Timeline: Battles of the Second World War

Timeline: Battles of the Second World War The battles here are presented along chronological lines, not according to locale. BATTLE: THE INVASION OF ...
Author: Noel Brooks
0 downloads 0 Views 123KB Size
Timeline: Battles of the Second World War The battles here are presented along chronological lines, not according to locale.

BATTLE: THE INVASION OF POLAND

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

WHEN: September 1st, 1939

It started the Second World War.

WHERE: Poland

Blitzkrieg allowed the Germans to sweep through Poland with little resistance.

WHAT: The Germans invaded Poland using blitzkrieg tactics. OUTCOME: Britain and France declared war on Germany. Canada’s declaration followed a week later.

BATTLE: THE PHONY WAR

Canada was not automatically obligated to go to war, but chose to do so a week after Britain’s declaration.

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

WHEN: October 1939 – April 1940 WHERE: Western Europe

Allied troops and Canadians were all waiting for combat to begin.

WHAT: It was expected that Germany was going to invade Western Europe. OUTCOME: Germany did not invade due to bad weather and indecision.

BATTLE: EVACUATION OF DUNKIRK

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

WHEN: 1940 WHERE: The English Channel WHAT: British and French troops retreated to the French beaches at Dunkirk and became trapped.

In spite of this being a defeat, this event represented a moral victory for the Allies. A few weeks later, France surrendered to Germany.

OUTCOME: 900 ships sailed from England and rescued 340,000 soldiers.

BATTLE: THE BATTLE OF BRITAIN

WHEN: Summer of 1940 WHERE: Britain WHAT: Air attacks by the Luftwaffe on Britain’s RAF airfields OUTCOME: Hitler eventually abandoned air attacks on the airfields and ordered daylight bombing raids on London. This allowed Britain’s forces to regroup and later win the battle.

BATTLE: THE INVASION OF THE SOVIET UNION

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance) The use of radar and the German cipher machine (the Engima) contributed to Britain’s power in the airs. Hitler’s change in tactics in response to Churchill’s bombing of Berlin likely cost him the war. This battle was the first time that Hitler was denied conquest. The battle left the future Allies with a base from which to attack Hitler in Europe.

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

WHEN: June 22nd, 1941 WHERE: Soviet Union

Hitler invaded the Soviet Union to fulfill his vision of Lebensraum and to destroy communism.

WHAT: Hitler launched an invasion called “Operation Barbarossa” with 3 million German troops.

The Soviets reacted with a “scorched earth” policy

OUTCOME: The Germans advanced but were stopped just outside of Moscow for now.

BATTLE: PEARL HARBOUR

Hitler now had a two front war.

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

WHEN: December 7th, 1941 WHERE: Pearl Harbour, Hawaii

This attack brought the United States into the war. In Europe this gave Britain a much-

needed ally. WHAT: The Japanese launched a surprise attack on the American naval base. OUTCOME: The United States and Britain declared war on Japan.

BATTLE: THE BATTLE OF MIDWAY

Canada declared war against Japan and Canadian troops were sent to fight in Hong Kong.

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

WHEN: June, 1942 WHERE: Midway Islands, north and west of Hawaii WHAT: The Americans intercepted the Japanese fleet which was preparing to conquer these islands.

This marked a turning point in the Pacific Theatre. The American fleet sank the best units of Japanese naval aviation (aircraft carriers). The Japanese were on the defensive after this battle.

OUTCOME: The Japanese were soundly defeated.

BATTLE: DIEPPE

WHEN: August, 1942 WHERE: Dieppe – coast of France WHAT: 5,000 Canadians landed on the beach with the goal of taking the beach and the town back from the Germans. OUTCOME: The attack failed and many Canadians were killed and taken prisoner.

BATTLE: BATTLE OF EL ALAMEIN

WHEN: October 1942

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

More Canadian troops died in these few hours than on any other day in the war. Part of the reason for the failure was that Britain decided to forgo the much-needed aerial and naval support. Allies learned that heavy air and sea support would be necessary for any future invasion of France.

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

This victory was a turning point in the war.

WHERE: 60 miles west of Cairo, North Africa

It was the first time the Allies had defeated the forces of the fascist countries.

WHAT: The Germans and the Italians sought control of Egypt.

This victory prevented the Germans from seizing the Suez Canal.

OUTCOME: The British won in a decisive victory.

BATTLE: BATTLE OF THE ATLANTIC

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

WHEN: The duration of the war WHERE: Between North America and Britain WHAT: Germany wanted to cut off all Allied supplies to Britain; British and Canadian navies wanted to put an end to the German submarine threat. TECHNOLOGY USED: U-Boats; the convoy system (merchant ships surrounded by destroyers for protection); long-range bombers; sonar

OUTCOME: The Allies beat the German submarines, “wolfpacks”, by dropping bombs and depth charges.

BATTLE: THE BATTLE OF STALINGRAD

The Royal Canadian Navy provided much of the protection for merchant ships. By the end of the war the Royal Canadian Navy had expanded to include 370 ships and 100,000 personnel. 2,000 members of the Canadian Navy lost their lives in combat. Canada’s involvement was crucial to the Allied victory. Many Canadians also served by manning the freighters that transported material to Europe.

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

WHEN: September 1942 – January 1943 WHERE: Stalingrad WHAT: Hitler attacked Stalingrad because of its name, and to go past it to the Caucasus oil fields.

This victory was an enormous boost in morale for the Allied forces. After this battle, the Germans suffered defeat after defeat on the eastern front as Stalin’s forces moved closer to Berlin.

OUTCOME: The Soviets captured or killed the entire German army.

BATTLE: THE ITALIAN CAMPAIGN

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

WHEN: 1943 - 1945 WHERE: A landing on Sicily and then onto the peninsula of Italy.

The “Vandoos”, a French-Canadian unit, played a big part in liberating Rome from German control.

WHAT: Allied forces, including Canadians, landed on Sicily using an amphibious attack, and then moved onto the mainland.

Mussolini was captured and hung in public in 1945.

OUTCOME: The Germans were finally driven back by a French-Canadian unit which then pushed through to free northern Italy in the fall of 1944.

BATTLE: THE NORMANDY LANDING

WHEN: June 6th, 1944 WHERE: The shores of Normandy WHAT: “Operation Overlord” was the Allied invasion of German-held Europe. OUTCOME: The Allied forces gained a foothold in Europe to begin pushing back the German army.

BATTLE: BATTLE OF LEYTE GULF

WHEN: October 1944

The capture of Italy was an important step towards the liberation of Europe, and it kept many German troops occupied.

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

This was the largest Canadian military operation of the Second World War. Canadian forces were assigned the target called Juno; over 5,000 Canadians were killed. There were more than 200,000 Allied casualties. Allies gained the much-needed beachhead in Europe.

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

WHERE: The Philippines WHAT: The Americans took on virtually the whole Japanese fleet.

The Japanese introduced the kamikaze suicide technique: planes loaded with explosives would deliberately crash into an American ship.

OUTCOME: The Americans sank one half of the Japanese fleet.

BATTLE: THE LIBERATION OF HOLLAND

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

WHEN: May 1945 WHERE: Holland

This Canadian victory allowed Allied troops to continue forward towards Germany.

WHAT: Canadian forces drove the NAZIS to retreat from Holland and surrender.

Canadians have been much respected in Holland ever since.

OUTCOME: On May 8th 1945 the last German troops surrendered.

BATTLE: HIROSHIMA

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

WHEN: August 6th, 1945 WHERE: Hiroshima, Japan

This was the first atomic bomb used in warfare.

WHAT: Truman decided to drop an atomic bomb on the city. OUTCOME: 100, 000 people were killed.

BATTLE: NAGASAKI

SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance)

WHEN: August 9th, 1945 WHERE: Nagasaki, Japan

A total of 170,000 people died due to both atomic bombs.

WHAT: Truman dropped another atomic bomb since Japan did not surrender immediately

OUTCOME: 35,000 people were killed.

This Introduced the nuclear era in modern international affairs.