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AMERICA AS A WORLD POWER (1865

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Chapter 10 AMERICA AS A WORLD POWER (1865 1914) Section 1: The United States Gains Overseas Territories Section 2: The Spanish-American War Section 3: The United ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AMERICA AS A WORLD POWER (1865


1
AMERICA AS A WORLD POWER(18651914)
Chapter 10
  • Section 1 The United States Gains Overseas
    Territories
  • Section 2 The Spanish-American War
  • Section 3 The United States and Latin America
  • Section 4 The United States and Mexico

2
OBJECTIVES
Section 1 The United StatesGains Overseas
Territories
  • Why did some people favor expansion over
    isolationism?
  • What events led to the U.S. annexation of Hawaii?
  • What was the goal of U.S. foreign policy in Japan
    and China?

3
Favoring Expansion Over Isolationism
Section 1 The United StatesGains Overseas
Territories
  • wanted to extend the economic influence of the
    United States into new markets
  • wanted to expand the power of the U.S. military
    to protect these new foreign markets

4
Events Leading to the U.S. Annexation of Hawaii
Section 1 The United StatesGains Overseas
Territories
  • Sugar prices dropped causing the economy to
    collapse.
  • In 1893 the planters revolted against Queen
    Liliuokalanis constitutional monarchy.
  • Planters revolt was successful and they formed a
    new government with Sanford B. Dole serving as
    president.

5
Events Leading to the U.S. Annexation of Hawaii
Section 1 The United StatesGains Overseas
Territories
(continued)
  • U.S. Minister John L. Stevens declared Hawaii to
    be under U.S. control on February 1, 1893.

6
Goal of U.S. Foreign Policyin Japan and China
Section 1 The United StatesGains Overseas
Territories
  • Hoping to find new markets, American traders in
    the 1800s looked to Asian markets, particularly
    China and Japan.
  • U.S. announced the Open Door Policy a policy of
    preserving equal access for all nations to trade
    in China to protect American trade.

7
Goal of U.S. Foreign Policyin Japan and China
Section 1 The United StatesGains Overseas
Territories
(continued)
  • U.S. wanted to prevent any European colonization
    of China that would limit U.S. influence there.

8
OBJECTIVES
Section 2The Spanish-American War
  • How did the press affect U.S. involvement in the
    conflict between Spain and Cuba?
  • What enabled the United States to win the war
    against Spain?
  • How did the Spanish-American War affect the
    Philippines, Cuba, and Puerto Rico?

9
The Press and Its Effect on U.S. Involvementin
the Conflict Between Spain and Cuba
Section 2The Spanish-American War
  • The press exaggerated the Cuban conflict further
    increasing American support for the Cubans.
  • In their competition for readers, Joseph Pulitzer
    of the New York World and William Randolph Hearst
    printed sensational, often exaggerated, stories
    in order to sell newspapers in what became known
    as yellow journalism.

10
Reasons for U.S. Victory Over Spain
Section 2The Spanish-American War
  • The U.S. had a more powerful navy.
  • The U.S. had a larger army.
  • The U.S. had the support of local rebels.

11
The Spanish-American War and the Philippines,
Cuba, and Puerto Rico
Section 2The Spanish-American War
  • The peace treaty placed Cuba, Puerto Rico, the
    Philippines under U.S. control.
  • President McKinley set up a military government
    in Cuba.
  • The Platt Amendment allowed the U.S. to intervene
    in Cuban affairs.
  • Puerto Rico became a commonwealth.
  • The Philippines became a U.S. colony.

12
OBJECTIVES
Section 3 The United Statesand Latin America
  • What steps did the United States take to build a
    canal across Panama?
  • How did U.S. involvement in Latin America change
    under President Theodore Roosevelt?
  • How did Presidents Taft and Wilson enforce the
    Monroe Doctrine?

13
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14
Steps Taken to Build the Panama Canal Four
Treaties
Section 3 The United Statesand Latin America
  • Clayton-Bulwer Treaty (1850) U.S. and Great
    Britain agreed to jointly build and maintain a
    canal
  • Hay-Pauncefote Treaty (1901) the British gave
    up their interest the Central American canal in
    return for the U.S. agreeing to keep the canal
    open to all vessels at all times

15
Steps Taken to Build the Panama Canal Four
Treaties
Section 3 The United Statesand Latin America
(continued)
  • Hay-Herran Treaty (1903) proposed agreement
    between Colombia and the U.S. to allow the U.S.
    to build a transatlantic canal in Colombia
  • Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty (1903) agreement that
    gave the U.S. a 99 year lease to build a canal on
    a 10-mile wide strip of land across the Isthmus
    of Panama

16
Changes in Latin America Under Roosevelt
Section 3 The United Statesand Latin America
  • U.S. became more involved in Latin American
    affairs.
  • Roosevelt issued the Roosevelt Corollary to the
    Monroe Doctrine making the U.S. the police
    officer of the Western Hemisphere.

17
Ways Taft and Wilson Enforced the Monroe Doctrine
Section 3 The United Statesand Latin America
  • Taft used dollar diplomacy. Dollar diplomacy was
    Tafts plan of influencing Latin American
    governments through economic rather than military
    intervention.

18
Ways Taft and Wilson Enforced the Monroe Doctrine
Section 3 The United Statesand Latin America
(continued)
  • Wilson believed that the United States had a
    moral obligation to promote democracy in Latin
    America. He wanted to protect U.S. interests in
    the area by backing a democratic government.
    Wilson sent more troops into Latin America than
    any president before him.

19
OBJECTIVES
Section 4 The United States and Mexico
  • Why did the Mexican people revolt against their
    government in 1910?
  • What caused Mexican immigration to the United
    States to increase in the early 1900s?
  • Why did President Woodrow Wilson intervene in the
    Mexican Revolution?

20
Mexican Revolution
Section 4 The United States and Mexico
  • The Mexican people revolted against President
    Porfirio Diaz and the role of foreign companies
    in Mexico resulting in the Mexican Revolution in
    1911.

21
Mexican immigrated to the U.S. in the early
1800s to
Section 4 The United States and Mexico
  • escape violence
  • avoid political persecution
  • find jobs

22
Wilsons Reaction
Section 4 The United States and Mexico
  • Wilson intervened in Mexico to protect American
    investments in that country.
  • Mexican rebels began to attack cities in the U.S.
    and Wilson responded by sending troops led by
    John J. Pershing into Mexico.
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