write the time line chart showing on 1919_1920
Answers
Answer:
pls elaborate more
Explanation:
ok then :-)
Explanation:
Timeline
June 28, 1914
Archduke Francis Ferdinand is assassinated.
July 28, 1914
Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia, beginning World War I.
August 2-7, 1914
Germany invades Luxembourg and Belgium. France invades Alsace. British forces arrive in France. Nations allied against Germany were eventually to include Great Britain, Russia, Italy, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Rhodesia, Romania, Greece, France, Belgium, United States, Canada, Serbia, India, Portugal, Montenegro, and Poland.
August 10, 1914
Austria-Hungary invades Russia.
September 9, 1914
Allied forces halt German advance into France during First Battle of the Marne.
February 18, 1915
Germany begins naval blockade of Great Britain.
April 25, 1915
Allied forces land on the Gallipoli Peninsula of the Ottoman Empire.
May 7, 1915
German submarine sinks the passenger liner Lusitania during crossing from New York to Liverpool, England, killing 128 Americans.
[LUSITANIA, 1907-1914, New York City: broadside view, maiden voyage, crowd in foregrd.] 1907. George Grantham Bain Collection, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. LC-USZ62-55384
May 23, 1915
Italy declares war on Austria-Hungary.
February 21, 1916
Germany begins the attack on Verdun.
Verdun. Print (poster): lithograph. Maurice Toussaint. Paris: Cornille & Serre, [1919]. French World War I posters, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. LC-USZC2-4113
May 31, 1916
Naval Battle of Jutland takes place between British and German fleets.
July 1, 1916
Allied offensive begins the Battle of the Somme.
Taking away the wounded in motor ambulance (Somme). Stereograph. Meadville, Pa.: Keystone View Co., c1918. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. LC-USZ62-114922
December 18, 1916
Battle of Verdun ends with 550,000 French and 450,000 German casualties.
February 1, 1917
Germany returns to unrestricted submarine warfare halted after the sinking of the Lusitania.
February 3, 1917
United States severs diplomatic relations with Germany.
April 6, 1917
The United States declares war on Germany.
June 7, 1917
General John J. Pershing, newly selected commander of the American Expeditionary Forces, arrives in England with his staff.
[John Joseph Pershing . . . with eleven members of his staff, on deck of ship]. [between 1910 and 1920]. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. LC-USZ62-113652
June 24, 1917
American combat forces arrive in France.
December 15, 1917
Russia signs armistice with Germany.
January 8, 1918
President Woodrow Wilson presents to Congress his outline of Fourteen Points required for peace.
Woodrow Wilson. In album: Woodrow Wilson, Herbert E. French, National Photo Company, 1921. National Photo Company Collection, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. LC-USZ62-113824
February 8, 1918
The Stars and Stripes begins publication with a first issue of one thousand copies. Second Lieutenant Guy T. Viskniskki is the first managing editor of the newspaper.
March 3, 1918
Russia signs the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany.
March 21, 1918
Germany begins its final offensive of the war.
March 1918
American women recruited to serve as bilingual telephone operators for the AEF arrive in Europe.
May 28, 1918
United States forces are victorious in the Battle of Cantigny, the first independent American operation.
June 2, 1918
American forces stop German attempt to cross the Marne River at Chateau-Thierry.
Another notch, Chateau Thierry - U.S. Marines. Print (poster): lithograph. Adolph Treidler, [1917]. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. LC-USZC4-10664
July 26, 1918
The Stars and Stripes suspends the Sporting Page.
September 12, 1918
American First Army attacks St. Mihiel salient.
St. Mihiel. Print (poster): lithograph. Maurice Toussaint. Paris: Cornille & Serre, [1919]. French World War I posters, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. LC-USZC2-4112
September 26, 1918
Allied forces begin the attack at Meusse-Argonne, the final offensive of the war.
[Infantry] advancing on path through barbed wire entanglements . . . 107th Inf., 27th Div., near Beauquesnes, Somme, France. September 13, 1918. John Joseph Pershing Collection, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. LC-USZ62-87811
November 11, 1918
Germany signs the Armistice at Compiègne, ending World War I.
December 1918
Harold Ross assumes editorship of The Stars and Stripes.
December 1, 1918
British and American forces enter Germany.
December 16, 1918
The Stars and Stripes War Orphans Adoption Campaign ends after raising 123,047 francs and placing 3,444 orphans for adoption.
December 27, 1918
Sporting Page returns to The Stars and Stripes.