Social Impact
Use of Atomic Weapons
Treatment of Japanese Citizens
Economic and Diplomatic Effects
Reactions to Events in Europe and Asia (1933 - 1941)
100

The effect on the workforce in regards to women and minorities

More and better jobs

100

The project famous for the development of the atomic bomb

Manhattan Project

100

The name that the Internment camps were called to make them seem less harsh

Relocation Centers

100

The effect on the overall economy of the US by the end of the war

Positive growth 

100

The attack on Pearl Harbor had the US abandon this and enter the war

Neutrality

200

The first all African American unit to be trained fighter pilots

Tuskegee Airmen

200

The President which authorized the use of the atomic bomb

President Truman

200

The legal case that was on the Constitutionality of forced relocation

Korematsu v. U.S.

200

The defeated country which the US developed a strong relationship with

Japan

200

The group which believed that the dispute was between foreign nations and that the US should stay uninvolved

Isolationists

300

Group of Navajo who used their native language to transmit messages which the Japanese considered unbreakable

Navajo Code-Talkers

300

What bombing attack on Japan had more immediate casualties than the atomic bombs

Tokyo Firebombing

300

The number of internment camps in the US

10

300

Conference in which FDR, Churchill, and Stalin met to put Postwar plans in place and discuss plans for approaching defeat and occupation of Germany

Yalta Conference

300

The first was passed by Congress in 1935 which prohibited the export of “arms, ammunition, and implements of war” 

Neutrality Acts

400

This women's group ferried, tested, and delivered planes across the country

WASPs (Women's Airforce Service Pilots)

400

This was the amount of casualties caused by the bombings, both from the bomb's immediate effects and its lingering effects over the next four months

150,000 - 226,000

400

The number of Japanese civilians displaced from their homes between 1943 and 1945

~8.5 million (8-9 million accepted)

400

Early Allied document formed by the primary Allied powers which outlined several goals of the anti-Axis forces and established the foundations of an Allied alliance and Allied goals

Atlantic Charter

400

System that allowed the United States to provide weaponry to nations "vital to the defense of the United States"

Lend-Lease Act

500

Authorized by FDR and allowed the removal of any or all people from military areas "as deemed necessary or desirable" after Pearl Harbor

Executive Order #9066

500

This incident marked an attempted military coup that attempted to prevent Emperor Hirohito from surrendering regardless of the atomic bombs

Kyūjō incident

500

At least four of the states which contained internment camps

California, Arizona, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and Arkansas.

500

Agency promoting inter-American cooperation, especially in commercial and economic areas, with the goal of rooting out Axis political and cultural influence

Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs

500

First peacetime draft which provided for all men 21-35 to register for the military

Selective Training and Service Act

M
e
n
u