HOLOCAUST TIME LINE 1933-1945

Please create a timeline in Microsoft Word. All of the below dates and events need to be visible on your timeline. Please include at least 3 images per year (if there are only 2 events in a year, only include 2 images for that year).

1933
April 1 / A nationwide boycott of Jewish-owned businesses in Germany is carried out under Nazi leadership.
May 10 / Books by Jews and opponents of Nazism are burned publicly.
April 7 / Jews are barred from government service; Jewish civil servants, including University professors and school teachers, are fired from their positions.
July 14 / Laws are passed in Germany that permit the forced sterilization of Gypsies, the mentally and physically disabled, African-Germans, and others considered "inferior" or "unfit."
January 30 / Adolf Hitler is appointed chancellor of Germany.
March 20 / The first concentration camp is established in Nazi Germany at Dachau. The first prisoners are political opponents.
1933-1935 / In all German schools it is officially taught that "non-Aryans" are racially inferior. Jewish children are prohibited from participating in "Aryan" sports clubs, school orchestras, and other extracurricular activities; banned from playgrounds, swimming pools, and parks
April 25 / The law against "overcrowding in German schools and universities" is adopted, restricting the number of Jewish children allowed to attend. Children of war veterans and those with one non-Jewish parent are initially exempted.
March 4 / Franklin D. Roosevelt is inaugurated President of the United States.
October 19 / Germany withdraws from the League of Nations.
1934
October / First major wave of arrests of homosexuals occurs throughout Germany, continuing into November.
August 3 / Adolph Hitler declares himself president and chancellor of the Third Reich after the death of Paul von Hindenburg.
1935
May / "No Jews" signs and notices are posted outside German towns and villages, and outside shops and restaurants.
Jews are prohibited from serving in the German armed forces.
March 16 / Hitler violates the Versailles Treaty by renewing the compulsory military draft.
September 15 / The Nuremberg Laws deprive German Jews of their citizenship.
April / Jehovah's Witnesses are banned from all civil service jobs and are arrested throughout Germany.
1936
August 1-16 / The Olympic Games take place in Berlin. Anti-Jewish signs (i.e., "Jews Not Welcome") are removed until the Games are completed.
1936
July 12 / The first German Gypsies are arrested and deported to Dachau concentration camp.
March 3 / Jewish doctors are no longer permitted to practice in government institutions in Germany.
October 15 / The Ministry of Science and Education prohibits teaching by "non-Aryans" in public schools and bans private instruction by Jewish teachers.
March 7 / Hitler's army invades the Rhineland.
1937
July 16 / Buchenwald concentration camp opens.
November 16 / Jews can obtain passports for travel outside of Germany only in special cases.
July 2, 1937 / Further restrictions are imposed on the number of Jewish students attending German schools.
1938
July 23 / The German government announces Jews must carry identification cards.
December 8 / Jews may no longer attend universities as teachers and/or students.
March 13 / Germany annexes Austria.
December 3 / Jews must sell their businesses and real estate and hand over their securities and jewelry to the government at artificially low prices
November 9-10 / Kristallnacht ("Night of Broken Glass"): Nazi organized nation-wide pogroms result in the burning of synagogues; the looting and destruction of many Jewish homes, schools, and community offices; vandalism; and the looting of 7,500 Jewish stores. Many Jews are beaten, and more than 90 are killed. Thirty-thousand Jewish men are arrested and imprisoned in concentration camps. Several thousand Jewish women are arrested and sent to local jails. This is followed by a punitive fine to be paid by the Jewish community for the damages done to their businesses and the accelerated "Aryanization" of Jewish businesses.
July 6-15 / Representatives from thirty-two countries meet at Evian, France, to discuss refugee policies. Most of the countries refuse to let in more Jewish refugees.
November 7 / Herschel Grynzpan assassinates the German diplomat in Paris, Ernst vomRath
December 2-3 / Decrees ban Jews from public streets on certain days; Jews are forbidden drivers' licenses and car registrations.
November 12 / German Jews are ordered to pay one billion Reichsmarks in reparations for damages of Kristallinacht.
May 13 / The German government passes a decree requiring the registration of all Gypsies without a fixed address living in Austria; by June 1938, all Gypsy children above the age of 14 have to be fingerprinted. This is a central part of the growing racial definition of Gypsies as "criminally asocial."
1938
November 15 / All Jewish children are expelled from German schools and can attend only separate Jewish schools.
1939
August 23 / Soviet-German Non-aggression Pact signed.
October / Hitler extends powers to doctors to kill institutionalized mentally and physically disabled persons in the "euthanasia" program. (T-4 Program)
September 1 / The German army invades Poland and World War II begins.
June 5 / Two-thousand Gypsy males above the age of 16 are arrested in Burgenland Province (formerly Austria) and sent to Dachau and Buchenwald concentration camps; 1,000 Gypsy girls and women above the age of 15 are arrested and sent to the Ravensbruck concentration camp.
November 28 / The first Polish ghetto, PiotrkówTrybunalski is established.
June / Cuba and the United States refuse to accept Jewish refugees aboard the ship S.S. St. Louis, which is forced to return to Europe.
November 23 / Germans force Jews in Poland to wear a yellow Star of David on their chests or a blue-and-white Star of David armband.
March 15 / Germany invades and occupies Czechoslovakia.
September 23 / Jews are forced to turn in radios, cameras, and other electric objects to the police. Jews receive more restrictive ration coupons than other Germans. They do not receive coupons for meat, milk, etc. Jews also receive fewer and more limited clothing ration cards than do Germans.
1940
October / The Warsaw ghetto is established.
May 20 / Himmler orders a concentration camp to be established at Auschwitz, Poland.
October 3 / Anti-Jewish laws are passed by France's Vichy Government.
November 20, 1940 / Hungary, Romania, and Slovakia join the Axis Powers.
November 15 / The Warsaw ghetto is closed off with approximately 500,000 inhabitants.
Spring / The German army invades and defeats Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and France.
May 1-7 / Approximately 164,000 Polish Jews are concentrated and imprisoned in the Lódz ghetto which is established and sealed off from the outside world.
1941
September 23 / Soviet prisoners of war and Polish prisoners are killed in Nazi test of gas chambers at Auschwitz in occupied Poland.
November 5-9 / Five thousand Gypsies are deported from labor and internment camps in Austria to the Lódz ghetto in Poland.
December 7 / Japan attacks Pearl Harbor. Brings the US into WWII
September 28-29 / Nearly 34,000 Jews are murdered by mobile killing squads at BabiYar, near Kiev in the Ukraine.
1941
December 8 / The Chelmno death camp opens near Lódz, Poland and the first gassing of victims in mobile gas vans occurs.
April 6 / The German army invades Yugoslavia and Greece.
December 11 / Germany declares war on the United States.
March 22 / Gypsy and African-German children are expelled from public schools.
September 1 / German Jews above the age of six are forced to wear a yellow Star of David sewed on the left side of their clothes with the word "Jude" printed in black.
May 15 / Romania passes law condemning adult Jews to forced labor.
October / Construction begins on Birkenau, an addition to the Auschwitz camp. Birkenau includes a killing center which begins operations in early 1942.
December-January / Five thousand Austrian Gypsies from the Lódz ghetto are deported to the killing center at Chelmno where they are all killed in mobile gas vans.
October-November / First group of German and Austrian Jews are deported to ghettos in eastern Europe.
March 24 / The German army invades North Africa.
June 22 / The German army invades the Soviet Union. The Einsatzgruppen, mobile killing squads, begin the mass murders of Jews, Gypsies, and Communist leaders.
June / The French Vichy government revokes civil rights of French Jews in North Africa.
1942
July 4 / Mass gassing begins at Auschwitz in the “new and improved” gas chambers
December 1 / A special internment camp for non-Jewish Polish youth is opened in Lódz.
1942 / Nazi "extermination" camps located in occupied Poland at Auschwitz, Birkenau, Treblinka, Sobibor, Belzec, and Majdanek-Lublin begins mass murder of Jews in gas chambers.
October 4 / All Jews in concentration camps in Germany are sent to death camp at Auschwitz.
July 28 / Jewish fighting organizations established in the Warsaw ghetto.
September 5-12 / Approximately fifteen thousand Jews in the Lódz ghetto are deported to Chelmno, mostly children under ten and individuals over sixty-five, but also others who are too weak or ill to work. By September 16, approximately fifty-five thousand Jews have been deported to the killing center at Chelmno.
June 1
June 1, 1942 / Treblinka death camp opens.
Jews in France and the Netherlands are required to wear identifying Stars of David.
1942
January 20 / Wannsee Conference-15 Nazi and government leaders meet at Wannsee, a section of Berlin, to discuss the "final solution to the Jewish question".
June / The German government closes all Jewish schools.
January 16 / Jews in the Lódz ghetto are deported to the killing center at Chelmno.
May 4-12 / Approximately ten thousand Jews, who had arrived in the Lódz ghetto some six months earlier from Germany, Luxembourg, Vienna, and Prague, are deported to Chelmno. Their baggage is confiscated before they board the train.
1943
August 2 / The inmates at Treblinka rebel.
April 19-May / 16 Jews in the Warsaw ghetto initiate resistance to deportation by the Germans to the death camps.
June / The Nazis order all of the ghettos in Poland and the Soviet Union destroyed.
May 26 / In order to hide the number of deaths occurring in the camps, a secret numbering code is established
Fall / The Danish citizens smuggle most of the nation's Jews to neutral Sweden.
October 14 / The inmates at Sobibor initiate an armed rebellion.
March / All Gypsies in Germany and Nazi occupied countries, with few exceptions, are arrested and deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau.
1944
June 6 / The Allied Powers invade Normandy.
June 23-July 14 / Seven thousand one hundred ninety-six Jews are deported from the Lódz ghetto to Chelmno where they are killed.
November 26 / Himmler orders the destruction of the crematoriums at Auschwitz to hide the evidence of the death camps.
July 20 / German officers fail and are caught in an attempt to assassinate Hitler.
October 7 / The prisoners at Auschwitz-Birkenau rebel and blow up one crematorium
January / The War Refugee Board is established by President Franklin Roosevelt.
May 15 / The Nazis begin deportation of Hungarian Jews. Over 430,000 Jews are sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau where most are gassed.
March / The German army invades Hungary.
July 24 / The Soviet Army liberates the Majdanek death camp.
1945
April / United States soldiers liberate survivors from the Buchenwald and Dachau concentration camps.
May 7 / Germany surrenders and war in Europe is ended.
1945
January 17 / Nazis empty Auschwitz and start prisoners on "death marches" to Germany.
January 27 / The Soviet army liberates Auschwitz
May 5 / Troops from the United States liberate Mauthausen concentration camp.
November / The war crimes tribunal is convened at Nuremberg, Germany.
April 30 / Adolph Hitler commits suicide in his bunker in Berlin rather than be caught by the advancing Soviet army