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Chapter 10 America Claims an Empire (1890-1920)

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Chapter 10 America Claims an Empire (1890-1920) I. Imperialism and America (pages 364-367) A. Imperialism B. U.S. join Europe and establish colonies overseas – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 10 America Claims an Empire (1890-1920)


1
Chapter 10 America Claims an Empire (1890-1920)
  • I. Imperialism and America (pages 364-367)
  • A. Imperialism
  • B. U.S. join Europe and establish colonies
    overseas
  • C. arguments in favor
  • 1. new markets
  • 2. military strength (Admiral Alfred
    Mahan)
  • 3. belief in Anglo-Saxon superiority
  • a. Social Darwinism -
  • b. White Mans Burden -

2
  • Rudyard Kiplings White Mans Burden
  • Take up the White Man's burden
  • Send forth the best ye breed
  • Go bind your sons to exile
  • To serve your captives' need
  • To wait in heavy harness,
  • On fluttered folk and wild
  • Your new-caught, sullen peoples,
  • Half-devil and half-child.
  • Take up the White Man's burden
  • In patience to abide,
  • To veil the threat of terror
  • And check the show of pride
  • By open speech and simple,
  • An hundred times made plain
  • To seek another's profit,
  • And work another's gain.

3
  • D. arguments against
  • 1. threat to our Anglo-Saxon heritage
  • 2. moral grounds
  • 3. practical grounds
  • Examples of U.S. Imperialism (pages 366-381)
  • A. Hawaii
  • 1. American sugar growers in Hawaii
    want Hawaii
  • annexed why?
  • 2. revolution against Queen
    Liliuokalani (1893) helped by
    U.S ambassador John Stevens

4
3. provisional government under Sanford Dole
Republic of
Hawaii 4. President Grover Cleveland -
recognized but against annexation unless
Hawaiians approve 5. President William
McKinley - annexed in 1898 without
Hawaiians voting
5
  • B. The Spanish-American War (1898) (pages
    370-381)
  • 1. background
  • a. long interest in Cuba, Spains colony
  • b. Americans invested in sugar cane
    plantations
  • (after 1886)
  • c. Cuba fought 2 wars for independence
  • (1.) 1868-1878
  • (2.) 1895 / Jose Marti / deliberately
    destroyed
  • American property . . . to get U.S.
  • involved
  • d. American public opinion split

6
  • 2. causes (in addition to destruction of
    American property)
  • a. sympathy for Cuban people / General
    Valeriano the Butcher Weyler
  • b. yellow journalism / Joseph
    Pulitzer William Randolph Hearst
  • c. de Lome letter (February)
  • d. sinking of the Maine (February)

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8
  • Reports on the Maine
  • Captain Sigbees official report to the Navy
    Department
  • Maine blown up in Havana harbor at nine forty
    tonight and
  • destroyed. Many wounded and doubtless more
    killed and
  • drowned . . . Public opinion should be suspended
    until further
  • report . . . . Many Spanish officers . . . now
    with me express
  • sympathy.
  • Sylvester Scovel in the New York World
  • The cause of the disaster to the United States
    battleship Maine
  • is undetermined. It is not known whether is
    resulted from a bomb
  • or a torpedo, an explosion in the magazine, or
    the carelessness
  • of the officers. All is conjecture, uncertainty,
    excitement . . .

9
  • George E. Bryson in the New York Evening Journal
  • The Maine was destroyed by a torpedo . . . The
    discovery of the
  • hole in the bottom of the Maine, giving undoubted
    proof of
  • Spanish treachery . . . shows that the great
    battleship and her
  • crew . . . were deliberately sacrificed.
  • Walter S. Meriwether in the
  • New York Herald
  • I made the rounds of the hospitals . . .
  • With all possible tenderness and
  • care the Spanish doctors were
  • dressing the face of a fireman.
  • There is something in my eyes, he said.
  • Wait and let me open them.
  • Both eyes were gone.

10
  • 3. the Splendid Little War (April- August
    1898)
  • a. after the deLome letter and the Maine
    most Americans favored war
    with Spain (despite concessions)
  • b. April 11 - President McKinley asks to
    use force
  • against Spain
  • April 20 Congress declares war
    against Spain
  • c. 3 main areas of fighting
  • (1.) Philippines
  • (a.) Admiral George Dewey / Manila Bay
  • (May) -
  • (b.) Emilio Aguinaldo -

11
  • Oh, dewey was the morning
  • Upon the First of May,
  • And Dewey was the admiral
  • Down in Manila Bay
  • And dewey were the
  • Regents eyes,
  • Them orbs of royal blue,
  • And dew we feel
  • discouraged?
  • I do not think we dew!

12
  • (2.) Cuba
  • (a.) Admiral William Sampson / naval
    blockade . . .
  • sealed the Spanish fleet in harbor
    of
  • Santiago de Cuba
  • (b.) U.S. Army arrives in
  • June inexperienced,
  • ill-prepared faced
  • hardships

13
Recipe for Hardtack
  • http//users.lmi.net/mcm20me/20th_Maine/CompG/rese
    arch/hardtack.htm

14
  • (i.) led by Major General William Shafter
  • (ii.) most famous land battle . . . uphill
    charge on Kettle Hill by Rough Riders
    (Leonard Wood Teddy
    Roosevelt) 9th and 10th Cavalries
  • (African-American regiments) which led
    to
  • infantry attack on San Juan Hill (July)
  • (c.) Spanish fleet tried to escape blockade
    destroyed
  • (July)

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  • (3.) Puerto Rico
  • (a.) American troops
    invaded /little
    resistance
  • 4. Results
  • a. armistice signed (August)
    . . . war lasted
  • only 4 months, few casualties
    (5,400 out of
  • 300,000 most
    from disease)
  • b. Treaty of Paris
    (December)
  • (1.) Cuba
    independent
  • (later Platt Amendment)
  • (a.) U.S.
    protectorate
  • (b.)
    Good Neighbor Policy (1934)

17
  • (2.) U.S. acquires Puerto Rico
  • (a.) Foraker
    Act (1900)
  • (b.) U.S. citizenship (1917)
  • (c.) commonwealth (1952)
  • (3.) U.S. acquires Guam
  • (a.) U.S. Navy
  • (b.) Organic Act
    (1946)
  • (4.) buy Philippines for 20 million
  • (a.) Philippine-American War
    (1899-1902)
  • (b). independence (1946)

18
  • C. China - Open Door Policy
  • 1. John Jay / Open Door notes (1899)
  • 2. Boxer Rebellion (1900)

19
  • III. America as a world power (pages 382-389)
  • A. after Spanish-American War U.S. considered to
    be
  • a world power (Presidents Teddy Roosevelt,
    William
  • Howard Taft, and Woodrow Wilson)
  • B. keeping the power
  • 1. big stick diplomacy
  • a. the Great White Fleet
  • b. Roosevelt Corollary
  • c. Panama Canal
  • 2. dollar diplomacy

20
  • 3. missionary diplomacy
  • a. General Victoriano Huertas government
    of
  • butchers
  • b. War? Pancho Villa vs. General John J.
    Black Jack
  • Pershing
  • U.S. now more involved in world affairs . . .
    combined with
  • the visions of Progressivism . . . World
    War I
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