America in World War II, 1941-1945: Ill. Single-Answer Multiple Choice
America in World War II, 1941-1945: Ill. Single-Answer Multiple Choice
America in World War II, 1941-1945: Ill. Single-Answer Multiple Choice
1. The fundamental strategic decision of World War II made by President Roosevelt and the British at the
very beginning was
a. to plan for a second front in western Europe as soon as possible.
b. to force Italy out of the war first by attacking the soft underbelly of Europe.
c. to arouse the American people to an idealistic crusade of the same sort that Woodrow Wilson had
so effectively used in World War I.
d. to concentrate first on the war in Europe and to place the Pacific war against Japan on the back
burner.
e. to fight an equally vigorous naval war against Japan and a land war against Germany and Italy.
3. Overall, most ethnic groups in the United States during World War II
a. were further assimilated into American society.
b. were not allowed to serve in the military.
c. had their patriotism questioned as in World War I.
d. cast their vote for Republican candidates opposed to the war.
e. served in ethnically distinct military units.
5. The minority group most adversely affected by Washingtons wartime policies was
a. German Americans.
b. blacks.
c. Japanese Americans.
d. American communists.
e. Italian Americans.
9. During World War II, the United States government commissioned the production of synthetic
__________ in order to offset the loss of access to prewar supplies in East Asia.
a. textiles
b. rubber
c. tin
d. fuels
e. plastics
10. Match each of the wartime agencies below with its correct function:
A. War Production Board 1. assigned priorities with respect to the use of raw materials
and transportation facilities
B. Office of Price 2. controlled inflation by Administration rationing essential
goods
C. War Labor Board 3. imposed ceilings on wage increases
11. While most American workers were strongly committed to the war effort, wartime production was
disrupted by strikes led by the
a. Teamsters.
b. Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.
c. Longshoremens International Union
d. United Mine Workers.
e. Industrial Workers of the World.
13. The employment of more than six million women in American industry during World War II led to
a. equal pay for men and women.
b. a greater percentage of American women in war industries than anywhere else in the world.
c. the establishment of day-care centers by the government.
d. a reduction in employment for black males.
e. a strong desire of most women to work for wages.
14. The main reason the majority of women war workers left the labor force at the end of WW II was
a. union demands.
b. employer demands that they quit.
c. male discrimination on the job.
d. government requirements to hire veterans.
e. family obligations.
15. African Americans did all of the following during World War II except
a. fight in integrated combat units.
b. rally behind the slogan Double V (victory over dictators abroad and racism at home).
c. move north and west in large numbers.
d. form a militant organization called the Congress of Racial Equality.
e. serve in the Army Air Corps.
16. Which one of the following is least related to the other four?
a Smith-Connally Act
b. A. Philip Randolph
c. Fair Employment Practices Commission
d. racial discrimination in wartime industry
e. proposed Negro March on Washington.
18. The northward migration of African Americans accelerated after World War II because
a. the southern system of sharecropping was declared illegal.
b. Latinos had replaced blacks in the work force.
c. mechanical cotton pickers came into use.
d. northern cities repealed segregation laws.
e. the South made it clear that they were not wanted.
20. By the end of World War II, the heart of the United States African-American community had shifted to
a. Florida and the Carolinas.
b. southern cities.
c. the Pacific Northwest.
d. Midwestern small towns.
e. northern cities.
22. Most of the money raised to finance World War II came through
a. tariff collections.
b. excise taxes on luxury goods.
c. raising income taxes.
d. voluntary contributions.
e. borrowing.
23. The first naval battle in history in which all the fighting was done by carrier-based aircraft was the
Battle of
a. Leyte Gulf.
b. the Java Sea.
c. the Coral Sea.
d. Midway.
e. Iwo Jima.
24. The tide of Japanese conquest in the Pacific was turned following the Battle of
a. Leyte Gulf.
b. Bataan and Corregidor.
c. the Coral Sea.
d. Midway.
e. Guadalcanal.
25. The Japanese made a crucial mistake in 1942 in their attempt to control much of the Pacific when they
a. failed to take the Philippines.
b. unsuccessfully attacked the oil-rich Dutch East Indies.
c. overextended themselves instead of digging in and consolidating their gains.
d. sent their submarine force on a suicide mission at the Battle of Midway.
e. attacked Alaska and Australia.
26. In waging war against Japan, the United States relied mainly on a strategy of
a. heavy bombing from Chinese air bases.
b. invading Japanese strongholds in Southeast Asia.
c. fortifying China by transporting supplies from India over the Himalayan hump.
d. island hopping across the South Pacific while bypassing Japanese strongholds.
e. turning the Japanese flanks in New Guinea and Alaska.
27. The conquest of in 1944 was especially critical, because from there Americans could conduct round-
trip bombing raids on the Japanese home islands.
a. Guadalcanal
b. Wake Island
c. New Guinea
d. Okinawa
e. Guam
28. Until spring 1943, perhaps Hitlers greatest opportunities of defeating Britain and winning the war was
a. the possibility of a successful invasion across the English Channel.
b. that German U-boat would destroy Allied shipping.
c. the defeatism of pro-Fascist elements within upper-class British society would.
d. that General Rommel would conquer Egypt and the Suez Canal.
e. that the American-British-Soviet alliance would collapse.
29. Hitlers advance in the European theater of war crested in late 1942 at the Battle of __________, after
which his fortunes gradually declined.
a. the Bulge
b. Stalingrad
c. Monte Cassino
d. Britain
e. El Alamein
30. The Allies postponed opening a second front in Europe until 1944 because
a. they hoped that Germany and the Soviet Union would cripple each other.
b. men and material were needed more urgently in the Pacific.
c. the Soviet Union requested a delay until it could join the campaign.
d. they believed that North Africa was more strategically vital.
e. of British reluctance and lack of adequate resources.
31. Roosevelts and Churchills insistence on the absolute and unconditional surrender of Germany
a. eventually complicated the problems of postwar reconstruction.
b. clearly shortened the war.
c. was largely unacceptable to the Soviets, who hoped to encourage a Communist revolution inside
Germany.
d. may have prevented a separate peace between Hitler and Stalin.
e. encouraged anti-Hitler resisters in Germany to try to overthrow the Nazis.
32. President Roosevelts promise to the Soviets to open a second front in western Europe by the end of
1942
a. was fulfilled by the invasion of North Africa.
b. was made to deceive Stalin and encourage him to slow his armys movement into Eastern Europe.
c. strongly supported by Churchill and British military leaders.
d. utterly impossible to keep.
e. the key goal to which all American military efforts were directed
33. Arrange these wartime conferences in chronological order: (A) Potsdam, (B) Casablanca, (C) Teheran.
a. A, B, C
b. C, B, A
c. B, C, A
d. B, A, C
e. A, C, B
34. Arrange these events in chronological order: (A) V-J Day, (B) V-E Day, (C) D Day, (D) Invasion of
Italy.
a. D, C, B, A
b. A, C, B, D
c. B, D, A, C
d. C, A, D, B
e. A, D, B, C
35. The major consequence of the Allied conquest of Sicily in August 1943 was
a. a modification of the demand for unconditional surrender of Italy.
b. the overthrow of Mussolini and Italys unconditional surrender
c. the swift Allied conquest of the Italian peninsula.
d. a conflict between Churchill and General Eisenhower over the invasion of the Italian mainland.
e. the threat of a Communist takeover of the Italian government.
37. The real impact of the Italian front on World War II may have been that it
a. delayed the D-Day invasion and allowed the Soviet Union to advance further into Eastern Europe.
b. prevented the rise of fascism or communism in Italy after the war.
c. enabled the Americans to appease both British and Soviet strategic demands.
d. enabled the United States to prevent Austria and Greece from falling into Soviet hands.
e. destroyed the monastery of Monte Cassino and other Italian artistic treasures.
39. The cross-channel invasion of Normandy to open a second front in Europe was commanded by General
a. George Patton.
b. Dwight Eisenhower.
c. Douglas MacArthur.
d. Bernard Montgomery.
e. Omar Bradley.
40. In a sense, Franklin Roosevelt was the forgotten man at the Democratic Convention in 1944 because
a. so much attention was focused on who would gain the vice presidency.
b. he remained in Washington, D.C., to conduct the war.
c. poor health prevented him from taking an active role.
d. the issue of a fourth term was prominent.
e. Vice President Henry Wallace controlled the convention.
42. Hitlers last-ditch attempt to achieve a victory against the Americans and British came in
a. the Battle of the Bulge.
b. the Battle of the Rhineland.
c. the attempt to assassinate Churchill and Roosevelt.
d. an attempt to arrange a negotiated peace with Stalin.
e. the final U-boat campaign against the American navy.
45. The spending of enormous sums on the original atomic bomb project was spurred by the belief that
a. a nuclear weapon was the only way to win the war.
b. the Germans might acquire such a weapon first.
c. the Japanese were at work on an atomic bomb project of their own.
d. scientists like Albert Einstein might be lost to the war effort.
e. the American public would not tolerate the casualties that would result from a land invasion of
Japan.
46. The unconditional surrender policy toward Japan was finally modified by
a. assuring the Japanese that there would be no war crimes trials.
b. guaranteeing that defeated Japan would be treated decently by American occupiers.
c. agreeing not to drop more than two atomic bombs on Japan.
d. agreeing to let the Japanese keep Emperor Hirohito on the throne.
e. permitting the Japanese to retain a strong army but no real navy.
47. Which of the following was not among the qualities of the American participation in World War II?
a. a group of highly effective military and political leaders
b. an enormously effective effort in producing weapons and supplies
c. a higher percentage of military casualties than any other Allied nation
d. the preservation of the American homeland against invasion or destruction from the air
e. the maintenance and re-affirmation of the strength of American democracy