Skip to main content

Home/ Class of 2018 E/ Group items tagged war

Rss Feed Group items tagged

carlos hirlemann

World War 2 - 0 views

  • The first German serviceman killed in the war was killed by the Japanese (China, 1937) The first American serviceman killed was killed by the Russians (Finland 1940). 80% of Soviet males born in 1923 didn't survive World War 2 The highest ranking American killed was Lt. Gen. Lesley McNair, killed by the US Army Air Corps. Between 1939 and 1945 the Allies dropped 3.4 million tons of bombs, An average of about 27,700 tons of bombs each month. 12,000 heavy bombers were shot down in World War 2 2/3 of Allied bomber crew
  • were lost for each plane destroyed 3 or 4 ground men were wounded for each killed 6 bomber crewmen were killed for each one wounded Over 100,000 Allied bomber crewmen were killed over Europe There were 433 Medals of Honor awarded during World War 2, 219 of them were given after the receipiant's death From 6 June 1944 to 8 May 1945 in Europe the Allies had 200,000 dead and 550,000 wounded The youngest US serviceman was 12 year old Calvin Graham, USN. He was wounded in combat and given a Dishonorable Discharge for lying about his age. (His benefits were later restored by act of Congress).
  • 40,000 men served on U-Boats during World War 2; 30,000 never returned
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • Germany lost 40-45% of their aircraft during World War 2 to accidents
  • 84 German Generals were executed by Hitler
  • Most members of the Waffen SS were not German.
  • Air attacks caused 1/3 of German Generals' deaths
  • Germany lost 136 Generals, which averages out to be 1 dead General every 2 weeks
CJG bannanaman

Spanish Conquistadors - 0 views

  • Spanish ConquistadorsSpanish ConquistadorsThe Renaissance & Elizabethan Age of Exploration to the New World was dominated by the Spanish Conquistadors. The success of the Spanish Conquistadors in acquiring monopolies on much of the Eastern spice trade and their expeditions to the New World brought great wealth and power to Spain. The new discoveries made by the Spanish Conquistadors brought untold riches in terms of gold and silver and spices and it also brought power and influence... Who were the Spanish Conquistadors?The Spanish word Conquistador means conqueror. The Conquistadors were Spanish Soldiers and Explorers - 'el conquistador'The History of the Spanish ConquistadorsSpain had successfully taken the Iberian peninsula from the Muslim Moors after nearly eight hundred years of conflict. This victory was referred to as the 'reconquista'. The conflict with the Muslim Moors had been seen as a continuation of the Medieval Crusades. The crusades were a series of religious Holy Wars which had been given the blessing of the Pope. They were fought by Roman Catholic soldiers. The Spanish explorers / soldiers saw their mission to conquer new lands as a natural extension of the Medieval crusades. Roman Catholic Priests and Friars always accompanied the Spanish explorers who were expected to convert heathen natives to Christianity. The explorer / soldiers who travelled to the New World adopted the name 'Conquistadors'.The Motives of the Spanish ConquistadorsThe motives of the Spanish Conquistadors and
    • CJG bannanaman
       
      This was all about the spanish conquistadors: The RenAISSANCE AND ELIZABETH Age of exploration to the (new world) Which it is America. They brought gold, richness,silver,spieces and it also brought power and influence, as well as new technique and new crops. WHO WERE THE SPANISH CONQUISTADORS? Quinquistadors: means conqueror, conquistadors were soldiers and explorer.
  • their patrons were prompted by:Wealth - gold, silver and spicesPowerPrestigeIncreasing opportunities for Spanish trade Spreading the Catholic Religion to heathen nativesBuilding a Spanish Empire
    • Cxooper Stark
       
      he motives of the Spanish Conquistadors and their patrons were prompted by: Wealth - gold, silver and spices Power Prestige Increasing opportunities for Spanish trade Spreading the Catholic Religion to heathen natives Building a Spanish Empire
  •  
    Spain had successfully taken the Iberian peninsula from the Muslim Moors after nearly eight hundred years of conflict. This victory was referred to as the 'reconquista'. The conflict with the Muslim Moors had been seen as a continuation of the Medieval Crusades. The crusades were a series of religious Holy Wars which had been given the blessing of the Pope. They were fought by Roman Catholic soldiers. The Spanish explorers / soldiers saw their mission to conquer new lands as a natural extension of the Medieval crusades. Roman Catholic Priests and Friars always accompanied the Spanish explorers who were expected to convert heathen natives to Christianity. The explorer / soldiers who travelled to the New World adopted the name 'Conquistadors'.
  •  
    Spain had successfully taken the Iberian peninsula from the Muslim Moors after nearly eight hundred years of conflict. This victory was referred to as the 'reconquista'. The conflict with the Muslim Moors had been seen as a continuation of the Medieval Crusades. The crusades were a series of religious Holy Wars which had been given the blessing of the Pope. They were fought by Roman Catholic soldiers. The Spanish explorers / soldiers saw their mission to conquer new lands as a natural extension of the Medieval crusades. Roman Catholic Priests and Friars always accompanied the Spanish explorers who were expected to convert heathen natives to Christianity. The explorer / soldiers who travelled to the New World adopted the name 'Conquistadors'.
CJG bannanaman

P B S : C o n q u i s t a d o r s - C o r t é s - 0 views

  • In the decade before the Spanish arrived in Mexico, Aztec Emperor Montezuma II and his people were filled with a sense of foreboding. A series of evil omens had foretold of calamities to come. A fiery comet crossed the sky. The temple of Huitzilopochtli, the god of war, burst into flames. The Lake of Mexico boiled and rose, flooding into houses. A weeping woman passed by in the middle of the night, crying "My children, we must flee far away from this city!" Fishermen discovered a bird that wore a strange mirror in the crown of its head. Montezuma looked into the mirror and saw a distant plain, with people making war against each other and riding on the backs of animals resembling deer.
    • Mafer Martinez
       
      First contact. Cortes and the Aztecs.
    • CJG bannanaman
       
      This page was when Cortes first arrived to mexico to conquer the Aztecs. (in 1517-1519)Montezuma was their emperor.(of the aztecs)
  • 1517-1519 First Contact In the decade before the Spanish arrived in Mexico, Aztec Emperor Montezuma II and his people were filled with a sense of foreboding. A series of evil omens had foretold of calamities to come. A fiery comet crossed the sky. The temple of Huitzilopochtli, the god of war, burst into flames.
charmen chaminis

Pacific Ocean theater of World War II - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  •  
    ww2 in the pacific .
Dreams Sleeping

10 Deadliest Snipers of World War II - 0 views

  •  
    top ten snipers
charmen chaminis

World War II Memories, TRAINS, Tom Barker - 0 views

  •  
    TOM BARKER. Soldier from ww2. Diary of trains.
gaby garay

P B S : C o n q u i s t a d o r s - C o r t é s - 0 views

  • natives gave him small offerings of food and a gold mask, but then asked the Spanish to go: ''We wish neither war nor trade,'' they told Cortés.
    • gaby garay
       
      trade of the aztecs and spanish
Jennifer Garcia

"Loose Lips Sink Ships" - 0 views

  •  
    Learn more about what guidelines soldiers were given when writing letters home.
Sofia Martinez

The man who could have shot Hitler | Public Radio International - 0 views

  • Adolf Hitler believed it was Providence that led him safely through the Great War, in which he fought for four years as a common soldier. He had plenty of close shaves, but one incident stuck with him. He was wounded; a British soldier had him in his sights - close enough to make eye contact. But the British soldier lowered his gun. Hitler nodded in gratitude and crawled to safety.
  • "If only I had known what he would turn out to be. When I saw all the people, women and children, he had killed and wounded, I was sorry to God I let him go."
charmen chaminis

The Man Who Didn't Kill Adolf Hitler - KnowledgeNuts - 0 views

  • On September 28, 1918, in an event that would go down in World War I history, Private Henry Tandey, a British soldier who served near the French village of Marcoing says he came face to face with a wounded 29-year-old Adolf Hitler.
  • r nodded his thanks and disappeared. Tandey could have changed the course of history within seconds, but he felt sympathy towards Hitler. Tandey would not recall this event for another 20 years.
  • eville Chamberlain, visited Adolf Hitler in Germany. Hitler invited Chamberlain to his retreat in Berchtesgaden in Bavaria.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Hitler had a copy of Fortunio Matania’s depiction of Private Tandey hanging on the wall, and this magnificent work of art stood out for Chamberlain.
  • Hitler’s response was:
  • “That man came so near to killing me that I thought I should never see Germany again; providence saved me from such devilishly accurate fire as those English boys were aiming at us.”
charmen chaminis

Elsie S. Ott (1913-2006) | America Comes AliveAmerica Comes Alive - 0 views

  • First woman to receive the Air Medal, 1943
  • Second Lieutenant Elsie S. Ott was a pioneer in air evacuation of military casualties.
  • The numbers were high enough that getting them out of a battle zone was highly problematic
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • wounded.
  • he possibility of evacuating the wounded via military plane began to seem feasible.
  • Air Ambulances.”
  • econd Lieutenant Elsie Ott was the first nurse to prepare for an evacuation of the injured.
  • Elsie Ott was born in 1913 in Smithtown, New York,
  • Ott joined the Army Air Force Nurse Corps in September of 1941.
  •  
    A woman Flight nurse in WW2.
  •  
    A woman Flight nurse in WW2.
charmen chaminis

WW II Flight Nurse - 0 views

  •  
    flight nurse
charmen chaminis

Barbarossa | History.co.uk - 0 views

  • On 22 June 1941 Germany invaded the Soviet Union. Codenamed Operation Barbarossa, it was the largest military operation in history, involving more than 3 million Axis troops and 3,500 tanks. It was the logical culmination of Hitler’s belief that the German ‘master race’ should seek ‘lebensraum’ (living space) in the east, at the expense of the ‘subhuman’ native Slav people, who were to be exterminated or reduced to serf status.
  •  
    operation barbosa. attacking the soviet union.
charmen chaminis

Eastern Front | History.co.uk - 0 views

  •  
    easter front. COLD
charmen chaminis

History of WW2 - 0 views

  •  
    many important dates can be found here.
charmen chaminis

José Arturo Castellanos (1893 - 1977) - 0 views

  • José Arturo Castellanos Contreras (San Vicente, El Salvador, December 23, 1893 — San Salvador, June 18, 1977) was a Salvadoran army colonel and diplomat who, while working as El Salvador’s Consul General for Geneva during WWII, and in conjunction with a Jewish-Hungarian businessman named György Mandl (George Mandel), helped save up to 40,000 Central European Jews from Nazi persecution by providing them with false papers of Salvadoran nationality.
  • Mandel-Mantello proposed to Castellanos that they issue Salvadoran documents to help save Jews.
  • In 1942, Castellanos became the Salvadoran General Consul in Geneva and appointed Mandel-Mantello the consulate’s “First Secretary,” a ficticious title that does not exist in the Salvadoran diplomatic hierarchy.
  •  
    Arturo Castellanos Helped 40,000 Jews from the Nazi. He was a Salvadorian. His boss was Madel-Montello.
1 - 18 of 18
Showing 20 items per page