Rough Draft The year of 1918 played a crucial role in shaping the future of the whole world with the actions of Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points, the influenza pandemic, the case of Hammer v. Dagenhart case, the propaganda used in World War I, and the fashion. January 8, 1918, many months after the United States entered World War I along with the allies which included Britain, Russia, France, and Italy, President Woodrow Wilson delivered the Fourteen Points to the United States congress. In it, he shaped a plan that would end the war and disseminate peace for the world after the war. Though his plan was commended by many, it did not excite the leaders of the warring nations. “First, the United States held what it considered to be the moral…
During 1914, a first global world centered in Europe started. People often called this war as the Great War or World War I. World War I was a time of struggle for Europe. Many factors led to great tension in Europe, sparking the need for a war. The war was mainly fought between members of the Triple Alliance (Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy) and the members of The Triple Entente (Great Britain, France, and Russia).…
The War of 1812 was just like a person walking in a circle. No matter how much the person walked, it will always end up in the same place however as the person goes around she will be able to see more details of the place. The War of 1812 was fought between United States and Britain and end with no dramasticaly changes but deep efects. The war was caused by the three main facts.…
With the war already four years in, the United States entrance with its well supplied and equipped troops helped the Allies win the war ending November 11, 1918. In summary, the United States declared itself neutral but still realized the magnitude of World War I could spill out of Europe and affect us as a Nation. The following events caused the American people’s opinion to shaft from being neutral to demanding entrance into the war. The greatest persuader for the American people was German’s invasion of neutral country of Belgium and stories of German cruelties against its people including the killing unarmed civilians and destruction of small towns shocked and outraged Americans.…
World War 1 was expected to be the war to end all wars. When the first war began in 1914, it was presumed to end around Christmas time. Instead, it ended four years later in 1918. At the beginning of the war, America chose to stay neutral, however the country was never really neutral as it mainly helped the Allied side. The Americans public attitude changed negatively towards WW1 during the years 1914 to the 1920’s shortly after the war because of the unstable issue of neutrality, the actual joining of the war, and the aftermath of the war.…
The Relationship Between World War I and the Influenza Pandemic of 1918-1919 War and disease have been intertwined throughout history as human pathogens, weapons and armies have met on the battlefield. 1914-1919 marked the cruelest war in the chronicles of the human race preceded by the world’s deadliest unspoken pandemic. The aftermath of World War I proved so profound in their consequences that the influenza virus remained a blur in the public’s memory. Instead, focus was shifted towards the events that were results of World War I such as the rise of fascism, the Great Depression, World War II, and the Cold War (Kent Introduction 23).…
The novel, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald tells the story of the lives of Americans in the 1920’s (The roaring 20’s) with its flapper girls, vintage automobile, jazz and vibrant nightlife. Ironically, the next decade the 1930’s for some will remain the darkest moment of America’s economy (The Great Depression). This essay recounts how America’s economy went from grace to grass between the 20’s and 30’s. It strongly believes America’s economy between the 1920’s and 1930’s greatly shaped and globalized the economic and political stability of the world. It proves this by stating the effect of the two decades on the world as well as well as the type of interaction that happened between different civilizations during this period.…
After the war, many Americans became contaminated with the Spanish flu. The pandemic lasted an entire year and killed as many as 675,000 Americans. No disease had ever killed so many people. Consumer prices continued to rise after the war which led people to go on strike. In 1919 alone, more than 4 million workers participated in strikes against management.…
The United States encountered many challenges during world war one, which affected America, Foreign Nations, and each of their respective populations. The experience of the United States during the war remained impacted by imperialism, economic expansion and industrialization abroad and at the local level. Imperialism augmented the United States position against upcoming rivals. Economic expansion allowed the United States to acquire territories, expand markets, and establish foreign relationships that would later prove a crucial necessity. Industrialization already in progress, played a major role that not only enriched, but enlarged the United States position and further established key foreign relations.…
Americans worked to create a preventative vaccine, practiced better hygiene, and even wore face masks but the problems still never subsided. As you can infer from the data given, Americans in general faced many major problems during this small two year time period of 1917-1919. The baggage of going to war against Germany, Austria, the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria was also influenced heavily during this time by the great Spanish influenza…
And with the end of World War 1 in 1918, life seemed to be turning into a never-ending upswing. Of course, not everything was going so well and eventually, thing would take an extreme turn for the worst, but before that the United States prospered. Because of the rapid production of products for the military during WWI, many people…
After two and a half years of managing to avoid war, American neutrality ended in 1917, which caused more than four million military personnel to be deployed into foreign nations. Of those four million United States’ citizens, about 110,000 of them died. However, 43,000 of those soldiers did not die in battle, but were killed silently, in the most brutal way possible; the influenza virus. This virus gave victims the symptoms of a normal head cold, except because of an overreaction of the immune system, fluid gathered in the lungs which resulted in the development of pneumonia. The H1N1 virus was known best as the Spanish Flu and even though it most likely originated in China, the first reports of the virus came from Spanish Newspapers, while…
The bad parts of World War 1 seem overwhelming, but what the US gained from the war has shaped how our country runs…
(Faragher, P. 590) The proclamation to be neutral and follow every means to disposal the government designed to mobilize public opinion behind the war effort sacrificed America in both positive and negative occurrence. In other words, after World War 1 ended United States of America became a major global force after strongly conquering Germany until Germany surrender. Moreover, in the global economy United States of America held powerful posture in commercial and industrial engine. Although, World War 1 ended devastatingly and propaganda had its effects on America, it brought a turning point to America.…
America only was able to improve its civilian economy, mainly by providing large amounts of armament and supplies for the Allies. Rather than undermine the economy, the war became the best tool in bringing America out of the Great Depression. Still, it was thanks to Roosevelt’s war strategies that the US came out victorious from the military conflict. It was his belief that by keeping armed ground forces at the minimum level, he could improve the economy by securing the industrial production lines. Along with production and a boosting economy, came social changes that affected all aspects of American life.…