On the 11th of November 1918, World War I had ended. The war, the first modern conflict in history, left seventeen million casualties in its wake. World leaders of the time, like President Woodrow Wilson of the United States, Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau of France, and Prime Minister David Lloyd George, met to not only create a treaty between themselves and the Triple Alliance, but to also create a treaty that would last. Unfortunately, this treaty for peace and European prosperity, known as the Treaty of Versailles, did not last long. On the eve of September 1939, a new war, deadlier than the last, erupted, built from the Versailles bricks that led to the resentment and outrage of the German people, but, from this, how did the Treaty of Versailles aid the call for the Second World War?…