American History World War I

World War I ~ Lesson 6 Peace Treaty of Versailles

George, Orlando, Clemenceau, & Wilson at the Peace Conference

George, Orlando, Clemenceau, & Wilson at the Peace Conference

One hundred thousand Americans died fighting in Europe. Many others were permanently harmed by poison gas and other modern weapons.

Woodrow Wilson sailed to Europe to help write the peace treaty. Wilson put forth a program called the Fourteen Points. This was a list of fourteen things that he wanted put in the peace treaty. Some were

  • no more secret alliances
  • freedom on the seas
  • all land taken from one nation by another would be returned
  • A world body of nations would be formed, so the war could never happen again.

Other allied leaders did not agree with Wilson. Most wanted to punish the Germans. The leaders met many days in Versailles, France. They finally worked out peace treaties with the Central Powers.

Austria-Hungary was broken up into Austria, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia. Poland was made from Austrian, German, and Russian land. Yugoslavia was formed. The Germans had to break up industry, the army and navy, and pay all other nations for their war costs.

Territorial changes resulting from Treaty of Versailles

Fluteflute (talk)

Territorial changes resulting from Treaty of Versailles

Wilson's plan for the League of Nations was agreed on. His ideas were that nations settle their arguments before war could start. The headquarters would be in Geneva, Switzerland.

Congress rejected the Versailles Peace Treaty and would not let the Americans join the League of Nations. Many Congressmen felt America should stay out of foreign affairs with other nations. Later the U. S. signed a separate peace treaty with Germany.

Cartoon The Gap in the Bridge

Online Quiz 2

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