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United States Foreign Policy 1877-1899

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Title: United States Foreign Policy 1877-1899


1
United States Foreign Policy1877-1899
2
The Impulse for Imperialism
  • Imperialism The quest for colonial empire
  • The industrialized nations of the world began to
    compete for natural resources in Asia, Africa,
    and Latin America.
  • These same areas became markets for consumer
    goods produced by the industrialized countries.

3
The push for overseas markets
  • Congressional supporters like Senator Henry Cabot
    Lodge and Senator Albert J. Beveridge advocated
    the acquisition of over seas markets
  • The most influential supporter was Alfred Thayer
    Mahan the author of the book The Influence of
    Sea Power upon History.
  • Mahan advocated the need for a strong and large
    navy to protect a countrys economic interest and
    the need for overseas bases.

4
Other reasons for expansion
  • Belief in the racial and cultural superiority of
    people from Anglo-Saxon decent.
  • The Evangelical push to spread Christian values
  • The Social Darwinism theory.

5
Social Darwinist Thinking
The White MansBurden
The Hierarchyof Race
6
Moving towardImperialism
7
A. Samoa
  • 1. The US competed with Great Britain and Germany
    in the Pacific over territories and markets
  • 2. 1878, a treaty gave the US rights to the main
    harbor in Pago Pago, Samoa

8
  • 3. In 1889, the Germans sent marines to protect
    their interests in Pago Pago, Samoa the British
    and Americans sent gunboats.
  • 4. Ten years later (1899) the US retained the
    rights to Pago Pago after the three powers carved
    up the islands

9
B. Hawaii
  • 1. US wanted to expand trade across the Pacific
    to China Hawaii was a vital link
  • 2. 1780s an American Merchant ship had stopped in
    Hawaii and by the 1840s merchants and
    missionaries dominated the port of Honolulu

10
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11
  • 3. Hawaiis location, 2000 miles west of the
    United States, made it ideal for a fueling
    station.
  • 4. Missionaries began cultivating sugar and
    producing it for export to the US
  • 5. By the 1870s American Sugar planters held
    most of the wealth in the islands. By 1898 the
    value of sugar estates in Hawaii was 40 million
  • 6. The Hawaiian King Kalakaua, was forced by the
    planters in 1887, to sign a new constitution that
    limited his power to rule. The new constitution
    was referred to by Hawaiians as the Bayonet
    Constitution
  • 7. The new constitution also gave the US rights
    to build a fortified naval base at Pearl Harbor.
  • (talked about in Clevelands 1st term)

12
  • 8. 1890 McKinley Tariff allowed all countries
    to ship sugar to the US duty free and also gave
    US producers of sugar a 2 cent subsidy
  • 9.The McKinley Tariff crushed the Hawaiian
    economy
  • The McKinley Tariff of 1890 was named after
    the President McKinley. He served as a United
    States Representative where he made his name by
    supporting protective tariffs.

13
  • 10. Queen Liliuokalani very strong nationalist
    tried to limit foreign influence in Hawaii and
    restore the power of the monarchy- ESPECIALLY
    after the McKinley tariff hurt the economy.

Queen Liliuokalani
14
  • 11.As a nationalist, she believed that Hawaii
    should remain in the hands of the native people.
    As a monarchist, she believed that she not the
    sugar planters should control the
    constitutional legislature.
  • 12. 1893, the planters overthrew Queen
    Liliuokalani the US Marines were sent ashore to
    protect American lives and property

15
  • L. Revolutionary government was headed by ,
    Sanford Dole Queen Lilioukalani surrendered her
    throne
  • M. President Cleveland was against the US
    involvement in the Hawaiian revolt and requested
    that Queen Lilioukalani be restored to the throne
  • 13. Dole refused to step down Hawaii
  • remained a republic from 1894 -1898
  • 14. Hawaii will be annexed under President
  • McKinley on July 7, 1898

16
Sanford B. Dole, on the left, continued as
President of the new Territory of Hawaii until
the Hawaiian Organic Act of 1900 established a
permanent territorial government led by a
governor.
17
Congressional support for annexation of Hawaii
opposed by Cleveland
18
U.S. Involvement in China
  • Hawaii was important as a fueling station for
    trade with China.
  • China had been divided up into Spheres Of
    Influence by European nations and Japan by the
    1890s.
  • In the spheres of influence a nation held
    exclusive trading rights within China.
  • The Americans had no sphere of Influence and were
    afraid that they would be left out in the
    lucrative trade with China.

19
  • European powers and Japan carve up China

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21
Religious/Missionary Interests
American Missionariesin China, 1905
22
China
  • A. China was an important additional market for
    the US to sell to during the age of New
    Imperialism
  • B. After Japan defeated China in the
    Sino-Japanese war of 1895 Japan encouraged
    European countries to take advantage of Chinas
    weakened position.

23
The Open Door Policy
  • In 1899 Secretary of State John Hay called for an
    Open Door Policy in regards to equal trading
    rights in China.
  • Hay sent a series of open door notes to the
    European powers in China asking them to-
  • Open all ports to trade for all nations
  • Allow the Chinese officials to collect tariffs in
    these ports.
  • Allow the free and equal access to harbor and
    railroads in each sphere.
  • Hay received no reply so he simply announced that
    the terms were accepted and the US began to
    operate in the spheres. No European nation
    objected.

24
TheOpen Door Policy
25
The Boxer Rebellion
  • Chinese Resentment of Europeans became intense by
    1900.
  • The Fists of Righteous Harmony or Boxers were a
    secret anti-western society.
  • In 1900 the Boxers began attacking western
    missionaries, killing over 200.
  • Chinese governments, under the Empress Dowager,
    took no actions to stop the attacks.

26
The Boxer Rebellion 1900
  • The Peaceful Harmonious Fists.
  • 55 Days at Peking.

27
  • C. Foreign countries responded by sending in
    troops to Beijing along the way, these troops
    plundered the countryside and killed civilians

28
Chinese Boxers
29
The Boxers Defeat
  • The Boxers laid siege to the foreign embassies in
    the inner city of Peking
  • The international community held out for 55 days.
  • An international army marched into the city and
    destroyed the Boxer army and their allies in the
    Chinese army
  • Sec. of State John Hay issued a 2nd Open Door
    Note asking countries to respect China and
    continue open trade
  • China was forced to pay 333 million dollars in
    reparations to the Europeans, Japanese. and
    Americans.

30
Spanish-American War
  • The Spanish controlled only Cuba after the early
    19th century wars of independence in Latin
    America.
  • Cubans had fought four unsuccessful wars of
    independence against Spanish rule by 1893.
  • In 1895 Another revolt was launched.

31
Jose Marti
  • Jose Marti was a famous Cuban poet and
    journalist who was living in exile in New York.
  • Martis influence on the American public was
    important and far reaching
  • Marti died in battle in 1895.

32
Valeriano Weyler
  • Spain place General Valeriano Weyler in charge of
    the Cuba colony in 1896.
  • Weyler used concentration camps and ruthless
    tactics to end the revolt
  • Over 200,000 Cubans died under his rule

33
General Valeriano Weyler
34
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35
The Influence of the Media
  • William Randolph Hearst owned the New York
    Journal and believe newspapers should shape
    public opinion and policy.
  • Hearst sent Fredrick Remington to cuba to create
    drawings depicting Spanish Cruelty
  • Hearst engaged in Yellow Journalism or
    sensationalized stories about atrocities in Cuba
    to pressure the government into action against
    Spain.

36
  • 4. Newspapers like the New York Journal and the
    New York World relied on sensationalist headlines
    to sell newspapers- the Cuban Revolution was an
    excellent chance to sell papers Remington wrote
    Hearst
  • "Everything is quiet. There is no trouble. There
    will be no war. I wish to return." Hearst's reply
    is alleged to have been "Please remain. You
    furnish the pictures and I'll furnish the war."

37
Yellow Journalism
Joseph Pulitzer
Hearst to Frederick Remington You furnish
the pictures, and Ill furnish the war!
William Randolph Hearst
38
The Yellow Kid
  • NOTE OF INTEREST Pulitzer began publishing color
    comic sections that included a strip entitled
    "The Yellow Kid" (right) in early 1896, this type
    of paper was labeled "yellow journalism."

39
Remember the Maine
  • William McKinley did not want to go to war over
    cuba
  • Hearst reprinted degrading notes from the Spanish
    minister, Enrique de Lome.
  • The De Lome letters ridiculed McKinley as weak
    and indecisive.
  • The final event that triggered war was the
    sinking of the battleship Maine in Havana
    harbor killing 260 sailors.

40
  • (a) The explosion demolished the ship, killing
    266 crewmen. An inquest ruled that the explosion
    was caused by sabotage. Later investigations
    suggested that an accidental fire in the coal
    storage bunker ignited the gunpowder magazines.
  • (b) The explosion was a cause of the
    Spanish-American War and reason for the rallying
    cry, "Remember the Maine!, To hell with Spain!"
    The episode focused national attention on the
    crisis in Cuba but was not cited by President
    McKinley as a cause.
  • (c) Some who were already inclined to go to war
    with Spain over their perceived atrocities and
    loss of control in Cuba may have seen this as the
    last straw.

41
The USS Maine
42
The remains of the USS Maine
43
Yellow Journalism
44
War With Spain
  • The war began due to American demands that
    Spain peacefully resolve the Cuban fight for
    independence, though strong expansionist
    sentiment in the United States may have also made
    the US target Spain's other remaining overseas
    territories Puerto Rico, the Philippines, Guam
    and the Caroline Islands.
  • On March 29, 1898 The United States
    Government issued an ultimatum to the Spanish
    Government to terminate its presence in Cuba.
    Spain did not accept the ultimatum
  • The US President William McKinley declared war on
    Spain on April 11, 1898.
  • The U.S. Congress drafted the Teller Amendment
    to assure the world that the United States would
    not annex Cuba after the War.

45
  • When War was formally declared between Spain
    and the United States and McKinley ordered a
    blockade of Cuba. The U.S. fleet left Florida
    for Havana to begin the Cuban blockade at the
    principal ports . McKinley called for 125,000
    volunteers.

46
Fighting in the Philippines
  • The Spanish American war began in the Pacific
    ocean in Manila harbor in the Philippines.
  • Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore
    Roosevelt ordered Commodore George Dewey to the
    South Pacific, two weeks before the war began.
  • Dewey sailed from Hong Kong and attack the
    Spanish fleet and destroyed in it Manila Harbor.
  • Deweys Marines were helped by Filipino Rebels
    led by Emilio Aguinaldo to capture the city.

47
The Philippines
48
Dewey to and in Manila Harbor
49
Theodore Roosevelt
  • Assistant Secretary of the Navy in the McKinley
    administration.
  • Imperialist and American nationalist.
  • Criticized PresidentMcKinley as having the
    backbone of a chocolate éclair!
  • Resigns his position to fight in Cuba.

50
  • Guam, one of the Mariana Islands in the
    western Pacific, surrendered to Captain Henry
    Glass on the U.S.S. Charleston. The Spanish
    commander on the island obviously had not heard
    of the outbreak of the war, and there was no
    ammunition on the island.

51
Fighting in Cuba
  • The American army was unprepared for a war
    against a European nation.
  • Wrong equipment was issued, too few transport
    vessels were available to carry troops to Cuba.
  • Theodore Roosevelt had organized a Volunteer
    Calvary Unit of 1,000 men known as the Rough
    Riders.

52
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53
The Rough Riders
54
Theodore Roosevelt and the Rough Riders at San
Juan Hill
55
The Actions
  • The Spanish Army had better weapons but poorer
    leadership than the Americans.
  • The battle of San Juan Hill was the most
    recognized victory for the Rough Riders but it
    also included the 9th and 10th cavalry units
    called the Buffalo Soldiers or Smoked Yankees

56
Cuban and American troops in action
57
THE NAVAL BATTLE OF SANTIAGO
  • The U.S. Navy's defeat of the Spanish battle
    fleet marked the end of centuries-long Spanish
    power in the western hemisphere. 1,800 Spaniards
    died in the battle, in contrast to one American
    death and one American wounded sailor. All of the
    Spanish ships were beached, either burning or
    sinking. Two weeks later the Spanish forces
    defending Santiago surrendered and the
    Spanish-American war ended.

58
The victory in Cuba
  • The American Army won the war on land and on the
    sea.
  • American Troops invaded and captured Puerto Rico.
  • Spain Surrendered and in 1898 signed the Treaty
    of Paris with the U. S. to end the War.

59
A Splendid Little War
60
Treaty of Peace in Paris
  • The Treaty of Paris
  • (1) Spain allowed an independent Cuba,
  • (2) Gave up Puerto Rico and Guam to the US,
  • (3) Spain sold the Philippine Islands, for
  • 20,000,000.

61
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