN: | 9781624667473 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
Preface xiii
Introduction xvii
Estimated Military and Civilian Deaths Attributable to World War II xviii
Estimated Number of Deaths Attributable to World War II:
Asia and the Pacific xxxvi
Estimated Number of Deaths Attributable to World War II: Europe xxxvii
Chapter 1: The Yanks Are Coming... Again: U.S. Entry into
World War II 1
1. The Neutrality Acts Seek to Avoid U.S. Participation in
Another War, 1935-1939 5
2. President Franklin D. Roosevelt Proposes a “Quarantine”
of Aggressors, 1937 8
3. President Roosevelt Denounces Isolationism and the
Axis Powers, 1940 11
4. President Roosevelt Proposes Lend-Lease Aid to Great Britain
and the Four Freedoms, December 17 and 29,1940,
and January 6,1941 14
5. Charles A. Lindbergh Opposes Lend-Lease, February 6, 1941 20
6. Americans Express Their Opinions on Aid to Britain and
Entry into the War, 1940—1941 22
7. Secretary of State Cordell Hull Responds to Japans Final
Proposal, November 26, 1941 24 8 9
8. Japan Terminates Negotiations and Hull Replies Orally,
December 7, 1941 27
9. President Roosevelt Asks Congress for a Declaration of War,
December 8, 1941
31
VI
Contents
Chapter 2: Over Here: Mobilizing the American People for War 33
1. Congress Institutes the Draft, 1940 36
2. Conscientious Objectors Explain Their Reasons for
Refusing to Register for the Draft, 1941 39
3. Representative Edith Nourse Rogers Introduces
the WAAC Bill, 1941 41
4. Jobs Performed by White and African Americans in
the IIS. Army, 1942 43
5. President Franklin D. Roosevelt Outlines a Blueprint
for Victory, January 6, 1942 44
6. World War II and the American Economy 46
7. African Americans Call for Victory at Home and Abroad, 1942 48
8. The Bureau of Motion Pictures Enlists Hollywood in
the War Effort, 1942 49
9. Rosie the Riveter Becomes the Image of
Patriotic Womanhood, 1943 52
10. The U.S. Treasury Department Calls on All Americans to
Pay Their Taxes to Beat the Axis, 1945 53
Chapter 3: Creating a Global Allied Strategy to
Defeat the Axis Powers 55
1. U.S. and British Military Officials Agree to a Germany-
First Strategy: Admiral Starks Memorandum and the
ABC-1 Accord, November 1940 and March 1941 58
2. Britain and the United States Reach Strategic Agreements *
at the ARCADIA Conference, Washington, DC,
December 1941-January 1942 62
3. Admiral Ernest J. King Calls for a Strategic Focus on Japan,
March 1942 66
4. President Franklin D. Roosevelt “Promises” the
Soviets a Second Front, May-June 1942 68
5. Churchill Vetoes Crossing the Channel in 1942 and
Proposes the North African Alternative, July 8, 1942 71
6. Admiral Ernest J. King and General George C. Marshall
Respond with a Pacific-First Proposal, July 10, 1942
72
Contents
vii
7. President Roosevelt Rejects the Pacific-First Alternative,
July 14,1942 73
8. Britain and the United States Agree on a Mediterranean
Strategy for 1943 during the Casablanca Conference,
January 1943 74
9. Stalin Angrily Responds to the Continued Delays in
Establishing a Second Front, June 24,1943 76
10. President Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin Debate and
Decide Future Allied Strategy at the Tehran Conference,
November 29-30,1943 78
Chapter 4: Fighting and Defeating Nazi Germany 83
1. Army Ground versus Air Plans for the War against Germany:
The “Victory Program” (with AWPD-1) of September 1941 85
2. The Naval and Air Campaigns against German U-Boats and
Cities Receive High Priority at the Casablanca Conference,
January 1943 88
3. A Mother Questions and General Henry H. “Hap”
Arnolds Staff Defends the Bombing of German Cities 91
4. The Original Overlord Plan Proposes Landing on the
Normandy Beaches and Explains the Problems to
Be Overcome, July 27,1943 93
5. Generals Eisenhower and Montgomery Debate Broad versus
Narrow Front Strategies, September 1944 97
6. Generals Bradley and Patton Express Their Anger at
Montgomery, April 1943 and December 1944 101
7. General Marshall Explains the Key Military Events in
German Defeat as Perceived by Captured Members of
the German High Command, September 1945 110
8. Tuskegee Airman Lieutenant Alexander Jefferson Recalls
His Combat Missions and Internment, 1944 112
9. Sergeant Bernard Bellush Recalls D-Day on Omaha Beach,
November 14,1944, and March 16, 2000 119 10
10. Newspaper Columnist Ernie Pyle Depicts the Realities
of War for Americans at Home, 1943 125
Contents
viii
Chapter 5: The War against Japan—and the Japanese 129
1. Public Opinion Favors a Japan-First Strategy, 1942-1943 132
2. The Military Plans for the Defeat of Japan, May 21,1943 133
3. Army Nurse Lieutenant Juanita Redmond Describes a
Japanese Air Attack on Bataan in the Philippines, April 1942 135
4. Navy Pilot George Gay Survives the Battle of Midway, June 1942 138
5. Marine Private E. B. Sledge Remembers the Hellish Battle
of Okinawa, 1945 142
6. Japanese Civilians Tomizawa and Kobayashi Hiroyasu
Live through the Firebombing of Tokyo, 1945 145
7. General Joseph Stilwell Bitterly Explains His Problems in
China, 1944 148
8. President Franklin D. Roosevelt Orders Japanese Relocation, 1942 150
9. Japanese American Mikiso Hane Remembers His
Wartime Internment 154
Chapter 6: For the Duration: Life and Society on the
American Home Front 159
1. War Jobs Trigger the Second Great Migration 162
2. The NAACP Explains What Caused the Detroit Race Riots, 1943 164
3. Mississippi Congressman John Rankin Attacks the
“Zoot Suiters,” 1943 170
4. Wartime and Postwar Conditions Affect Marriage, Divorce, and
Birthrates, 1930-1950 172
5. Ladies Home Journal Tells You What to Do “If You’re a
War Bride,” 1942 175
6. Pinup Girls Remind American Soldiers Why They Fight 181
7. The Office of War Information Warns American Men
about Venereal Diseases 182
8. An African American Woman Reflects on Her Experiences
as a War Worker, 1943 183
9. President Franklin D. Roosevelt Talks to the Nation about
Economic Sacrifice, 1942
184
Contents
IX
Chapter 7: The Manhattan Project and Beyond: The Role of
Science, Medicine, and Technology in the American War Effort 189
1. Office of Scientific Research and Development Director
Dr. Vannevar Bush Reports to the White House on the
Importance of Science during and after the War 191
2. Mass-Produced Penicillin Saves Countless Lives 195
3. Advances in Medicine Save Soldiers from Disease and Death 196
4. Radar Helps the Allies to Victory 198
5. Physicist Leo Szilard Issues a Warning about the
Atomic Bomb, 1939 199
6. Albert Einstein Informs President Franklin D. Roosevelt
of the Potential for an Atomic Bomb, 1939 200
7. The Manhattan Project Spans the Country 202
8. Physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer Later Explains the
Establishment of the Atomic Bomb Laboratory at
Los Alamos, New Mexico, 1954 204
9. Manhattan Project Commanding General Leslie Groves
Reports the Results of the Alamogordo Test, 1945 208
Chapter 8: The Intelligence War: Code Breaking,
Cryptography, Intelligence Gathering, and Allied Victory 213
1. A Congressional Committee Assesses Blame for the
Pearl Harbor Disaster, 1945 215
2. Bletchley Park Cryptologist and Historian Peter Calvocoressi
Explains How Enigma Worked during the War 218
3. WRNS Tends the Colossus Code-Breaking Computer, 1943 223
4. Americans Decode and Translate a Japanese Encrypted
Message, 1944 224
5. The Navajo Language Becomes an Unbreakable American
Code, 1942 226
6. Office of Strategic Services Official Allen Dulles Explains
His Wartime Intelligence Activities, 1941-1945 228
7. Historian and OSS Official William Langer Describes the
Contribution of Scholars to the Intelligence War, 1943-1946 232
X
Contents
Chapter 9: The United States and the Holocaust 235
1. The National Origins Act Restricts Immigration, 1924 237
2. Henry Ford s Dearborn Independent Reveals
American Anti-Semitism, 1921-1922 238
3. The United States Supreme Court Finds the Sterilization of
“Defectives” Constitutional, 1927 241
4. Public Opinion Polls Reveal American Attitudes about
Jews in Europe, Refugees, and Immigration, 1938—1945 244
5. Jan Karski of the Polish Underground Gives an
Eyewitness Account of the Final Solution, 1942—1944 248
6. The State Department Receives and Suppresses
News of the Final Solution, 1942 253
7. The Moscow Declaration on War Crimes, 1943 257
8. Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr. Denounces
State Department Behavior to President Franklin
D. Roosevelt, 1944 258
9. U.S. Soldier Clinton C. Gardner Remembers the Liberation
of the Buchenwald Concentration Camp, 1945 260
Chapter 10: Planning and Preparing for the Peace at Home 265
1. The National Resources Planning Board Looks Forward, 1943 267
2. President Franklin D. Roosevelt Proposes an Economic
Bill of Rights, 1945 272
3. Robert A. Taft Lays Out the Republican Vision for the
Postwar World, 1943 274
4. Vice President Henry Wallace Plans for a Third New
Deal, 1943 279
5. Women Give Up Their War Jobs 284
6. Americans Worry about Postwar Employment Prospects:
The Gallup Poll, December 27,1944 288
7. President Roosevelt Promises Veterans a New Bill
of Rights, 1944 290 8
8. Black Veterans Debate the Impact of the GI Bill, 1945
292
Contents
xx
Chapter 11: President Franklin D. Roosevelt and
Allied Diplomacy for War and Peace 299
1. The Atlantic Charter States Allied War Aims, 1941 301
2. Josef Stalin Demands Territorial Settlements, 1941 302
3. The Allies Announce Formation of the Grand Alliance and
Declare Their War Aims: The Declaration by the
United Nations 307
4. President Roosevelt Enunciates the Unconditional
Surrender Policy, 1943 308
5. The Allies Agree on Postwar Policies: The Moscow Declaration
on General Security and the Cairo Declaration, 1943 309
6. President Roosevelt Informs His Allies of
His Postwar Plans, 1942 and 1943 311
7. The Allies Agree to a Postwar International Organization:
The Dumbarton Oaks Agreements, 1944 315
8. Churchill and Stalin Divide Eastern Europe, 1944 317
9. The Allies Reach Postwar Agreements at the
Yalta Conference, 1945 318
10. President Roosevelt Sends Messages to Stalin and
Churchill Just before His Death, 1945 324
Chapter 12: The Atomic Bomb and the End of World War II 327
1. Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter Shares with
President Franklin D. Roosevelt Physicist Niels Bohr’s
Suggestion That the Soviets Be Informed about the
Atomic Bomb Project, 1944 330
2. Churchill and President Roosevelt Reject Informing
the Soviets, 1944 331
3. Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson Informs President
Harry Truman of the Atomic Bomb Project, April 25,1945 332
4. The Franck Committee Warns of a Nuclear Arms Race and
Calls for a Noncombat Demonstration of the Bomb, 1945 334
5. The Scientific Panel of the Interim Committee Recommends
Combat Use of the Bomb against Japan, 1945 338
Contents
xii
6. Conventional versus Nuclear Bomb Destruction:
Dresden and Hiroshima, 1945
7. Public Opinion Polls Show Strong Support for
the Atomic Bomb, August 1945
General Bibliography
|
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title | The United States in World War II a documentary history |
title_auth | The United States in World War II a documentary history |
title_exact_search | The United States in World War II a documentary history |
title_full | The United States in World War II a documentary history edited, with an introduction, by Mark A. Stoler and Molly C. Michelmore |
title_fullStr | The United States in World War II a documentary history edited, with an introduction, by Mark A. Stoler and Molly C. Michelmore |
title_full_unstemmed | The United States in World War II a documentary history edited, with an introduction, by Mark A. Stoler and Molly C. Michelmore |
title_short | The United States in World War II |
title_sort | the united states in world war ii a documentary history |
title_sub | a documentary history |
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