Title: Imperialism
1Imperialism Progressivism
2- And one night late it came to me this way(1)
That we could not give them back to Spain-that
would be cowardly and dishonorable (2) that we
could not turn them over to France or Germany-
our commercial rivals in the Orient- that would
be bad business and discreditable (3) that we
could not leave them to themselves- they were
unfit for self-government- and they would soon
have anarchy and misrule over there worse than
Spains was and (4) that there was nothing left
for us to do but to take them all and to educate
the Filipinos, and uplift and civilize and
Christianize them, and by Gods grace do the very
best we could by them, as our fellowmen for whom
Christ also died. And then I went to bed, and
went to sleep and slept soundly.
3- To what extent was American overseas imperialism
of the late 19th century a departure from
American tradition?
4The Open Door Note
- Issued by Secretary of State John Hay to European
powers in China - Wanted them to keep an open door of trade
between China and the West - All nations should have equal access and economic
rights in China
5The Open Door Note
- European reaction?
- American reaction?
- Real meaning of the Open Door Note
6The Boxer Rebellion
- 1899 China divided among European Powers into
spheres of influence dominated Chinese
politics and economy
7The Boxer Rebellion
- 1900 Nationalist Chinese rebels (Boxers)
rebel against foreign control killed many
European and American missionaries - Also targeted Chinese Christians
8The Boxer Rebellion
- A multinational force (including 2100 Americans)
sent to China to subdue Boxers - Significance?
- China forced to pay millions to allied countries
- American creates college fund for future Chinese
leaders
91900 Election
- Republicans choose TR as VP reasons?
- TR campaigns like Bryan popular, big crowds
101900 Election
- McKinley defeats Bryan by bigger margin than
1896 main issue imperialism
11The Assassination of McKinley, Sept. 1901
- Assassinated by an anarchist at World Fair at
Buffalo, NY
12- To what extent was American overseas imperialism
of the late nineteenth century imperialism a
departure from American tradition?
13- The United States, since Washingtons Neutrality
Proclamation, proclaimed neutrality in foreign
affairs and, espousing the Monroe Doctrine,
largely avoided involvement in the eastern
hemisphere before the late nineteenth century.
However, Americans took land from Native
Americans by force, coerced other nations into
giving up territory, and always believed in a
God-given right to expansion. Therefore, American
tradition has always included elements of
imperialism. - United States history began with a belief in
divine approval of efforts to expand westward.
However, in the late nineteenth century, the
United States boldly asserted her interests in
the eastern hemisphere, built her navy to project
her power overseas, and contended with European
powers for access to lucrative overseas markets.
Late nineteenth century imperialism was
remarkably different than previous western
expansion.
14TR as President
- Different from predecessors
- More energetic
- Reformist, progressive
- More visible to the public
- More aggressive in dealing with problems of the
country
15TR s Foreign Policy
- Emphasized strong defense
- Creator of modern steel navy
- Speak softly and carry a Big Stick became
symbol of American imperialism
16The Roosevelt Corollary
- Addition to Monroe Doctrine
- Statement of US strength
- Protection of American interests in Latin America
- Claimed right to intervene if Americans or their
interests were threatened - Unpopular in L. America
17The Panama Canal
- Previously attempted by the French in 1870s
resulted in 20,000 deaths and bankruptcy
Bankruptcy proceedings of French Canal Company
18The Panama Canal
- Original choice of TR Nicaragua
- Chose Panama after volcano eruption
19The Panama Canal
- TR attempts to buy rights from Colombia to build
canal but is refused reasons - French agent Philippe Bunau-Varilla creates
Panama Revolt (1903)
Panama capitol building
20The Panama Canal
- Colombia attempts to regain Panama, blocked by US
Navy outside Bogotá - US recognizes newly independent Panama
- First act of amb. Bunau-Varilla sells rights to
US for 10m US begins work on the Canal - US gives Colombia 25 million for its trouble
21The Panama Canal
- Takes 10 years, 400m to build
- Invented new equipment
- Development of yellow vaccine
- Casualties under 200
-
22The Panama Canal
23Progressivism in the Early 20th Century
24Progressivism
- A movement of upper and middle class reformers to
change society through government action - Use of Omaha Platform as guide, but mostly not
populists - Made up of
- labor and urban reformers
- politicians from both parties
- muckraking journalists
- advocates of social reform
25Issues in the Progressive Era
- Political reform
- Aid to immigrants
26Issues in the Progressive Era
- Woman suffrage
- Temperance/prohibition
- Conservation
- Regulation of trusts
27The Muckrakers
- Journalists who exposed social problems and
supported reforms with their articles - Upton Sinclair and The Jungle (1906) problems of
urban poor
- Ida Tarbell The History of Standard Oil (1902)
- Frank Norris and The Octopus (1901) exposed the
abuses of the railroad industry
28The Muckrakers
- Lincoln Steffens Shame of the Cities exposed
the political machines - George Washington Plunkitt
- of Tammany Hall
29The Jungle (1906)
- Sinclair intended to show urban poverty instead,
public focuses on conditions in the meat industry - Leads to Pure Food and Drug Act and Meat
Inspection Act
30TR as Progressive Era President
- Background as reformer
- Reformed civil service of NYC
- NYC Police Commissioner
- Governor of NY
- First major test 1902 Coal Strike
311902 Coal Strike
- TR tries to mediate between strikers and owners
in White House meetings - Owners refuse to compromise TR threatens to take
over the mines for the workers - To he with the Constitution when the people
need coal!
321902 Coal Strike
- Owners initially refuse, then compromise as TR
calls up the Army to take over the mines - TR calls this the Square Deal, becomes
trademark of his administration
33TR the Trustbuster!
- Regulation, not destruction, of good trusts
definition of good and bad trusts - Use of Sherman Anti-Trust Act against
corporations -
-
First target the RRs
34TR Takes on the Robber Barons
- Empowers the Interstate Commerce Commission to
govern uncooperative trusts
35TR vs. Morgan
- TR takes on Northern Securities, controlled by
Morgan first trust broken up by Supreme Court - Trusts not busted
- Standard Oil
- US Steel
361904 Election
- TR crushes Alton Parker, promises not to run for
third term - Debs runs for 1st time
37TR the Conservationist
1885
- TR sets aside millions of acres for preservation
with the Newlands Act - Creates national parks (i.e. Yosemite)
38The Panic of 1907
- Bank began to fail rapidly Morgan creates a
group to stabilize banking system - Leads to creation of flexible currency and the
Federal Reserve (1913)
391908 Election
- TR anoints W. H. Taft successor
- Defeats William Jennings Bryan!
-
-
regrets promise of no -
3rd term retires to hunt -
big game -
40The Legacy of TR
- Made presidency center of govt. power expanded
presidential power and authority - Involved govt. in the lives of the people
trustbuster, govt. regulator - Made US international power
-
41William Howard Taft
- Background
- governor of the Philippines
- TRs Secretary of War
- later, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court
- Continued progressive reforms
- Expanded trust-busting efforts
- Expanded conservation efforts
- 17th Amendment passed
- direct election of Senators
-
42Taft and Trust-busting
- Taft did not recognize good or bad trusts
- Broke 77 in all, including Standard Oil and US
Steel - Broke agreement on trusts angered TR and
motivated him to run for 3rd term
43Dollar Diplomacy
- Expansion of Roosevelt Corollary protection of
US investment and people, worldwide - First use in Latin America i.e. Nicaragua,1909
- Most controversial Morgans Manchurian RR in
1911
44Problems in the Taft Administration
- Too progressive or not progressive enough for
Republicans - Overshadowed by TR
- Seen as not being own man but TRs puppet
- Conflict between TR and Taft over Tafts breaking
of gentlemans agreement on US Steel
45- Assess the validity of the following statement
- TR was an effective president who balanced
business interests with public well-being and
encouraged a new leadership role for the US in
world affairs.
461912 Election
- Candidates
- Taft Wilson TR
Debs - Main issue progressive reforms and dollar
diplomacy
47Woodrow Wilson
- Background
- PhD in Political Science
- Professor at Princeton, later president
- Governor of New Jersey, 1910 -1912 nominated
for president to remove him from NJ
481912 Election
- TR and the Progressive Party
- TR wants to run again, denied by Republicans
forms 3rd party - Nicknamed the Bull Moose Party
- Platform called the New Nationalism
- Called for further reforms than when president
and involvement in world affairs
491912 Election
- Events
- TR shot during campaign, continued anyway
- Vote divided between four candidates, Wilson
wins Electoral College
50Warm Up Write it on a clean, separate piece of
paper
- Given his immense popularity among the American
people, his aggressive campaigning, and his
reputation as a trust-buster, why did TR fail
to win the Republican nomination and the
Presidency in 1912?
51The Wilson Administration
- The Triple Wall of Privilege
- the tariff pledged to lower it, eventually
lowered through the Underwood Tariff also
enacted the income tax (16th Amendment)
52The Wilson Administration
- The Triple Wall of Privilege
- the banks after death of Morgan in 1913, the
Federal Reserve was created regulated supply
and interest rates
53The Wilson Administration
- The Triple Wall of Privilege
- the trusts similar opinion as Taft, saw trusts
as bad for the economy created the Federal Trade
Commission which regulates business - Also limits on child labor
54The Clayton Anti-Trust Act
- Also passed Clayton Anti-Trust Act which
strengthened the govt. in dealing with trusts - Also allowed for unions to be recognized and to
bargain collectively for first time called by
Gompers as the Magna Carta of Labor
55Think (and write), pair, share
- To what extent were progressive reformers during
the Progressive Era successful in initiating
reform? What were the failures of progressivism?
56Limits of Progressivism
- Race relations left out of reforms black
Americans see little progress during the era - Why?
57Blacks in the Gilded Age
- Two competing views integration vs. separation
- Views of Booker T. Washington
- economic independence before integration
- separation from white society to build up
black institutions and businesses - Founded Tuskegee Institute
Let down your bucket where you are.
I have learned that success is to be measured
not so much by the position that one has reached
in life as by the obstacles which he has overcome
while trying to succeed.
58Blacks in the Gilded Age
- Jim Crow in the South, segregation in most
parts of the country impact of Plessy v.
Ferguson (1896) separate but equal
Homer Plessy, 1896
Homer Plessy
59Blacks in the Gilded Age
- Views of W. E. B. DuBois
- immediate integration is the right of black
Americans, as promised in the Declaration and
Constitution - Founded NAACP in 1910
- Influence on MLK and the
- civil rights movement
The important thing is this To be able at any
moment to sacrifice what we are for what we could
become.
60Wilsons Foreign Policy
- Campaigned against Dollar Diplomacy called for
moral diplomacy pulled troops out of Haiti and
Dominican Republic
61Problems With Mexico
- Mexican Revolution 1910 1919
- MX controlled by dictator Porfirio Diaz, revolt
led by Emilio Zapata and Francisco Madero - Revolt succeeds and Madero new pres. of MX
62Problems With Mexico
- Madero overthrown and executed by Valeriano
Huerta in 1913 - Wilson refuses to recognize new leader of MX,
begins to secretly support rival Venustiano
Carranza - Huerta began to threaten American assets and
people
Huerta
Carranza
63US in Mexico
US in Mexico
- Wilson vs. Huerta
- Sent navy to patrol Mexican coast to protect US
citizens - April, 1914 nine sailors captured entering
restricted zone in Tampico, MX
- Wilson sends bombs Vera Cruz in May, starting
anti-American riots - Huerta threatens American interests in MX
64US in Mexico
- War with Mexico close both armies prepare
- US navy blockades Mexican ports
- Latin American countries move to intercede
between US and MX
65The ABC Powers
- The ABC Powers (Argentina, Brazil, and Chile)
mediate between US and MX in Niagara Falls, NY
(July, 1914) - During conference, Huerta
- overthrown by Carranza
- Assisted by Pancho Villa
66Francisco Pancho Villa
- Carranzas military leader, armed and equipped by
US Army to fight Huerta - Former bandit leader
Villa with American general John Black Jack
Pershing
67US vs. Villa
- Wilson promises support, recognition if Carranza
removes Villa from command - Villa vows revenge, begins raids on American
holdings in Mexico - Raids Columbus, NM
- Kills 18 Americans
- (July, 1916)
68US vs. Villa
- Wilson sends Pershing into MX to capture Villa,
despite MX protests - Villa evades US for over a year
- Pershing returns to US to lead US Army in WW I
- Villa never captured rumors?