U.S. History 1302
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Transcript U.S. History 1302
Unit 6
Callon’s
definition…
Empire: One group exerting
political, economic, or
military control over
another
Two reasons for an empire:
• Barbarian hordes who have
nothing better to do
• To make money
Trade
takes something that is less
valuable and turns it into something more
valuable
Hence, generation of wealth
Provides an alternative to LAND =
MONEY = POWER, but only slightly at
first
Empires
are all about trade
What makes for a successful empire?
• Colonies
Provide resources
Provide a market for goods
• Strong Navy
Whoever has the strongest navy has the strongest
empire
By
the 1800’s ALL the major world powers
were empires
Britain was the most successful
The U.S. is outpacing Britain in industrial
capacity and wants to become a major
world power
This means becoming an empire
Wrote
the influential book “The Influence
of Sea Power upon History”
Inspired Teddy Roosevelt
(Undersecretary of the Navy)
The U.S. began to modernize their navy
Built dozens of new steel battleships and
cruisers
Seward’s
Folly in 1867
William Henry Seward was Sec. of State
Purchased Alaska from Russia for $7.2
million
Scoffed at at the time, but extended U.S.
influence in the Pacific
Hawaii
annexed in 1898
Annexation opposed by
Queen Liliuokalani and
native Hawaiians
Queen forced to abdicate
after coup by American
planters in 1893
By
1897 the once mighty Spanish Empire
was down to the lone island of Cuba
Cubans revolted, started guerilla war
Spanish cracked down, forcing Cubans
into concentration camps
American newspapers reported…
Newspapers
competed for circulation
Especially notorious
• William Randolph Hearst – New York Journal
• Joseph Pulitzer – New York World
Began
to exaggerate and fabricate
stories
Hearst vs Pulitzer
U.S. angry
over Spanish treatment of
Cubans
Sent the U.S.S. Maine to Havana to protect
Americans in Cuba
Maine mysteriously exploded
Spanish assumed guilty
Americans demand war
We now know it was an accident
Oops…
Teddy
Roosevelt anticipated war with
Spain
Readied the U.S. Pacific fleet
As soon as war declared Commodore
George Dewey attacked the Spanish
Philippines
Stunning victory for the Americans
Army
forced to land
in Cuba
Target was Santiago
After city taken,
Spanish fleet forced to
retreat
Destroyed by
American navy
Spain
forced to surrender
U.S. paid $20 million in exchange for the
Philippines, Puerto Rico, and Guam
Cuba becomes a U.S. protectorate
Cuba forced to cede land for a naval
base, Guantanamo
U.S. now has an established presence
across the Pacific and Caribbean
Filipinos
were rebelling against the
Spanish
Switched to the U.S. when U.S. didn’t
leave
Long, bloody, expensive war for the U.S.
Filipinos used guerilla tactics
Ironically, the U.S. tried to force them into
concentration camps
Both
sides used torture
Eventually rebel leader Emilio Aguinaldo
was captured in 1902
Thousands dead on both sides
By
the late 1800’s China was dominated
by Europe
Regions of China divided into spheres of
influence
Prevented others from trading in their
territory
The U.S. wanted to get involved, but no
areas available to trade in
U.S. proposed
an “Open Door” policy to
allow free trade throughout China
Unpopular with Europeans, but ultimately
unopposed after the Boxer Rebellion
Helped protect Chinese sovereignty
Allowed the U.S. trade access to China
Teddy
Roosevelt president in 1901
Reasserted the Monroe Doctrine
• No new European colonies in the Western
Hemisphere
Added
the Roosevelt Corollary
• The U.S. would intervene to protect its interests
in Latin America
• Matched Roosevelt’s “Big Stick” diplomacy
Best
example of the “Big Stick”
The U.S. and Europe wanted to build a
canal through Central America
Ideal location was Panama
French company contracted to do the
construction
The problem was Panama was a province
of Colombia, who refused the deal
Roosevelt
outraged
French company conspired with Panama
to overthrow the Colombian govt.
Within hours Roosevelt recognized
Panama’s independence and supported it
with the U.S. Navy
Triumph
of modern engineering
Took roughly 10 years to build
After
Roosevelt came Taft
Taft disagreed with “Big Stick” diplomacy
Tried to reform the relationship with Latin
America
Offered trade deals to bolster the
economy
After Taft
came Wilson
Wilson wanted to spread democracy into
Latin America
Refused to make agreements with nondemocratic governments
Led to trouble with Mexico
What
is Progressivism?
Progressivism = Reform
Specifically, Progressivism means reform
through government intervention
Meant to solve the problems of the
Gilded Age
Reversal of Laissez-Faire
Not restricted to one political party
Applied
to numerous areas from 1901-
1920
• Social Reform
• Political Reform
• Economic Reform
• Environmental Reform
• Labor Reform
• And more…
Investigative
journalists
who exposed social
problems
Thomas Nast helped
expose Boss Tweed
Jacob Riis exposed
poverty in cities
One
of the most famous
muckrakers was Upton
Sinclair
Wrote “The Jungle”
depicting horrid
conditions in meat
packing plants in
Chicago
“It was too dark in these storage places to see well, but
a man could run his hand over these piles of meat and
sweep off handfuls of the dried dung of rats. These rats
were nuisances, and the packers would put poisoned
bread out for them, they would die, and then rats,
bread, and meat would go into the hoppers together.”
Almost
turned Teddy Roosevelt into a
vegetarian
Doing
more with less
Business owners began to look for ways
to operate more efficiently
Soon spread to government
Wasteful agencies soon removed or
consolidated
Would eventually lead to Henry Ford and
the assembly line
Roosevelt
began
attacking trusts
Reasoned they were
bad for the public good
Only went after the
worst offenders, many
trusts left intact if they
cooperated
In
1902 Coal workers went on strike
Wanted higher wages and shorter hours
Roosevelt tried to intervene
Invited owners and workers to talk
Workers refused to negotiate
Roosevelt infuriated and threatened to
have the military take over the mine
Workers relented with only minor gains
Progressives
also sought social justice
Charities increased
Cities cleaned up
Sewers installed
Child labor curtailed
Temperance advocated
One of the biggest influences was the
WCTU, Women’s Christian Temperance
Union
Progressivism
stalled in the South
“Jim Crow” laws segregated blacks and
kept them from voting
Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896 legalized
segregation and established “separate
but equal”
Doctrine was implicitly denied by the
Gentleman’s Agreement with Japan in
1907
Booker T. Washington
• Emphasized education
• Founded numerous schools for
blacks
• Argued that over time blacks
could prove themselves the
equals of whites
W.E.B
DuBois
• First black to earn a PhD from
Harvard
• Argued blacks should
demand and immediate end
to segregation
• Eventually lost faith,
supported Black Power, and
moved to Africa
Roosevelt
one of the first presidents
concerned with the environment
Wanted long term resource management
and wildlife protection for future
Americans
Founded 2 million acre Yellowstone Natl.
Park
Also
founded
dozens of wildlife
preserves, parks,
and national
monuments,
including the
Grand Canyon
Roosevelt at Yosemite, 1903
Roosevelt’s
Secretary
of War
Groomed for the
Presidency
Elected in 1908 as a
Republican
Never comfortable as
President
Unpopular
as President
Reversed many of
Roosevelt’s
appointments
Much more aggressive
in anti-trust legislation
Prompted Roosevelt to
challenge Taft in 1912
Democrat
elected
President in 1912
Wanted to continue
Progressive reform
Worked to lower tariffs
to damage trusts
Passed legislation to
further dissolve trusts
Created
the Federal Reserve (The Fed) in
1913
12 Regional Federal Reserve banks
Intended to centralize and control the
money supply
Also passed next to the 16th Amendment,
allowing for a federal income tax
Most
important event in modern history
Completely changed the course of world
history
Affects Western politics, economics,
religion, and society on profound levels
Catastrophic in terms of damage
Total Mobilized
Forces
ALLIED AND ASSOCIATED POWERS
Russia
12,000,000
British Empire
8,904,467
France
8,410,000
Italy
5,615,000
United States
4,355,000
Japan
800,000
Romania
750,000
Serbia
707,343
Belgium
267,000
Greece
230,000
Portugal
100,000
Montenegro
50,000
TOTAL
42,188,810
ALLIED AND ASSOCIATED POWERS
Germany
11,000,000
Austria7,800,000
Hungary
Turkey
2,850,000
Bulgaria
1,200,000
TOTAL
22,850,000
GRAND
65,038,810
TOTAL
Country
Killed
Wounded
Prisoners and
Missing
Total
Casualties
Casualties as
% of Forces
1,700,000
908,371
1,357,800
650,000
116,516
300
335,706
45,000
13,716
5,000
7,222
3,000
5,142,631
4,950,000
2,090,212
4,266,000
947,000
204,002
907
120,000
133,148
44,686
21,000
13,751
10,000
12,800,706
2,500,000
191,652
537,000
600,000
4,500
3
80,000
152,958
34,659
1,000
12,318
7,000
4,121,090
9,150,000
3,190,235
6,160,800
2,197,000
323,018
1,210
535,706
331,106
93,061
27,000
33,291
20,000
22,062,427
76.3
35.8
73.3
39.1
7.1
0.2
71.4
46.8
34.9
11.7
33.3
40.0
52.3
1,773,700
4,216,058
1,152,800
7,142,558
64.9
1,200,000
3,620,000
2,200,000
7,020,000
90.0
325,000
87,500
3,386,200
400,000
152,390
8,388,448
250,000
27,029
3,629,829
975,000
266,919
15,404,477
34.2
22.2
67.4
8,528,831
21,189,154
7,750,919
37,466,904
57.5
What
does all this have to do with the
U.S.?
Not much
Most people in the U.S. wanted to remain
neutral
Even if the U.S. joined it wasn’t clear
which side they should be on
U.S. selling
supplies to France and Britain
Would have sold to Germany, but British
were blockading the coast
Germany becoming increasingly
desperate as supplies choked off
Retaliated with U-boats in the Atlantic
Germans
eventually
began attacking all ships
off the coast of Great
Britain
U.S. merchants and
passengers advised
against travel
128
Americans killed in July 1915
Wilson
demanded that Germany cease
unrestricted submarine warfare
Germany wanted to avoid U.S.
involvement and agreed, despite its
success
The U.S. was happy to avoid the war
Wilson re-elected in 1916 because:
“He Kept Us Out of War”
By
1917 Germany was increasingly
desperate
Decided to resume unrestricted
submarine warfare
In order to keep the U.S. out of the war
Germany tried a scheme with Mexico
Germany’s
foreign secretary, Arthur
Zimmerman, sent a telegram to the
ambassador in Mexico
Offered a deal that if Mexico would
attack the U.S. then Germany would help
them regain territory
British intelligence intercepted the
telegram and handed it off to the U.S.
Resumption
of unrestricted submarine
warfare
Germany conspired to attack the U.S.
Bolshevik Revolution in Russia
French
Army on the verge of collapse
Germany about to get major
reinforcements at Russia drops out
For the U.S. it was now or never
The U.S. declared war on April 6, 1917
Still, the U.S. had virtually no standing
army and would not deploy until 1918
Germany
made two final pushes in
1918
Made it again to the gates of Paris
The last push ultimately failed
A faction in Germany revolted and
forced the Kaiser to abdicate
Germany asked for a cease-fire
Went into effect Nov. 11 at 11am
Germany
bewildered and starving
The British kept the blockade until the
treaty was finally signed, 7 months later
Wilson wanted to show mercy to
Germany with easy terms to try and
prevent another war
France and Britain wanted payback
Wilson’s
peace plan to prevent another war
Advocated:
• No secret alliances
• Free trade / oceans
• Arms reductions
• Self-determination for colonies and ethnic groups
• A “League of Nations”
Only
the League of Nations was adopted,
but U.S. failed to join
Germany
lost significant territory
Germany prevented from keeping any
significant army
Territory on the Rhine occupied by Allies
Germany forced to admit “war guilt” and
pay enormous reparations
Austria-Hungary dissolved and
forbidden to join Germany
Numerous new nations created