Title: Give Me Liberty!
1Chapter 19
Norton Media Library
Give Me Liberty! An American History Second
EditionVolume 2
by Eric Foner
2Chapter 19
Norton Media Library
Give Me Liberty! An American History Second
EditionVolume 2
by Eric Foner
3I. An era of intervention
- W. T. Sneads The Americanization of the World
- Theodore Roosevelt and Roosevelt Corollary
(Panama Canal) - William Howard Taft and Dollar Diplomacy
- Woodrow Wilsonsmoral imperialism (see quote,
page 680 685) - Mexico
- Mexican Revolution under leadership of Francisco
Madero - Assassination of Madero and outbreak of Civil War
- Wilson dispatches troops, skirmishes with Pancho
Villa
4Map 77
5Map 76
6II. America and the Great War
- Outbreak of European war
- Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand
- Allied Powers (Britain, France, Russia, Japan)
versus Central Powers (Germany, Austria-Hungary,
Ottoman Empire) - Protracted, bloody stalemate
- Implications of European war
- Undermining of faith in human progress and reason
- Indication of power of nationalism in modern world
7Map 81
8Map 79
9II. America and the Great War (contd)
- American Response
- Mixed sentiments
- Sympathy for Allied Powers
- British roots
- Association of Britain with democracy, Germany
with tyranny - Opposition to Allied Powers, and/or U.S.
involvement - German, Irish, Russian (anti-czarist) roots
- Antiwar feminists, pacifists, social reformers
10II. America and the Great War (contd)
- American Response
- The road to American involvement
- Initial declaration of neutrality
- British and German blockades
- American business ties to Britain
- Sinking of Lusitania
- Preparedness policy
- German suspension of submarine warfare against
neutrals - Reelection of Wilson He Kept Us Out of War
- German resumption of open submarine warfare
- Zimmerman Note
- First Russian Revolution (Menshevik) overthrow
of czar - American declaration of war against Germany
11II. America and the Great War (contd)
- From American to Armistice
- Second Russian Revolution (Bolshevik)
- Vladimir Lenins break with Allies
- Withdrawal of Russia from war
- Wilsons Fourteen Points
- Defeat of German advance Allied counteroffensive
- German surrender (11/11/1911)
12III. The war at home (contd)
- Expansion of federal powers
- Military conscription (Selective Service Act,
1917) - Economic intervention
- Areas
- War production (War Industries Board Bernard
Baruch) - National transportation (Railroad Administration)
- Coal and oil (Fuel Administration)
- Farming and food preparation (Food
Administration) - Labor relations (National War Labor Board)
- Varied degrees of intervention
- Coordination of overall war production (WIB)
- Control of some sectors (coal, oil, labor
relations)
13III. The war at home (contd)
- Expansion of federal powers
- Economic intervention
- Partnership between business and government
- Guaranteed profit
- Suspension of anti-trust
- Labor-management-government cooperation
- Uninterrupted production
- Federal mediation
- Labors right to organize
- Improved wages and working conditions
- Raising of revenue
- Corporate and income tax increases
- Liberty bonds
14III. The war at home (contd)
- Propaganda war
- Widespread opposition to American entry
- Industrial Workers of the World
- Socialist party
- Committee on Public Information George Creel
- Modes of propaganda
- Pamhlets
- Posters
- Advertisements
- Motion pictures
- Four-Minute speeches
- Themes
- Social cooperation
- Expanded democracy and freedom
- Demonization of Germans
15III. The war at home (contd)
- Revitalization of Progressive causes
- Womens suffrage
- Optimism that wartime patriotism will gain women
the vote - Insistence that women should enjoy democracy at
home - National Womens party
- Alice Paul
- Support from Wilson
- Postwar ratification of Nineteenth Amendment
(1920)
16III. The war at home (contd)
- Revitalization of Progressive causes
- Prohibition
- Sources of support
- Employers
- Urban reformers
- Women
- Anti-immigration Protestants
- Anti-Germans
- Progress
- Passage of state laws
- Postwar ratification of Eighteenth Amendment
(1920)
17Map 80
18III. The war at home (contd)
- Repression of dissent
- Instruments
- Federal government
- Espionage Act
- Sedition Act
- State governments
- Vigilante organizations
- Themes
- Definition of patriotism as support for
government, war, economic status quo - Definition of un-Americanism as labor
radicalism, opposition to war (see Emma Goldman
quote, page 697)
19III. The war at home (contd)
- Repression of dissent
- Means
- Criminalization of dissent conviction of Eugene
V. Debs - Investigations of suspected dissidents
- Mass arrests
- Public harassment and intimidation
- Suppression of labor protest
- Terror
- Minimal reaction from Progressives
20III. The war at home (contd)
- Status and response of African-Americans
- Progressive era
- Roosevelt, Wilson, and Race
- Birth of a Nation
- W. E. B. Du Bois and revival of black protest
- Du Bois background
- The Souls of Black Folk
- Challenge to Booker T. Washingtons
accommodationism - Talented tenth
- Niagara movement (1905), see Du Bois quote, pg.
707 - NAACP (1909)
21III. The War at Home (contd)
- Status and response of African-Americans
- World War I era
- Optimism that wartime patriotism would gain
blacks equal rights - Close ranks
- Minimal gains
- Great migration (1910 90 black population in S)
- Scale and direction (see table, page 709)
- Motivations and aspirations
- Disappointing realities
- Anti-black violence, North and South
- New spirit of militancy
- Silent Protest Parade
- Garveyism (see quote, page 710)
- Universal Negro Improvement Association
22IV. 1919
- Labor upheaval in America
- Breadth and magnitude
- Spirit and themes
- Appropriation of wartime rhetoric of freedom and
democracy - Social and ideological diversity
- Labor upheaval in America
23IV. 1919 (contd)
- Labor upheaval in America
- Red Scare
- Methods
- Federal raids on officers of labor and radical
organizations Palmer Raids - Arrests
- Deportations
- Secret Files
- Outcomes
- Devastation of labor and radical organizations
- Broad outrage over abuse of civil liberties
24V. Forging of postwar international order
- Wilsons performance abroad
- Rapturous reception in Paris
- Hardheaded diplomacy at Versailles
- Treaty of Versailles
- Wilsonian elements
- League of Nations
- New sovereign nations in Europe Finland, Poland,
Czechoslovakia, Austria, Hungary, Latvia,
Lithuania, Estonia, Yugoslavia - Harsher elements
- French occupation of Saar Basin and Rhineland
- Germany
- Restrictions on German military
- Crippling reparations for Germany 33-56 billion
- War guilt clause
25V. Forging of postwar international order
(contd)
- Treaty of Versailles
- Limits of national sovereignty
- Denial of independence for French and British
colonies - League of Nations mandates for former Ottoman
lands - Reallotment of former German colonies
- Seeds of instability for twentieth-century world
- Wilsonian internationalism in postwar America
- Short term setbacks
- League of Nations debate
- Wilsons stroke, incapacity
- Senate rejection of Versailles treaty
- Eclipse of Progressivism return to normalcy
26Map 82