Title: America Becomes A Colonial Power
1America Becomes a Colonial Power
2Why did America join the imperialist club at the
end of the 19c?
3Economic Growth
41. Commercial/Business Interests
U. S. Foreign Investments 1869-1908
5- Sugarcane Plantation, Hawaii (p. 605)
6Changing times - Arguments for US expansion
- Economic - overproduction and surplus needed new
markets - US business abroad increased call for government
involvement - Banana Republics
71. Commercial/Business Interests
American Foreign Trade1870-1914
82. Military/Strategic Interests
Alfred T. Mahan ? The Influence of Sea Power on
History 1660-1783
9Changing times - Arguments for US expansion
- American Security overseas
- The Influence of Sea Power Upon History (Alfred
T. Mahan) - Importance of a nations navy
- 1880s - first battleships
- 1890 - Naval Act - to build a larger fleet
10 11American Security
123. Social Darwinist Thinking
The White MansBurden
The Hierarchyof Race
13The American Moral Obligation (a new White
Mans Burden)
144. Religious/Missionary Interests
American Missionariesin China, 1905
155. Closing the American Frontier
16Changing times - Arguments for US expansion
- The American Spirit Culturally
- Closing the Frontier limit development of
American character Needed to expand. - Henry Cabot Lodge
- Frederick Jackson Turner (frontier thesis)
- Theodore Roosevelt
- Anglo-Saxon civilization
- Josiah Strong (minister)
- Albert Beveridge (Senator)
- Could extend civilization to heathen
(un-Christian peoples) - Social Darwinists
- Survival of the Fittest Civilizations
17American Empire
18Hawaii "Crossroads of the Pacific"
19U. S. Missionaries in Hawaii
Imiola Church first built in the late 1820s
20U. S. View of Hawaiians
Hawaii becomes a U. S. Protectorate in 1849
by virtue of economic treaties.
21Hawaiian Queen Liliuokalani
Hawaii for the Hawaiians!
22U. S. Business Interests In Hawaii
- 1875 Reciprocity Treaty
- 1890 McKinley Tariff
- 1893 Americanbusinessmen backed anuprising
against Queen Liliuokalani. - Sanford Ballard Dole proclaims the Republic of
Hawaii in 1894.
23To The Victor Belongs the Spoils
Hawaiian Annexation Ceremony, 1898
24Hawaii
25Japan
26Commodore Matthew Perry Opens Up Japan 1853
The Japanese View of Commodore Perry
27Treaty of Kanagawa 1854
28Gentlemans Agreement 1908
- A Japanese note agreeing to deny passports
tolaborers entering the U.S. - Japan recognized the U.S.right to exclude
Japaneseimmigrants holding passportsissued by
other countries. - The U.S. government got theschool board of San
Francisco to rescind their order tosegregate
Asians in separateschools.
- 1908 - Root-Takahira Agreement.
29Lodge Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine 1912
- Senator Henry CabotLodge, Sr. (R-MA)
- Non-European powers,like Japan, would
beexcluded from owningterritory in the
WesternHemisphere.
30Japan
31Alaska
32Sewards Folly 1867
7.2 million
33Sewards Icebox 1867
34Alaska
35Cuba
36Causes of the Spanish-American War
37The Imperialist Tailor
38Spanish Misrule in Cuba
39Valeriano Weylers Reconcentration Policy
40Yellow Journalism Jingoism
Joseph Pulitzer
Hearst to Frederick Remington You furnish
the pictures, and Ill furnish the war!
William Randolph Hearst
41Theodore Roosevelt
- Assistant Secretary of the Navy in the McKinley
administration. - Imperialist and American nationalist.
- Criticized PresidentMcKinley as having the
backbone of a chocolate éclair! - Resigns his position to fight in Cuba.
42The Rough Riders
43Remember the Maineand to Hell with Spain!
Funeral for Maine victims in Havana
44The Spanish-American War (1898)That Splendid
Little War
How prepared was the US for war?
45A Splendid Little War
46- The Battle of San Juan Hill (p. 618)
47Cuba
48The Philippines
49The Spanish-American War (1898)That Splendid
Little War
50Dewey Captures Manila!
51De Lôme Letter
- Dupuy de Lôme, SpanishAmbassador to the U.S.
- Criticized PresidentMcKinley as weak and
abidder for the admirationof the crowd,
besidesbeing a would-be politicianwho tries to
leave a dooropen behind himself whilekeeping on
good termswith the jingoes of hisparty.
52Is He To Be a Despot?
53Emilio Aguinaldo
- Leader of the FilipinoUprising.
- July 4, 1946Philippine independence
54William H. Taft, 1stGov.-General of the
Philippines
Great administrator.
55Our Sphere of Influence
56The Treaty of Paris 1898
- Cuba was freed from Spanish rule.
- Spain gave up Puerto Rico and the island ofGuam.
- The U. S. paid Spain20 mil. for
thePhilippines. - The U. S. becomesan imperial power!
57Treaty of Paris (1898)
58After the Spanish-American War in the Philippines
59The American Anti-Imperialist
League
- Founded in 1899.
- Mark Twain, Andrew Carnegie, WilliamJames, and
WilliamJennings Bryan amongthe leaders. - Campaigned against the annexation of
thePhilippines and otheracts of imperialism.
60Debating Imperialism
- Anti-Imperialists
- A moral and political argument Expansionism was
a rejection of our nations founding principle of
liberty for all. - A racial argument Imperialism was just another
form of racism. - An economic argument Expansion involved too many
costs. Maintaining the armed forces required
more taxation, debt, and possibly even
compulsory, or required, military service. In
addition, laborers from other countries would
compete for jobs with U.S. workers.
- Pro-Imperialists
- Imperialism offered a new kind of frontier for
American expansion. - A new international frontier would keep Americans
from losing their competitive edge. - Access to foreign markets made the economy
stronger. - In 1907, President Roosevelt sent the Great White
Fleet, part of the United States Navy, on a
cruise around the world to demonstrate U.S. naval
power to other nations. American citizens clearly
saw the advantages of having a powerful navy.
61Cuban Independence?
- Teller Amendment (1898)
- Platt Amendment (1903)
- Cuba was not to enter into any agreements with
foreign powers that would endanger its
independence. - The U.S. could intervene in Cuban affairs if
necessary to maintain an efficient, independent
govt. - Cuba must lease Guantanamo Bay to the U.S. for
naval and coaling station. - Cuba must not build up an excessive public debt.
Senator Orville Platt
62American Public Opinion
- Most Americans favored US Expansion
- Conquest of Western US complete
- Extend influence (not conquer) to other nations
63Did U. S. citizenship follow the flag??
64The Philippines and the Spanish-American War
65Puerto Rico
66Puerto Rico 1898
- 1900 - Foraker Act.
- PR became an unincorporated territory.
- Citizens of PR, not of the US.
- Import duties on PR goods
- 1901-1903 ? the Insular Cases.
- Constitutional rights were not automatically
extended to territorial possessions. - Congress had the power to decide these rights.
- Import duties laid down by the Foraker Act were
legal!
67Puerto Rico 1898
- 1917 Jones Act.
- Gave full territorial status to PR.
- Removed tariff duties on PR goods coming into the
US. - PRs elected theirown legislators governor to
enforcelocal laws. - PRs could NOT votein US presidentialelections.
- A resident commissioner was sent to Washington to
vote for PR in the House.
68Panama
69Panama The Kings Crown
- 1850 - Clayton-Bulwer Treaty.
- 1901 - Hay-Paunceforte Treaty.
- Philippe Bunau-Varilla,agent provocateur.
- Dr. Walter Reed.
- Colonel W. Goethals.
- 1903 - Hay-Bunau- Varilla Treaty.
70Panama Canal
TR in Panama(Construction begins in 1904)
71Panama
72The Panama Canal
73The Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine
1905
Chronic wrongdoing may in America, as elsewhere,
ultimately require intervention by some civilized
nation, and in the Western Hemisphere the
adherence of the United States to the Monroe
Doctrine may force the United States, however
reluctantly, in flagrant cases of such wrongdoing
or impotence, to the exercise of an international
police power .
74The Roosevelt Corollary
75Speak Softly,But Carry a Big Stick!
76Roosevelts Big Stick Diplomacy
- Speak softly and carry a big stick and you will
go far. Roosevelt used this old African proverb
to guide his foreign policy. - The Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine
The United States will act as an international
police power in the Western Hemisphere and
intervene to prevent intervention by other
powers. - Roosevelt in Latin America Under Roosevelt, the
United States often intervened in Latin America. - Roosevelt in Asia Roosevelt wanted to preserve
an open door to trade with China. He won a Nobel
peace prize for negotiating a peace settlement
between Russia and Japan.
77China
78Stereotypes of the Chinese
Immigrant
Oriental Chinese Exclusion Act, 1887
79The Boxer Rebellion 1900
- The Peaceful Harmonious Fists.
- 55 Days at Peking.
80The Open Door Policy
- Secretary John Hay.
- Give all nations equalaccess to trade in China.
- Guaranteed that China would NOT be taken over by
any one foreign power.
81TheOpen Door Policy
82America as a Pacific Power
83Open Door in China
84America's New Role
85The Cares of a Growing Family
86Constable of the World
87Treaty of Portsmouth 1905
Nobel Peace Prize for Teddy
88The Great White Fleet 1907
89The Great White Fleet
90Foreign Policy After Roosevelt
- William Howard Taft
- Elected President in 1908
- Taft believed in maintaining influence through
American investments, not military might. - This policy was called dollar diplomacy.
- The United States reached new heights of
international power under Roosevelt and Taft. - However, the policies of both Presidents also
created enemies in Latin America and a growing
international resentment of U.S. intervention.
- Woodrow Wilson
- Under Wilson, the United States applied more
moral and legalistic standards to foreign policy
decisions. - Wilsons policy drew the United States into the
complex and bloody Mexican Revolution. - Wilsons moral diplomacy did not work well in
Mexico. Many lives were lost, and U.S. financial
interests lost ground. - U.S.Mexico relations were strained for many
years.
91Tafts Dollar Diplomacy
- Improve financialopportunities for American
businesses. - Use private capital tofurther U. S.
interestsoverseas. - Therefore, the U.S. should create stability and
order abroad that would best promote Americas
commercial interests.
92Expansionism
93Mexico
94The Mexican Revolution 1910s
- Victoriano Huerta seizes control of Mexico and
puts Madero in prison where he was murdered. - Venustiano Carranza, Pancho Villa, Emiliano
Zapata, and Alvaro Obregon fought against
Huerta. - The U.S. also got involved by occupying Veracruz
and Huerta fled the country. - Eventually Carranza would gain power in Mexico.
95The Mexican Revolution 1910s
Emiliano Zapata
Pancho Villa
Venustiano Carranza
Porfirio Diaz
Francisco I Madero
96Wilsons Moral Diplomacy
- The U. S. shouldbe the conscienceof the world.
- Spread democracy.
- Promote peace.
- Condemn colonialism.
97Searching for Banditos
General John J. Pershing with PanchoVilla in
1914.
98U. S. Global Investments Investments in Latin
America, 1914
99U. S. Interventions in Latin America 1898-1920s
100Uncle Sam One of the Boys?