GOAL SIX 6.03 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 13
About This Presentation
Title:

GOAL SIX 6.03

Description:

Boxer Rebellion. The Boxers, or 'The Righteous and Harmonious Fists,' were a religious society ... The Boxers believed that the expulsion of foreign devils ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:60
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 14
Provided by: Gas1
Category:
Tags: goal | six | boxer

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: GOAL SIX 6.03


1
GOAL SIX6.03
  • The Emergence of the United States in World
    Affairs
  • (1890-1914)
  • The learner will analyze causes and effects of
    the United States emergence as a world power.
  • Describe how the policies and actions of the
    United States government impacted the affairs of
    other countries.

2
Jingoism
  • Jingoism is a term describing chauvinistic
    patriotism, especially with regard to a
    warmongering political stance. This patriotic
    belligerence was intensified by the sinking of
    the Maine and led to the Spanish-American War.
    "Jingoism" did not enter the U.S. vernacular
    until the twentieth century.

3
Dollar Diplomacy
  • U.S. foreign policy in the early 1900s of using
    American diplomatic influence to protect American
    investments in Latin America and Asia and
    encourage more stable governments. President
    William Howard Taft expanded the policy, begun
    under President Theodore Roosevelt, from 1909 to
    1913. Woodrow Wilson repudiated the policy when
    he became president.

4
Platt Amendment
  • After the Spanish-American War, the United States
    occupied Cuba for five years, after which it
    withdrew under the condition that Cuba would
    apply the terms of the Platt Amendment to its
    constitution. The amendment, attached to the
    Cuban constitution on March 2, 1901, gave the
    United States sweeping power over the Cuban
    government and effectively made Cuba independent
    in name only. Many Cubans strongly opposed the
    terms of the amendment and staged several
    uprisings, which President Theodore Roosevelt
    quelled by the use of military force, which the
    Platt Amendment specifically authorized. The
    amendment was named after its original author,
    Senator Orville Platt.

5
Roosevelt Corollary- (1904)
  • foreign policy statement attached to the Monroe
    Doctrine by President Theodore Roosevelt,
    declaring that the United States would exercise
    police power to maintain stability in the Western
    Hemisphere. Directed at Europe, the Roosevelt
    Corollary stated that the United States would
    consider any interference in the affairs of
    small, poor Latin American nations a violation of
    the Monroe Doctrine. The first application of the
    Corollary occurred in 1905, when Roosevelt sent
    Marines to the Dominican Republic to manage the
    country's European debts.

6
Anti-Imperialism League
  • The American Anti-Imperialist League was founded
    in 1899, after the United States occupied Cuba
    and Puerto Rico and the Philippine Islands. Cuba
    became nominally independent, although the United
    States retained until 1934 the legal right to
    intervene in Cuban domestic and foreign affairs.
    Both Puerto Rico and the Philippines became
    American colonies.

7
Anti-Imperialism League
  • The Filipinos revolted against American rule in
    February, 1899, and were suppressed in 1902 after
    a bloody, ruthless guerrilla war. Most Americans
    supported overseas expansion, but many of the
    nation's most illustrious citizens - including
    Andrew Carnegie and William James, were appa11ed
    by American imperialism. In 1899 they founded the
    American Anti-Imperialist League in order to
    campaign, unsuccessfully as it turned out,
    against the annexation of the Philippines.

8
Missionary (moral) Diplomacy
  • The policy employed by Woodrow Wilson as an
    alternative to Tafts Dollar Diplomacy. Belief
    that if countries elected moral and ethical
    leaders, The United States would have better
    foreign relations.

9
Boxer Rebellion
  • The Boxers, or "The Righteous and Harmonious
    Fists," were a religious society that had
    originally rebelled against the imperial
    government in Shantung in 1898. They practiced an
    animistic magic of rituals and spells, which they
    believed, made them impervious to bullets and
    pain. The Boxers believed that the expulsion of
    foreign devils would magically renew Chinese
    society and begin a new golden age. Much of their
    discontent, however, was focussed on the economic
    scarcity of the 1890's. They were a passionate
    and confident group, full of contempt for
    authority and violent emotions.

10
Open Door Policy- (1899)
  • principle stating that all nations have equal
    trading rights and commercial opportunities in
    China. In the nineteenth century Japan and other
    nations had divided China into separate spheres
    of influence, with each power maintaining
    economic dominance in its area. The Open Door
    policy was proposed by U.S. Secretary of State
    John Hay in 1899 and again following China's
    Boxer Rebellion in 1900.

11
Open Door Policy- (1899)
  • In it, American policymakers reluctantly accepted
    the spheres of influence already established but
    sought equal privileges for the United States.
    Because most nations, especially Japan,
    disregarded the provisions, the Nine-Power
    Treaty, signed at the 1922 Conference on the
    Limitation of Armament in Washington, D.C.,
    reaffirmed the Open Door policy. It ended with
    the recognition of China's sovereignty after
    World War II.

12
Annexation of Hawaii
  • America's annexation of Hawaii in 1898 extended
    U.S. territory into the Pacific and highlighted
    resulted from economic integration and the rise
    of the United States as a Pacific power. For most
    of the 1800s, leaders in Washington were
    concerned that Hawaii might become part of a
    European nation's empire. During the 1830s,
    Britain and France forced Hawaii to accept
    treaties giving them economic privileges.

13
Annexation of Hawaii
  • In 1842, Secretary of State Daniel Webster sent a
    letter to Hawaiian agents in Washington affirming
    U.S. interests in Hawaii and opposing annexation
    by any other nation. He also proposed to Great
    Britain and France that no nation should seek
    special privileges or engage in further
    colonization of the islands. In 1849, the United
    States and Hawaii concluded a treaty of
    friendship that served as the basis of official
    relations between the parties.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com