COMMUNICATIONS SKILLS

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Transcript COMMUNICATIONS SKILLS

Air Power in World War I
World War I
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Elf Performers
ELF 1: MEGAN CLAWSON
ELF 2: RAOUL GAUBY
ELF 3: JAMI SCHROEDER
ELF 4: TYLER SCOTT
ELF 5: SGT T
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
WWI Performers
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Archduke Franz Ferdinand
Missus Ferdinand
Serbia
Austria-Hungary
Russia
Germany
Belgium
France
England
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Archduke Franz Ferdinand enters with
wife what’s her name (probably Missus
Duke Ferdi)
Archduke: “Hi everybody…(wave to
crowd)…I am here with my
ugly…oh…I mean my lovely wife to
make all you fine Serbians my
Servants”
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
 Enter Serbian Nationalist with weapon
 Serbian Nationalist: “I will be a servant to
nobody you south end of a north bound
donkey female reproductive organ ArchDukey with your ugly…oh I mean Lovely
wife. Oh and by the way what kind of
name is Franz…did your mother not like
you? I will now kill you…kill you dead and
your ugly…oh I mean lovely wife.”
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Serbian Nationalist kills Archduke and
his ugly…oh I mean lovely wife
Archduke and ugly…oh I mean lovely
wife lay down and die
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Enter Austria Hungary
Austria-Hungary Looks at dead people
and says: “Heyyyyyyy!!! Who killed
the Duke and his ugly…oh I mean
lovely wife?”
Serbian Nationalist: “It was I you
scurvy swine poor excuse for a
country”
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Austria-Hungary: “Well that makes me
very angry and I shall make war with
you…for you are very small like
(name a small cadet here) and I will
spank you until you cry”
Serbian Nationalist: “Bring it on tough
guy I am afraid of nobody except
(name that small cadet here)”
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Enter Russia: Russian say to AustriaHungary: “Hey Austria-rearwipeHungary…Serbia is my friend…I have
an alliance with them (wink
wink)…and if you touch them I will
bring my big burly hairy women
across the border to play footsie with
your men as we kick your bleeps”
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Austria-Hungary to Russia: “Game on
flabby lips…you can join your miniserbs as my servants” Oh..I will also
bring my little friend Hun and his
cast of girly men wearing tights from
Germany for they have allianced
(wink wink) with me”
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Enter Germany: Stand beside AustriaHungary: give a high-five:
Germany says: “OH YEAH!!! GIVE ME
SOME OF THAT SWEET SERB”
Enter Belgium: “Hey everybody
whazzupppp?”
Germany says to Belgium: “Shut your
pie-hole Belgi…Nobody likes you”
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Belgium says to Germany: “That’s
mean…just wait until my Frenchy
Friends hear what you said…they will
say they are going to make war with
you but they won’t cause they really
aren’t fighters…they are lovers…you
know with the French kiss thing
going on.”
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Enter France: Stand beside Belgium:
give a high-five: “OH YEAH!!! GIVE
ME SOME OF THAT GERMAN
CAKE…THAT WILL GO GOOD WITH
MY WINE AND I’LL INVITE MY
FUNNY TALKING FRIEND FROM THE
NORTH BLIMEY AND HIS CAST OF
BLOKES…THEY NEVER MISS A
GOOD BUTT WOOPING.”
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Enter England: Stand beside France:
“OH YEAH!!! I’ll TAKE AN ORDER
OF GERMAN CHOCOLATE AND
THROW A FEW OF THOSE AUSSIEHUNGARY MILK-MAIDS ON THE
SIDE”
All face-off and make mean gestures
then leave the scene.
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Pre-WW I Alliances
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Overview
 The contributions of US pilots during
World War I
 The role of air power during World
War I
 How air power expanded during World
War I
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
World War I
 Most World War I battles were fought
on land or at sea
 Airplanes were still fragile when the
war started in 1914
 But during the war, aviation engineers
made tremendous advances
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
World War I begins in
Europe
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Outbreak of WWI
 Because of alliances
among different
nations in Europe,
one country after
another soon
declared war
The Allies
The Central Powers
Russia
Germany
France
Serbia
Britain
 Soon the Allies were
at war against the
Central Powers
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Austria-Hungary
Turkey
WW I BATTLE MAP
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
The War Comes to the
United States (06:02)
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
The US Enters the War
 US President Woodrow Wilson vowed that
the United States would remain neutral
 But over time, that proved impossible
 German U-boats targeted all American
ships headed toward Britain
 Germany also made a secret deal with
Mexico
 The United States declared war on
Germany and entered World War I in April
1917
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Aircraft in War
 In a few key instances, aircraft
contributed to the Allied victory
 Aircraft had important functions—
from doing aerial reconnaissance to
shooting down enemy aircraft
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
The Lafayette Escadrille
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
The Lafayette Escadrille
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Some American pilots didn’t wait for the United
States to join the war
The French Foreign Legion could sign up these
volunteers
In April 1916 seven American pilots formed a
fighting group called Escadrille Américaine
They had to change the name to the Lafayette
Escadrille
By the time the United States Air Service brought
the unit under its supervision in 1918, its pilots had
made 199 kills
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Raoul Lufbery
 Raoul Lufbery was the most
famous pilot of the Lafayette
Escadrille
 He had 17 combat victories
during the war
 He died in action when his
plane became engulfed in
flames after being shot by a
German aircraft
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Courtesy of the U.S. Air Force
Movie: Flyboys
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Edward Rickenbacker
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Courtesy of Bettman/Corbis
Edward Rickenbacker
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Edward Rickenbacker
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Edward Rickenbacker
America’s ace of aces started out as a
professional racecar driver
Col William (“Billy”) Mitchell helped
Rickenbacker become a pilot
Rickenbacker rose from an enlisted
Soldier to the rank of captain and took
command of the 94th Squadron
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Frank Luke
 As soon as the US entered the war, Frank
Luke joined the Army Signal Corps
 Luke sometimes went off by himself to look
for German aircraft even though he risked
court-martial
 Luke’s career as a combat pilot was short: he
died just 17 days after his first kill
 In that time, he shot down 15 balloons and
three airplanes
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Eugene Bullard
 Bullard was the only AfricanAmerican to serve as a pilot
during World War I
 Bullard signed up with the
French Foreign Legion in
October 1914
 He tried to join the US Air
Service, but the Army turned
him down
 He shot down two German
aircraft while in the French
Air Service
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Courtesy of the U.S. Air Force
Stalemate
 By 1917, the war in Europe was at a
stalemate
 A stalemate is a situation in which further
action is blocked
 A force was needed to tip the balance one
way or the other
 The Allies hoped that force would be the
United States, which joined the effort in
April
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
US Involvement
 In August 1917 the US Congress vowed to
“darken the skies over Europe with US
aircraft”
 Congress had good intentions, but it had
made an empty promise
 While the United States never built more than
a handful of airplanes during the war years, it
did provide considerable manpower in the air
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
The Role of Aircraft
Until WWI, most people thought the role
of aircraft in combat was limited to aerial
reconnaissance
Dropping bombs from the sky seemed
an unlikely idea
Conducting battles between squadrons
of planes also seemed far-fetched
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Reshaping War
 The airplane reshaped the way
countries fight wars more quickly than
any other weapon in military history
 A motto emerged by war’s end:
“If you control the air, you cannot be
beaten; if you lose the air,
you cannot win”
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
The Long-Range Raid
 London, 1915: German airships floated
over the city and dropped bombs
 Through 1917 the Germans worked on
perfecting these long-range strategic
raids
 Strategic means designed to strike at
the sources of an enemy’s military,
economic, or political power
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
German Airship
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Courtesy of the Library of Congress
The Machine Gun
 Another WWI innovation was the airplanemounted machine gun
 French pilot Roland Garros was the first to
bolt an automatic rifle to his plane
 The Germans asked Dutchman Anthony
Fokker to improve it—he built an
interrupting gear
 But soon the Allies and the Central Powers
were again on equal footing
 The famous dogfights commenced—a
dogfight is a battle between fighter planes
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
The Battle of Saint Mihiel
 September 1918: Air power played a
tremendous role in this offensive
 Billy Mitchell commanded nearly 1,500
Allied airplanes
 The Allied pilots had two goals:
 To destroy German planes in the air
 To destroy German aircraft in hangars on the
ground
 The Battle of Saint Mihiel helped lead to
Allied victory two months later
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
How the Airplane
Revolutionized War
 During WWI both sides sent up airplanes to
shoot down observation aircraft
 Each side had to protect its observation
aircraft
 Aerial combat was born
 Once machine guns were mounted on
planes, pilots could use them to strafe
soldiers on the ground
 To strafe is to attack with a machine gun
from a low-flying aircraft
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Challenging Old Strategies
 Airplanes now offered possibilities that
challenged age-old warfare strategies
 In traditional battles, troops dug trenches
and assaults were from the front
 But airplanes could fly over an enemy’s
trenches and bomb from overhead
 They could also hit important targets behind
enemy lines, such as factories
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Necessity Is the
Mother of Invention
 The technology of the Allied and
Central Powers’ air power would
leapfrog one over the other:
 Speeds picked up
 Aircraft became stronger and sturdier
 Maximum altitudes climbed from 10,000
feet to 24,000 feet
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
New Developments in Aviation
 Once war broke out, the pace of
invention picked up
 By 1918 three specialized types of
aircraft had emerged:
 The fighter
 The observation aircraft
 The bomber
Sopwith Camel Most Successful Fighter
Plane of World War I
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Courtesy of the U.S. Air Force
Fighters
The fighter came into its own with the
birth of the dogfight
These fighter aircraft needed three
qualities: they had to be lightweight,
fast, and maneuverable
By early 1918 fighters zipped along at a
cool 130 mph
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Why War Sped Up
US Aviation Development
Congress appropriated $64 million for
airplanes in 1917
At that time the United States was far
behind other nations in air power
Curtiss Aircraft was the only aviation
manufacturer in the country
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Future of Aviation
 Army staff officers still had their
eyes focused on the infantry
 They had no plans for their
aviation section
 But Brig Gen Billy Mitchell
believed strongly in the future
of aviation as an instrument in
warfare
 Today’s US Air Force still
considers Mitchell one of its
founding fathers
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Courtesy of the U.S. Air Force
World War I Comes to an
End (03:35)
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Review
 During World War I, aircraft had important
functions—from doing aerial reconnaissance
to shooting down enemy aircraft
 Four American pilots who made significant
contributions in World War I were Raoul
Lufbery, Eddie Rickenbacker, Frank Luke,
and Eugene Bullard
 While the United States never built more than
a handful of airplanes during the war years, it
did provide considerable manpower in the air
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Review
The airplane reshaped the way
countries fight wars more quickly than
any other weapon in military history
Another WWI innovation was the
airplane-mounted machine gun
The Germans asked Dutchman
Anthony Fokker to improve it—he built
an interrupting gear
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Review
 During World War I, airplanes offered
possibilities that challenged age-old warfare
strategies
 By 1918 three specialized types of aircraft
had emerged: the fighter, the observation
aircraft, and the bomber
 Billy Mitchell believed strongly in the future of
aviation as an instrument in warfare
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Summary
The contributions of US pilots during
World War I
The role of air power during World War I
How air power expanded during World
War I
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Next….
Done—air power in World War I
Next—the barnstormers
Chapter 2, Lesson 3
Courtesy of the U.S. Air Force