The
years leading up to the declaration of war between the Axis and Allied
powers in 1939 were tumultuous times for people across the globe. The
Great Depression had started a decade before, leaving much of the world
unemployed and desperate. Nationalism was sweeping through Germany, and
it chafed against the punitive measures of the Versailles Treaty that
had ended World War I. China and the Empire of Japan had been at war
since Japanese troops invaded Manchuria in 1931. Germany, Italy, and
Japan were testing the newly founded League of Nations with multiple
invasions and occupations of neighboring countries, and felt emboldened
when they encountered no meaningful consequences. The Spanish Civil War
broke out in 1936, becoming a rehearsal of sorts for the upcoming World
War -- Germany and Italy supported the nationalist rebels led by General
Francisco Franco, and some 40,000 foreign nationals traveled to Spain
to fight in what they saw as the larger war against fascism. In the last
few pre-war years, Nazi Germany blazed the path to conflict --
rearming, signing a non-aggression treaty with the USSR, annexing
Austria, and invading Czechoslovakia. Meanwhile, the United States
passed several Neutrality Acts, trying to avoid foreign entanglements as
it reeled from the Depression and the Dust Bowl years. Below is a
glimpse of just some of these events leading up to World War II. (This
entry is Part 1 of a weekly 20-part retrospective of World War II) [45 photos]
Adolf Hitler, age 35, on his release from Landesberg Prison, on
December 20, 1924. Hitler had been convicted of treason for his role in
an attempted coup in 1923 called the Beer Hall Putsch. This photograph
was taken shortly after he finished dictating "Mein Kampf" to deputy
Rudolf Hess. Eight years later, Hitler would be sworn in as Chancellor
of Germany, in 1933. (Library of Congress)
First pictures of the Japanese occupation of Peiping (Beijing) in
China, on August 13, 1937. Under the banner of the rising sun, Japanese
troops are shown passing from the Chinese City of Peiping into the
Tartar City through Chen-men, the main gate leading onward to the
palaces in the Forbidden City. Just a stone's throw away is the American
Embassy, where American residents of Peiping flocked when Sino-Japanese
hostilities were at their worst. (AP Photo) #
Italian Fascist leader Benito Mussolini, center, hands on hips, with
members of the fascist Party, in Rome, Italy, Oct. 28, 1922, following
their March on Rome. This march was an act of intimidation, where
thousands of fascist blackshirts occupied strategic positions throughout
much of Italy. Following the march, King Emanuelle III asked Mussolini
to form a new government, clearing the way towards a dictatorship. (AP Photo) #
German-made Stuka dive bombers, part of the Condor Legion, in flight
above Spain on May 30, 1939, during the Spanish Civil War. The
black-and-white "X" on the tail and wings is Saint Andrew's Cross, the
insignia of Franco's Nationalist Air Force. The Condor Legion was
composed of volunteers from the German Army and Air Force. (AP Photo) #
Solemnly promising the nation his utmost effort to keep the country
neutral, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt is shown as he addressed
the nation by radio from the White House in Washington, Sept. 3, 1939.
In the years leading up to the war, the U.S. congress passed several
Neutrality Acts, pledging to stay (officially) out of the conflict. (AP Photo) #
Riette Kahn is shown at the wheel of an ambulance donated by the
American movie industry to the Spanish government in Los Angeles,
California, on Sept. 18, 1937. The Hollywood Caravan to Spain will first
tour the U.S. to raise funds to "help the defenders of Spanish
democracy" in the Spanish Civil War. (AP Photo) #
Two American Nazis in uniform stand in the doorway of their New York
City office, on April 1, 1932, when the headquarters opened. "NSDAP"
stands for Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, or, in
English, National Socialist German Workers' Party, normally shortened to
just "Nazi Party". (AP Photo) #
About to be engulfed in a gigantic dust cloud is a peaceful little
ranch in Boise City, Oklahoma where the topsoil is being dried and blown
away during the years of the Dust Bowl in central North America. Severe
drought, poor farming techniques and devastating storms rendered
millions of acres of farmland useless. This photo was taken on April 15,
1935. (AP Photo) #
England's biggest demonstration of its readiness to go through a gas
attack was staged, March 16, 1938, when 2,000 volunteers in Birmingham
donned gas masks and went through an elaborate drill. These three
firemen were fully equipped, from rubber boots to masks, for the mock
gas "invasion". (AP Photo) #
The German army demonstrated its might before more than a million
residents during the nationwide harvest festival at Bückeburg, near
Hanover, Germany, on Oct. 4, 1935. Here are scores of tanks lined up
just before the demonstration began. Defying provisions of the Treaty of
Versailles, Germany began rearming itself at a rapid rate shortly after
Hitler came to power in 1934. (AP Photo) #
America's Jesse Owens, center, salutes during the presentation of his
gold medal for the long jump on August 11, 1936, after defeating Nazi
Germany's Lutz Long, right, during the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin.
Naoto Tajima of Japan, left, placed third. Owens triumphed in the track
and field competition by winning four gold medals in the 100-meter and
200-meter dashes, long jump and 400-meter relay. He was the first
athlete to win four gold medals at a single Olympic Games. (AP Photo) #
British Premier Sir Neville Chamberlain, on his return from talks with
Hitler in Germany, at Heston airfield, London, England, on September 24,
1938. Chamberlain brought with him a terms of the plan later to be
called the Munich Agreement, which, in an act of appeasment, allowed
Germany to annex Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland. (AP Photo/Pringle) #
Windows of a shops owned by Jews which were broken during a coordinated
anti-Jewish demonstration in Berlin, known as Kristallnacht, on Nov.
10, 1938. Nazi authorities turned a blind eye as SA stormtroopers and
civilians destroyed storefronts with hammers, leaving the streets
covered in pieces of smashed windows. Ninety-one Jews were killed, and
30,000 Jewish men were taken to concentration camps. (AP Photo) #
View of one of the large halls of the Rheinmetall-borsig Armament
factories at Duesseldorf, Germany, on August 13, 1939, where gun barrels
are the main output. Before the start of the war, German factories were
cranking out pieces of military machinery measured in the hundreds per
year. Soon it climbed into the tens of thousands. In 1944 alone, over
25,000 fighter planes were built. (AP Photo) #
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