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Becoming a World Power 1890-1913

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Title: Becoming a World Power 1890-1913


1
Becoming a World Power 1890-1913
  • The Pressure to Expand Ch. 18, Sec. 1

2
Imperialism
  • Policy by a stronger nation to create an empire
    by dominating weaker nations economically,
    politically, culturally, or militarily

3
Pressures for Expansion
  • 1. Overproduction of food and goods
  • 2. business and farmers needed new markets
  • 3. To spread democracy
  • 4. To spread Christianity
  • 5. Social Darwinism

4
Vocabulary
  • Nationalism devotion to ones country
  • Annex to join or attach
  • Banana republic term used to describe a Central
    American nation dominated by U.S. business
    interests

5
Reasons for Imperialism
  • 1. Economic factors countries needed natural
    resources such as rubber and petroleum and new
    markets for manufactured goods due to
    overproduction
  • 2. Nationalist factors competition among
    nations for empires resulted from nationalism
  • 3. Military factors advances in technology and
    the need for military bases for fuel and supplies
  • 4. Humanitarian factors spread Western
    civilization, including law, medicine, and
    Christian religion

6
Time Line
  • 1796 Washington said, steer clear of permanent
    alliances
  • 1853 Commodore Matthew C. Perry opened Japan to
    trade
  • 1866 50,000 American soldiers sent to Mexico to
    stop French from placing an emperor on the throne
  • 1867 Seward bought Alaska from Russia
  • 1867 annexed Midway Islands

7
Matthew C. Perry in Japan 1853
8
U. S. Foreign Affairs
  • Began trade with China in 1860s
  • Treaty with Hawaii 1870s to sell sugar to the
    U.S. duty-free
  • 1913 Minor C. Keith of United Fruit Company
    dominated the governments of Costa Rica,
    Guatemala, and Honduras known as banana
    republics
  • Growth of U.S. Navy Alfred T. Mahan wrote The
    Influence of Sea Power Upon History 1660-1783
    stated that economy needed markets abroad by
    1900 the U.S. had a powerful navy

9
U. S. Navy
10
Security Naval Power
  • Naval Act 1890 construct battleships, gunboats,
    torpedo boats, and cruisers
  • Great White Fleet one of the most powerful
    navies in the world

11
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12
United States and Imperialism
  • Promote economic growth expand markets for sale
    of overproduction of goods
  • Protect American security Large Navy and need
    for Pacific bases
  • Preserve American spirit social Darwinism

13
Question
  • What factors influenced the United States
    government to expand abroad?
  • Write a paragraph in your notes describing
    the pressures that led to U.S. imperialism.
    Include a topic sentence and a concluding
    sentence.

14
The Spanish-American War Ch. 18, Sec. 2
15
Key Words
  • Arbitration settlement of a dispute by a person
    chosen to listen to both sides and come to a
    decision
  • Jingoism intense burst of national pride and
    desire for an aggressive foreign policy

16
Key Words
  • Spheres of Influence areas of economic and
    political control in China
  • Open Door Policy American approach to China,
    favoring open trade relations between China and
    others




17
U.S. Involvement in Latin America
  • Chile forced Chile to pay
  • money to families of slain
  • U.S. sailors
  • Brazil U.S. Navy put down
  • rebellion to protect U.S.
  • business interests

18
Defending the Monroe Doctrine
  • In a dispute between Britain and Venezuela, the
    U.S. forced them to go to arbitration to settle
    the dispute over territory between Venezuela and
    British Guiana

19
Cuban Rebellion
  • 1895 Cuba rebelled against Spain
  • 150,000 Spanish troops under General Valeriano
    Weyler, The Butcher, were sent by Spain to stop
    the rebellion
  • Concentration Camps were set up for Cubans
    200,000 Cubans die
  • Jose Marti Cuban journalist
  • describes the horrors in Cuba

20
U. S. Position
  • Cuban rebels attacked sugar plantations and mills
    to get U.S. help. Business owners increased
    pressure on the U.S. government to help the
    Cubans.
  • American newspapers used yellow journalism to
    get U. S. support for Cuba. The New York World
    and the New York Morning Journal competed.

21
Causes of War
  • 1. Explosion of the Maine
  • 2. Yellow journalism
  • 3. The de Lome Letter
  • 4. Sympathy for the Cubans

22
Maine
  • U.S. battleship U.S.S. Maine blew up and sank in
    Havana Harbor, killing 250 Americans.
  • Americans believed that Spain had blown up the
    ship
  • (Ships boiler blew up)
  • Pressure to declare war
  • from American citizens

23
William Randolph Hearst
24
Joseph Pulitzer
25
De Lome Letter
  • Letter written by ambassador to Washington, Dupuy
    de Lome, describing President McKinley as weak
    and a bidder for the admiration of the crowd was
    stolen and published.
  • U. S. citizens are angered

26
Battles
  • May 1, 1898, Admiral George Dewey attacked the
    Spanish Pacific Fleet in Manila Bay, Philippines
  • Spanish fleet sunk in seven hours.
  • U.S. controlled the area

27
Philippines
28
Emilio Aguinaldo
  • Filipino leader who helped the U.S. contain
    Spanish troops, hoping for independence
  • U.S. did not grant independence until 1946

29
Battle in Cuba
  • Navy attacked the Spanish Atlantic Fleet in
    Santiago, Cuba, sinking the ships
  • Land war Rough Riders, under Theodore Roosevelt
    charged up San Juan Hill
  • A splendid little war John Hay

30
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31
Treaty of Paris 1898
  • Cuba gains independence
  • U.S. gains Philippines, Puerto Rico, and Guam as
    unincorporated territories
  • U.S. paid Spain 20 million

32
Results of War
  • The U.S. fought Aguinaldo for three years,
    resulting in many Filipino deaths The
    Philippines remained a U.S. possession until
    1946.
  • Teller Amendment promised that the U.S. would not
    annex Cuba
  • Constitution of Cuba 1900

33
Platt Amendment
  • Cuban government could not enter foreign
    agreements
  • Had to give the U.S. two bases (Guantanamo Bay)
  • U.S. had right to intervene if necessary in
    effect until 1934

34
Puerto Rico
  • No independence
  • People given citizenship in 1917
  • May vote on statehood again in a few years

35
Pacific
  • Trade agreement Hawaiian sugar sold duty free
    in the U.S.
  • Hawaii U.S. leased Pearl Harbor
  • -Queen Liliuokalani pineapple guru Sanford B.
    Dole removed her from the throne in 1893
  • -Annexed in 1898
  • Samoa Divided islands with Germany U.S. got
    harbor, Pago Pago

36
"Now, children, you've got to learn these lessons
whether you want to or not! But just take a look
at the class ahead of you, and remember that in a
little while, you will be as glad to be here as
they are!"
37
Queen Liliuokalani
38
China
  • Vast market
  • Spheres of Influence
  • John Hay developed Open Door Policy
  • Boxer Rebellion - 1900 rebellion against
    foreigners Righteous and Harmonious Fists- 300
    killed

39
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40
Time Zones
  • World is divided into 24 time zones
  • Prime Meridian, which passes through Greenwich,
    England is Oo longitude
  • International Date Line is 180o longitude the
    calendar date to the east of this line is one day
    earlier.
  • Page 526

41
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42
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43
Expansion Under Roosevelt and Taft
  • Chapter 18
  • Section 3 4

44
Presidents of this Era
  • 25 1897-1901 William McKinley
  • Garret A. Hobart and Theodore Roosevelt
  • 26 1901-1909 Theodore Roosevelt
  • 27 1909-1913 William Howard Taft
  • 28 1913-1921 Woodrow Wilson
  • 29 1921-1923 Warren G. Harding
  • Calvin Coolidge

45
Key Words
  • Concession grant for a piece of land in exchange
    for a promise to use the land for a specific
    purpose
  • Dollar diplomacy encourage investment abroad

46
Key Words
  • Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine
    extension of a previously accepted idea
  • 1. Not use the Monroe Doctrine for territorial
    aggression
  • 2. U.S. intervene to prevent intervention
    from other powers
  • Racism belief that differences in character or
    intelligence are due to ones race

47
William McKinley
  • Reelected in 1900
  • Assassinated in 1901
  • Vice President Theodore Roosevelt becomes
    president

48
Theodore Roosevelts Foreign Policy
  • U.S. a world power
  • Intervenes in the affairs of countries that were
    of economic and strategic interest
  • Spanish-American War shows the need for a shorter
    route between the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans

49
The Panama Canal
50
Panama Canal
  • Isthmus of Panama belonged to Columbia
  • Ferdinand de Lesseps bought a concession in 1879
    to build a canal.
  • After 10 years, the company abandoned the
    project.
  • Congress passed the Spooner Act in 1902,
    authorizing the purchase of the French assets for
    40 million.
  • Colombia would not negotiate with the U.S.

51
Lease
  • Roosevelt indicated that the U.S. would not
    interfere if the French company organized a
    Panamanian revolt against Colombia.
  • In November, 1903 a revolt broke out with U.S.
    warships offshore to provide support for the
    rebels.
  • The U.S. recognized Panama as an independent
    country and ratified the Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty
    in 1904.
  • The treaty gave the U.S. a grant of a
    10-mile-wide strip for a Canal Zone for 10
    million.

52
Construction
  • Construction, which began in 1904, was finished
    in 1914
  • William C. Gorgas virtually eliminated malaria
    and yellow fever.
  • Roosevelts tactics used to acquire the Panama
    Canal caused ill-will among Latin Americans
    toward the U.S.
  • In 1921, Congress paid Colombia 25 million in
    recognition of the illegal means used to acquire
    the Canal Zone

53
Foreign Policy
  • Speak softly and carry a big stick you will go
    far. This quote by TR alluded to the threat of
    military force to conduct an aggressive foreign
    policy.
  • Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine the
    U.S. government would intervene to prevent
    intervention from other powers.
  • Santo Domingo U.S. took over finances and paid
    European debt
  • U.S. continued to intervene in Latin America

54
Russo-Japanese War
  • In 1905, Roosevelt mediated the conflict.
  • He received the Nobel Peace Prize for his role as
    mediator.
  • Japan received land and control over Korea
    Russia left Manchuria China remained open to all
    for trade.

55
William Howard Taft
  • Elected in 1908
  • Foreign policy goals were to maintain the open
    door in Asia and preserve stability in Latin
    America
  • Dollar diplomacy substituted dollars for bullets,
    although the results were not always profitable.

56
Chapter 18, Section 4
  • Debating Americans New Role

57
Anti-Imperialists
  • Moral and political arguments nation was founded
    on liberty for all
  • Racial arguments some Americans believed that
    people Anglo-Saxon heritage were superior
  • Economic arguments some felt that expansion cost
    too much in maintaining necessary armed forces or
    that people from annexed territories would take
    jobs

58
Imperialisms Appeal
  • Many Americans felt that imperialism offered a
    New Frontier abroad.
  • Many supported the effort to gain foreign markets
    for U.S. products
  • The U.S. became a powerful player on the world
    stage
  • Roosevelt sent part of the Navy on a cruise
    around the world to demonstrate the Great White
    Fleet.

59
Question
  • During the late 1800s, the press fanned the
    flames of the Spanish-American War by publishing
    sensational stories about Spanish cruelties in
    Cuba. On what current issues has the press
    played a major role in influencing public
    opinion?
  • Answer in paragraph form in your notes
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