Title: THE NATION AT WAR
1THE NATION AT WAR
- America Past and Present
- Chapter 24
2A New World Power
- American foreign policy aggressive, nationalistic
since late 19th century - Colonialism draws U.S. into international affairs
3"I Took the Canal Zone"
- 1903--Colombian senate refuses to allow U.S. to
build Panama Canal - Roosevelt abetted revolution to separate Panama
from Colombia - Independent Panama permits construction
- 1914--Panama Canal opened
4The Panama Canal Zone
5The Roosevelt Corollary
- U.S. treats Latin America as a protectorate
- Roosevelt Corollary--U.S. will ensure stability
of Latin American finance - Roosevelt Corollary spurs intervention in
- Dominican Republic
- Panama
- Cuba
6Ventures in the Far East
- 1905--TR mediates the Ruso-Japanese War
- Diplomatic agreements with Japan
- Korea under Japanese influence
- Japan to respect U.S. control of Philippines
- Japanese resentment builds over Open Door policy
in China
7Taft and Dollar Diplomacy
- Taft substitutes economic force for military
- American bankers replaced Europeans in Caribbean
- Taft's support for U.S. economic influence in
Manchuria alienates China, Japan, Russia
8Foreign Policy Under Wilson
- Wilson inexperienced in diplomacy
- Tries to base foreign policy on moral force
9Conducting Moral Diplomacy
- Wilson negotiated cooling-off treaties to try
and settle disputes without war - Resorts to military force in Latin America
- intervened there more than Roosevelt or Taft
10Troubles Across the Border
- 1913--Huerta leads coup in Mexico
- Wilson denies Huerta recognition
- Revolutionary regimes must reflect a just
government based upon law - Wilson blocks arms shipments to Mexico
- 1914--U.S. seizes Vera Cruz
- 1916--U.S. Army pursues Pancho Villa across
U.S., Mexican border
11Activities of the United States in the Caribbean,
1898-1930
12Toward War
- 1914--War in Europe
- Central Powers headed by Germany
- Allied Powers headed by England, France
- Wilson sympathizes with England, seeks U.S.
neutrality
13The Neutrality Policy
- Progressives see war as wasteful, irrational
- Suspicion that business seeks war for profit
- Immigrants prefer U.S. neutrality
- A long tradition of U.S. neutrality
- Americans see little national stake in war
14Freedom of the Seas
- England blockades Germany
- U.S. ships to Germany seized
- Wilson accepts English promise of reimbursement
at wars end
15The U-Boat Threat
- German submarines violate international law by
shooting without warning - August, 1915-- Lusitania sunk by U-Boat
- April, 1916--Wilson issues ultimatum call off
attacks on cargo and passenger ships or
U.S.-German relations will be severed - Germany pledges to honor U.S. neutrality
16"He Kept Us Out of War"
- 1916--Wilson campaigns on record of neutrality
- Republican Charles Evans Hughes campaigns on
tougher line against Germany - Wilson wins close election
- wins large labor, progressive vote
- wins majority of womens vote
17The Final Months of Peace
- 1917--Germany lifts restrictions on U-Boats
- Wilsons response
- orders U.S. merchant vessels armed
- orders U.S. Navy to fire on German U-Boats
- April 2, 1917--War declared on Germany
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19Over There
- U.S. allies in danger of losing war
- Germans sink 881,000 tons of Allied shipping
during April, 1917 - mutinies in French army
- British drive in Flanders Stalled
- Bolsheviks sign separate peace with Germany
German troops to West - Italian army routed
- Allies braced for spring, 1918 offensive
20U.S. Losses to the German Submarine Campaign,
1916-1918
21Mobilization
- No U.S. contingency plans for war
- 200,000 troops at wars beginning
- Draft conscripts 2.8 million by wars end
22European Alliances and Battlefronts, 1914-1917
23War in the Trenches
- Teaming of U.S., English navies halves Allied
losses to submarines - June 1917--U.S. troops arrive in France
- Spring, 1918--U.S. forces help halt final German
offensive - battle of Chateau Thierry
- battle of Belleau Wood
- September--Germans out of St. Mihiel
24The Western Front U.S. Participation, 1918
25Over Here
- Victory on front depends on mobilization at home
- Wilson consolidates federal authority to organize
war production and distribution - Wilson begins campaign for American emotions
26The Conquest of Convictions
- 1918--Wilson uses popular anti-German rage to
pass the Sedition Act - criticism of the war was penalized
- dissenters imprisoned
- Summer, 1918--anticommunism prompts deployment of
U.S. troops to Russia - 1918-1919--Red Scare results in domestic
suppression of radicals
27A Bureaucratic War
- Wartime agencies supervise production,
distribution to maximize war effort - Government seizes some businesses to keep them
running - Cooperation between government and business the
norm - Business profits from wartime industry
28Labor in the War
- Union membership swells
- Labor shortage prompts
- wage increase
- entry of Mexican-Americans, women, African-
Americans to war-related industrial work force
29African American Migration Northward, 1910-1920
30Labor in the War (2)
- 200,000 blacks serve in France
- 42,000 combat troops
- Great Migration to northern factories
- blacks must adjust industrial work pace
- encounter Northern racism
- 1917-1919--Race riots in urban North
- Wartime experience prompts new surge of black
resistance
31The Treaty of Versailles
- Common concern about Bolshevik revolution
- Wilsons Fourteen points call for non-punitive
settlement - England and France balk at Fourteen Points
- want Germany disarmed and crippled
- want Germanys colonies
- skeptical of principle of self-determination
32A Peace at Paris
- Wilson fails to deflect Allied punishment of
Germany in treaty - Treaty creates Wilsons League of Nations
- Article X of League charter requires members to
protect each others territorial integrity - League's jurisdiction excludes member nations
domestic affairs
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34Europe after The Treaty Versailles, 1919
35Rejection in the Senate
- Republican Senator Henry Cabot Lodge leads
opposition to Treaty, League - October, 1919--stroke disables Wilson
- November--Treaty fails in Senate
- January, 1920--final defeat of Treaty
- July, 1921--U.S. peace declared by joint
Congressional resolution
36Rejection in the Senate (2)
- Wilson hopes reelection will provide mandate for
League of Nations - Landslide for Republican Warren Harding
- Defeat of League of Nations brings defeat of
Progressive spirit
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38Postwar Disillusionment
- To the next generation the war seemed futile,
wasteful - The progressive spirit survived but without
enthusiasm or broad based support - Americans welcomed Hardings return to normalcy