-
Archduke Franz Ferdinand is assassinated in Sarajevo. His death is the event that sparks World War I.
-
Russia mobilizes its vast army to intervene against Austria-Hungary in favor of its ally, Serbia. This move starts a chain reaction that leads to the mobilization of the rest of the European Great Powers, and inevitably to the outbreak of hostilities.
-
Germany invades Belgium, beginning World War I.
-
The Germans fire shells filled with chlorine gas at Allied lines. This is the first time that large amounts of gas are used in battle, and the result is the near-collapse of the French lines. However, the Germans are unable to take advantage of the breach.
-
A German submarine sinks the passenger liner Lusitania. The ship carries 1,198 people, 128 of them Americans.
-
Reacting to international outrage at the sinking of the Lusitania and other neutral passenger lines, Kaiser Wilhelm suspends unrestricted submarine warfare. This is an attempt to keep the United States out of the war, but it severely hampers German efforts to prevent American supplies from reaching France and Britain.
-
The British employ the first tanks ever used in battle, at Delville Wood. Although they are useful at breaking through barbed wire and clearing a path for the infantry, tanks are still primitive and they fail to be the decisive weapon, as their designers thought they would be.
-
Germany resumes unrestricted submarine warfare in European waterways. This act, more than any other, draws the United States into the war and causes the eventual defeat of Germany.
-
British intelligence gives Wilson the so-called Zimmermann Telegram, a message from German foreign secretary Arthur Zimmermann proposing that Mexico side with Germany in case of war between Germany and the United States. In return, Germany promises to return to Mexico the "lost provinces" of Texas and much of the rest of the American Southwest. Mexico declines the offer, but the outrage at this interference in the Western Hemisphere pushes American public opinion to support entering the war.
-
President Wilson outlines his case for war to Congress.
-
Congress passes the Selective Service Act authorizing the draft. Although criticized for destroying democracy at home while fighting for it abroad, President Wilson claims he sees no other option and signs the bill into law.
-
The Germans sign a peace treaty with the new Bolshevik government of Russia. The terms of the treaty give Germany huge tracts of land that had been the Ukraine and Poland, and peace on the Eastern Front allows Germany to shift soldiers to the Western Front, causing serious problems for the French, British, and Americans.
-
The Battle of Cantigny is the first major American offensive of the war. Though small in scale, the Americans fight bravely and soon go on to larger attacks against German positions.
-
The Americans attack the Germans at Chateau-Thierry. This battle would morph into the larger Battle of Belleau Wood.
-
The Battle of Belleau Wood begins as the U.S. Marine Corps attacks the Germans across an open field of wheat, suffering huge casualties.
-
The Battle of Belleau Wood ends with the final expulsion of the Germans from the wood, which marks the farthest German advance on Paris. The area has changed hands six times during the three-week battle, which has caused nearly 10,000 American casualties.
-
An Armistice is signed ending fighting on the Western Front.
-
The Battle of St. Mihiel begins when 300,000 American troops under the direct command of General Pershing fling themselves into the German lines.
-
Kaiser Wilhelm abdicates, ending all German hope for a victory. He and his retinue quietly slip over the border into the Netherlands where he lives out the remainder of his life in relative peace and writes a self-promoting memoir defending his actions in the war.
-
Adolf Hitler becomes Chancellor of Germany.
-
Italy, under the leadership of Prime Minister Benito Mussolini, invades Ethiopia.
-
President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the 1937 Neutrality Act, which bans travel on belligerent ships, forbids the arming of American merchant ships trading with belligerents, and issues an arms embargo with warring nations.
-
The Japanese defeat Chinese forces in a clash near Peking, taking control of North China.
-
President Franklin D. Roosevelt forbids U.S. ships from carrying arms to China or Japan.
-
Japanese warplanes dive-bomb the American gunboat Panay in the Yangtze River in China. Japan apologizes and pays reparations for the lives lost.
-
In the United States, popular support for American action against Japan far exceeds support for action against Nazi Germany.
-
Time Inc. releases an anti-Nazi propaganda newsreel entitled March of Time in Nazi Germany
-
German Chancellor Adolf Hitler announces support for Japan.
-
German Chancellor Adolf Hitler declares Austria part of the Third Reich
-
Hermann Goering, marshal of the Third Reich and Hitler's second in charge, warns all Jews to leave Austria.
-
The United States grants recognition to the new Austrian government.
-
In a speech in Rome, Benito Mussolini, fascist leader of Italy, promises to fight the democracies alongside Adolf Hitler's should war break out.
-
The U.S. Congress passes the Naval Expansion Act giving President Franklin D. Roosevelt one billion dollars to enlarge the navy.
-
Adolf Hitler is poised to invade and conquer the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia.
-
Leaders of France and Great Britain meet with representatives from Germany, including Adolf Hitler, to discuss Germany's demands, ultimately granting Hitler the Sudetenland in the hopes of gaining "peace with honor." The Czechs are not consulted.
-
Adolf Hitler, in return for the Sudetenland, promises to leave the rest of Czechoslovakia alone.
-
During the German Kristallnacht (Night of Broken Glass), 7500 Jewish businesses are looted, 191 synagogues are set afire, nearly 100 Jews are killed, and tens of thousands are sent to concentration camps.
-
A group of U.S. Senators block the President's request for permission to offer economic aid to Britain and France in case of war.
-
President Franklin D. Roosevelt writes letters to both Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini, requesting they promise not to attack a list of nations for at least ten years. Hitler would respond on behalf of the Italian leader and himself, assuring Roosevelt that he had nothing to fear.
-
Time magazine prints its 1938 Man of the Year edition choosing Adolf Hitler for the title, but does not show the Nazi leader's face on the cover of the publication.
-
Adolf Hitler reneges on the promise made in September of 1938 and takes all of Czechoslovakia.
-
Passenger ship St. Louis, containing 907 Jewish refugees, begins its journey back to Europe after the United States refuses to grant it permission to dock.
-
Germany and the Soviet Union agree to a nonaggression pact leaving the Soviets free to strengthen their western frontier, and Hitler free to attack Poland.
-
German troops invade Poland on the ground while Hitler's air force bombs Polish cities from the sky.
-
Britain and France declare war on Germany honoring their commitment to Poland.President Franklin D. Roosevelt invokes the Neutrality Act but notes, "Even a neutral cannot be asked to close his mind or his conscience."
-
Congress grants President Franklin D. Roosevelt's request to revise neutrality laws, to repeal an arms embargo so that munitions could be sold to Britain and France, and to prevent American ships from sailing into war zones.
-
American author Ernest Hemingway publishes For Whom the Bell Tolls, a novel about a young American in Spain who joins an antifascist guerrilla force in the Spanish Civil War.
-
German fighter planes and ground troops pummel France.
-
Britain forces retreat from France and Adolf Hitler's armies defeat French forces.
-
The Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies is founded.
-
President Franklin D. Roosevelt moves the United States Pacific Fleet base from San Diego, California to Pearl Harbor in Hawaii.
-
Congress appropriates $16 billion for defense needs, and enacts the first peacetime draft in American history.
-
The America First Committee is formed.
-
In the presidential election, Democrats break with the two-term tradition and renominate Franklin D. Roosevelt for a third term. Republicans nominate Wendell L. Willkie, a public-utilities executive who shared FDR's views on the war in Europe. Franklin D. Roosevelt defeats Wendell L. Willkie by nearly 5 million popular votes.
-
United States Naval Intelligence cryptographers crack Japan's secret communications code and learn that Japan intends to conquer China.
-
Adolf Hitler takes neutral Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Holland, and Luxembourg.
-
In a speech to Congress, President Franklin D. Roosevelt requests new defense spending, an enlarged army, and an expanded air fleet. Public opinion favors the new defense program.
-
Benito Mussolini's Italian forces attack France from the south.
-
France, crushed, surrenders to Germany and signs an armistice. Great Britain now stands alone against the Axis power
-
The United States orders gasoline withheld from Japan sparking protest from the Japanese government.
-
President Franklin D. Roosevelt makes a deal to give Great Britain 50 destroyers in exchange for naval bases in Newfoundland, Bermuda, and sites in the Caribbean and the South Atlantic.
-
The United States extends the Japanese embargo to include iron and steel.
-
Responding to the embargoes imposed by the United States, Japan joins the German-Italian coalition.
-
The first draft numbers are drawn, sending thousands of draftees to drill camps all over the country.
-
President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivers a fireside chat to the American people announcing, "We must be the great arsenal of democracy."
-
In response to the destruction of the battleship Reuben James, the U.S. Congress authorizes American merchant ships to carry arms.
-
The United States extends "lend-lease" to the Soviet Union.
-
Before the U.S. Congress, President Franklin D. Roosevelt proposes a "lend-lease" program, which would deliver arms to Great Britain to be paid for following the war's end. Congress approves the bill.
-
President Franklin D. Roosevelt orders the United States Coast Guard to seize German ships that sail into American ports. 65 Axis ships are held in "protective custody."
-
In the South Atlantic the American merchant ship Robin Moor is sunk by a German torpedo. President Franklin D. Roosevelt responds to the German attack by declaring a national emergency.
-
President Franklin D. Roosevelt announces that the United States will take over defense of Iceland for the duration of the war.
-
President Franklin D. Roosevelt demands Germany and Italy close their American consulates located in the United States.
-
Germany invades the Soviet Union violating the Nonaggression Pact. U.S. Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson estimates that it will take Hitler less than three months to conquer the Soviet Union.
-
The United States extends lend-lease aid to the Soviet Union.
-
On a British battleship, President Franklin D. Roosevelt meets with the Prime Minister of Great Britain, Winston Churchill. The two leaders write up the Atlantic Charter.
-
President Franklin D. Roosevelt warns the Japanese government to cease all aggression toward neighboring countries or else face United States forces.
-
Provoked by the American destroyer Greer, a German submarine fires on the ship. In response to the attack, President Franklin D. Roosevelt orders the navy to shoot any Axis battleships they encounter.
-
German submarines damage the U.S.S. Kearny in a skirmish near Iceland, killing 11.
-
The U.S. destroyer Reuben James is sunk near Iceland, killing 115 seamen.
-
The Japanese government decides to attack Pearl Harbor if negotiations with the United States fail.
-
U.S. Naval cryptographers learn from secret code that Japan plans aggressive action if an agreement with the United States is not met.
-
Japan dismisses American demands to withdraw forces from China.
-
Japanese fighter planes attack the American base at Pearl Harbor destroying U.S. aircraft and naval vessels, and killing 2,355 U.S. servicemen and 68 civilians.
-
Germany and Italy, Japan's axis partners, declare war on the United States. The United States declares war on Germany, Italy, and Japan.
-
President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivers his State of the Union address in which he proposes a massive government spending budget, the largest in American history.
-
In the first major Allied offensive, British and U.S. armies attack Germany's Africa Korps on the Mediterranean chasing forces back toward Libya.
-
Under the leadership of General Dwight D. Eisenhower, U.S. troops land in Algiers, Oran, and Casablanca in North Africa.
-
Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Franklin D. Roosevelt meet in Casablanca in North Africa to plan attacks on all fronts, to invade Sicily and Italy, to send forces to the Pacific, and to better aid the Soviet Union.
-
The Russian Red Army traps and captures German armies that had invaded the Soviet Union.
-
The Italian government officially surrenders to the Allied powers; still, German forces occupy much of Italy.
-
The Allies capture German holdings in Naples.
-
The Allied powers announce the Cairo Declaration in which all three declare their intention to establish an international organization to maintain the peace and security of the world.
-
In England, the Allied powers assemble 2.9 million men, 2.5 million tons of supplies, 11,000 airplanes, and hundreds of ships in preparation for D-Day.
-
Rome falls to Allied forces.
-
D-Day: The first of nearly 3 million Allied soldiers arrive in Normandy, on the northern shores of France.
-
Allied troops take large portions of Normandy and Brittany initiating a German retreat.
-
U.S. forces, aided by a Free French division, liberate Paris from Nazi control.
-
Demobilization of the American army begins.
-
An atomic bomb is successfully detonated in the New Mexico desert.
-
The Allied powers meet in Yalta to negotiate Soviet dominance in Eastern Europe. The Yalta Conference would result in the dual administrations in Berlin, the break up of Germany, and the prosecution of war criminals.
-
President Franklin D. Roosevelt dies of a cerebral hemorrhage in Warm Springs, Georgia.
-
Italian insurgents capture Mussolini, murder him, and mutilate his body.
-
Adolf Hitler commits suicide in Berlin.
-
The German army signs an unconditional surrender.
-
The American air force in Europe heads for the war in the Pacific.
-
Allied leaders meet in Potsdam, Germany to send an ultimatum to Japan. Japanese military leaders ruling the government issue no surrender.
-
The United States drops an atomic bomb—the first to be used in warfare—on Hiroshima, killing 75,000 people instantly, and injuring more than 100,000.
-
With still no surrender from Japan, the Soviet Union enters the Pacific war as promised in Yalta, defeating Japanese forces in Manchuria.
-
A second atomic bomb is dropped in Nagasaki.
-
Tokyo asks for peace on the condition that Emperor Hirohito will retain his throne. The Allies accept.
-
A formal surrender ceremony is conducted in Tokyo Bay on the U.S. battleship Missouri. World War II officially ends.