6.1: Imperialism
1600-1900s: US expansion overseas
definition + change in meaning
US foreign policy:
isolation to expansion
factors / reasons
areas of us involvement
3 presidents - policies and areas affected
lasting impacts + effects
US as a world power (+/-)
US becomes a world power through imperialism + military involvement
foreign policy
1789-1870s: isolationism
george washington's farewell address
monroe doctrine
manifest destiny
internal / domestic issues
sectionalism - slavery - western expansion
civil war - reconstruction - indigenous wars
industrial revolution - progressive movement
1870-1920s: expansionism
imperialism: a policy of extending a country's power + influence through diplomacy or military force
old imperialism: 1500-1870s
creating an empire - conquest - colonies
ended with the division of africa (berlin conference - 1884)
new imperialism: 1870-1914 (wwi)
empire - domination and exploitation of weaker, less developed nations / regions
race to be the #1 power in the world
new types of domination / exploitation
goals: create economic monopoly, enforce military domination
formal: spheres of influence (economic), protectorates (military)
informal: intimidation ("bully tactics"), police actions - interventions
3 presidents: teddy roosevelt, william taft, woodrow wilson
teddy roosevelt (japan - panama - caribbean)
"speak softly + carry a big stick"
gunboat diplomacy - great white fleet
roosevelt corollary → to the monroe doctrine
us: policeman to the caribbean
us seen as a bully, intimidation
william howard taft (manchuria - central america)
"substitute dollars for bullets"
dollar diplomacy → investments = financial stability
us investors benefited but...
us exploitation for its own profits
woodrow wilson (haiti - mexico - wwi)
"watchful waiting"
moral diplomacy
end gunboat + dollar diplomacy
treat nations as equals
offer friendship + respect
end exploitation + manipulation
no interference in others' affairs unless xyz
reasons for us expansion + areas of involvement
factors: 1800s-1914 (wwi)
industrial revolution
by the late 1800s, the united states had emerged as a leader in agriculture and industry (steel - key indicator)
had already expanded ocean→ocean: should start stretching to new lands to become a world power
need for new resources and materials and new markets for american goods = $
-15. other factors LISTED ON FACTOR SHEET
areas of involvement
venezuela
boundary dispute between venezuela and british guiana
us v great britain
upholding the monroe doctrine
possibility of war??
negotiation → great rapprochement (friendship between us + britain)
hawaii
hawaiian islands had been inhabited since the 8th century, americans lived there by late 1800s (missionaries - planters - shippers)
1887: king kalakaua tried to prevent americans from taking the islands over but failed; american colonizers forced him to sign a constitution that left the hawaiian monarchy with no power
"hawaii for the hawaiians" → queen lilioukalani
among the most renowned queens of hawaii; 1893: attempted to restore the monarchy's authority
vowed to make hawaii a place for native hawaiians again (failed; hawaii becomes a us territory → pres cleveland rejected annexation)
last queen of hawaii; wrote song aloha oe (aka "farewell to thee")
cuba
revolution against spain
us comes into conflict with other countries who were also spreading beyond their borders - especially spain
spain was in cuba, philippines
causes of the spanish-american war (factor #4)
president mckinley's war message
the spanish-american war
thousands of americans volunteered to fight in the war against spain
us quickly grew from 30,000 soldiers to more than 274,000
"splendid little war" from april-august, secretary of state john hay
teddy roosevelt: hero at san juan hill
quickly gained popularity due to success in war
elected to public positions in new york
assistant secretary of the navy, vice president - following mckinley's assassination, roosevelt became president
war lasted less than 4 months, over 500 americans died (half of disease / food poisoning)
left us feeling like a stronger power
treaty of paris 1898 → gains for us
philippines
beginning of the filipino revolt led by emilio aguinaldo
no major battles because aguinaldo could only use guerrilla tactics
americans used naval blockade to isolate resistance (cut off trade, communication)
us army deployed 100,000 → 4,243 killed, 2,818 wounded
filipinos → ~16,000 killed, 100,000 died due to famine
imperialists v anti-imperialists
anti-imperialist league formed (mark twain, samuel gompers, andrew carnegie)
us policies
insular cases: supreme court
Did the constitution follow the flag?
incorporated territories v unincorporated territories
china
trade: tea - silk - porcelain - jade - etc.
1800s: treaty ports → established by europe (spheres of influence)
russia - japan - britain - france - germany
1840s: us established trading rights
these were threatened by european powers
1899: secretary of state john hay proposed open door policy
boxer rebellion → chinese nationalists
japan
1853 - commodore matthew party
treaty of peace + friendship
japan: "empire builder"
industrialization + modernization
imperialism: need for land + resources
competition for us → china
1904-1905: russo-japanese war
treaty of portsmouth - teddy roosevelt (1906 - npp)
us - west coast
gentleman's agreement (san francisco)
root-takahira agreement - preserve china
roosevelt: gunboat diplomacy
steered us more actively into world politics
"speak softly and carry a big stick"
great white fleet - battleships
what happened in the rest of the world would directly affect the united states → thus the united states should help shape the rest of the world in their own self-interest
national security
president roosevelt was a man of action
many americans thought he would bring the us to war due to tough rhetoric, opinions concerning peace + readiness for war
in spite of rising global tensions, the roosevelts were relatively peaceful + harmonious
awarded nobel peace prize for his work in negotiating the end of he russo-japanese war in 1905 (first american to be honored with it) → portsmouth conference
negotiating with japan concerning japanese immigrants on the west coast + rights of china → gentleman's agreement
the panama canal
roosevelt saw the need for a shortcut between the atlantic and pacific oceans
others had thought of it, french attempted but were unsuccessful
thick jungles + disease (malaria) were major obstacles, plus mountains + tropical rains
Colombia refused to sell the isthmus of Panama to us, congress was still debating!
roosevelt informs panama that if a revolution against colombia where to take place, the us navy would help keep colombian troops from panama
peaceful revolution soon takes place → panama becomes independent and gives the us permission to begin work on the canal
hay-bunau-varilla treaty: land for canal
new machines, medicines + technology to keep the workers healthy
george goethals
william gorgas + walter reid
roosevelt was the first president to leave the us while in office
visited panama canal on august 15, 1914 (still used today)
roosevelt corollary
added to the monroe doctrine
preventative intervention - pay off debts
stop germany + britain
american police power
us seen as bully of the north
worsened us relations with latin america
taft: dollar diplomacy
more traditional, conservative position on foreign policy
"dollars, not bullets"
encouraged american banks + businesses to invest in caribbean and asia in order to stabilize their economies and governments
manchuria - tried to buy railroad from japan and russia in order to sell to china (rejected - taft ridiculed)
caribbean - pumped $ into honduras + haiti - stability
forced to send troops to cuba, dominican republic, nicaragua
wilson: moral diplomacy
disliked both gumboat and dollar diplomacy - believed that the us should respect every nation's sovereignty
watchful + offering friendship rather than threatening other countries
got congress to repeal the panama canal tolls act
signed the jones act - philippines
1917 - purchased the virgin islands
wilson + mexico
wilson at times used force + the us navy to defend american lives + property in mexico
1913: mexican revolution
american soldiers captured
wilson ordered navy to seize vera cruz
a-b-c powers intervened (war prevented)
president victoriano huerta forced to step down
pancho villa (rival to new president carranza) tried to provoke war with the us → attacks on us property + americans killed
president wilson sent general john j pershing to mexico to capture villa (withdrawn in 1917 - wwi)
the us as a world power
in a matter of a few decades, the united states had found its place among leaders of the world
its influence was felt by many, americans were proud to be so
1600-1900s: US expansion overseas
definition + change in meaning
US foreign policy:
isolation to expansion
factors / reasons
areas of us involvement
3 presidents - policies and areas affected
lasting impacts + effects
US as a world power (+/-)
US becomes a world power through imperialism + military involvement
foreign policy
1789-1870s: isolationism
george washington's farewell address
monroe doctrine
manifest destiny
internal / domestic issues
sectionalism - slavery - western expansion
civil war - reconstruction - indigenous wars
industrial revolution - progressive movement
1870-1920s: expansionism
imperialism: a policy of extending a country's power + influence through diplomacy or military force
old imperialism: 1500-1870s
creating an empire - conquest - colonies
ended with the division of africa (berlin conference - 1884)
new imperialism: 1870-1914 (wwi)
empire - domination and exploitation of weaker, less developed nations / regions
race to be the #1 power in the world
new types of domination / exploitation
goals: create economic monopoly, enforce military domination
formal: spheres of influence (economic), protectorates (military)
informal: intimidation ("bully tactics"), police actions - interventions
3 presidents: teddy roosevelt, william taft, woodrow wilson
teddy roosevelt (japan - panama - caribbean)
"speak softly + carry a big stick"
gunboat diplomacy - great white fleet
roosevelt corollary → to the monroe doctrine
us: policeman to the caribbean
us seen as a bully, intimidation
william howard taft (manchuria - central america)
"substitute dollars for bullets"
dollar diplomacy → investments = financial stability
us investors benefited but...
us exploitation for its own profits
woodrow wilson (haiti - mexico - wwi)
"watchful waiting"
moral diplomacy
end gunboat + dollar diplomacy
treat nations as equals
offer friendship + respect
end exploitation + manipulation
no interference in others' affairs unless xyz
reasons for us expansion + areas of involvement
factors: 1800s-1914 (wwi)
industrial revolution
by the late 1800s, the united states had emerged as a leader in agriculture and industry (steel - key indicator)
had already expanded ocean→ocean: should start stretching to new lands to become a world power
need for new resources and materials and new markets for american goods = $
-15. other factors LISTED ON FACTOR SHEET
areas of involvement
venezuela
boundary dispute between venezuela and british guiana
us v great britain
upholding the monroe doctrine
possibility of war??
negotiation → great rapprochement (friendship between us + britain)
hawaii
hawaiian islands had been inhabited since the 8th century, americans lived there by late 1800s (missionaries - planters - shippers)
1887: king kalakaua tried to prevent americans from taking the islands over but failed; american colonizers forced him to sign a constitution that left the hawaiian monarchy with no power
"hawaii for the hawaiians" → queen lilioukalani
among the most renowned queens of hawaii; 1893: attempted to restore the monarchy's authority
vowed to make hawaii a place for native hawaiians again (failed; hawaii becomes a us territory → pres cleveland rejected annexation)
last queen of hawaii; wrote song aloha oe (aka "farewell to thee")
cuba
revolution against spain
us comes into conflict with other countries who were also spreading beyond their borders - especially spain
spain was in cuba, philippines
causes of the spanish-american war (factor #4)
president mckinley's war message
the spanish-american war
thousands of americans volunteered to fight in the war against spain
us quickly grew from 30,000 soldiers to more than 274,000
"splendid little war" from april-august, secretary of state john hay
teddy roosevelt: hero at san juan hill
quickly gained popularity due to success in war
elected to public positions in new york
assistant secretary of the navy, vice president - following mckinley's assassination, roosevelt became president
war lasted less than 4 months, over 500 americans died (half of disease / food poisoning)
left us feeling like a stronger power
treaty of paris 1898 → gains for us
philippines
beginning of the filipino revolt led by emilio aguinaldo
no major battles because aguinaldo could only use guerrilla tactics
americans used naval blockade to isolate resistance (cut off trade, communication)
us army deployed 100,000 → 4,243 killed, 2,818 wounded
filipinos → ~16,000 killed, 100,000 died due to famine
imperialists v anti-imperialists
anti-imperialist league formed (mark twain, samuel gompers, andrew carnegie)
us policies
insular cases: supreme court
Did the constitution follow the flag?
incorporated territories v unincorporated territories
china
trade: tea - silk - porcelain - jade - etc.
1800s: treaty ports → established by europe (spheres of influence)
russia - japan - britain - france - germany
1840s: us established trading rights
these were threatened by european powers
1899: secretary of state john hay proposed open door policy
boxer rebellion → chinese nationalists
japan
1853 - commodore matthew party
treaty of peace + friendship
japan: "empire builder"
industrialization + modernization
imperialism: need for land + resources
competition for us → china
1904-1905: russo-japanese war
treaty of portsmouth - teddy roosevelt (1906 - npp)
us - west coast
gentleman's agreement (san francisco)
root-takahira agreement - preserve china
roosevelt: gunboat diplomacy
steered us more actively into world politics
"speak softly and carry a big stick"
great white fleet - battleships
what happened in the rest of the world would directly affect the united states → thus the united states should help shape the rest of the world in their own self-interest
national security
president roosevelt was a man of action
many americans thought he would bring the us to war due to tough rhetoric, opinions concerning peace + readiness for war
in spite of rising global tensions, the roosevelts were relatively peaceful + harmonious
awarded nobel peace prize for his work in negotiating the end of he russo-japanese war in 1905 (first american to be honored with it) → portsmouth conference
negotiating with japan concerning japanese immigrants on the west coast + rights of china → gentleman's agreement
the panama canal
roosevelt saw the need for a shortcut between the atlantic and pacific oceans
others had thought of it, french attempted but were unsuccessful
thick jungles + disease (malaria) were major obstacles, plus mountains + tropical rains
Colombia refused to sell the isthmus of Panama to us, congress was still debating!
roosevelt informs panama that if a revolution against colombia where to take place, the us navy would help keep colombian troops from panama
peaceful revolution soon takes place → panama becomes independent and gives the us permission to begin work on the canal
hay-bunau-varilla treaty: land for canal
new machines, medicines + technology to keep the workers healthy
george goethals
william gorgas + walter reid
roosevelt was the first president to leave the us while in office
visited panama canal on august 15, 1914 (still used today)
roosevelt corollary
added to the monroe doctrine
preventative intervention - pay off debts
stop germany + britain
american police power
us seen as bully of the north
worsened us relations with latin america
taft: dollar diplomacy
more traditional, conservative position on foreign policy
"dollars, not bullets"
encouraged american banks + businesses to invest in caribbean and asia in order to stabilize their economies and governments
manchuria - tried to buy railroad from japan and russia in order to sell to china (rejected - taft ridiculed)
caribbean - pumped $ into honduras + haiti - stability
forced to send troops to cuba, dominican republic, nicaragua
wilson: moral diplomacy
disliked both gumboat and dollar diplomacy - believed that the us should respect every nation's sovereignty
watchful + offering friendship rather than threatening other countries
got congress to repeal the panama canal tolls act
signed the jones act - philippines
1917 - purchased the virgin islands
wilson + mexico
wilson at times used force + the us navy to defend american lives + property in mexico
1913: mexican revolution
american soldiers captured
wilson ordered navy to seize vera cruz
a-b-c powers intervened (war prevented)
president victoriano huerta forced to step down
pancho villa (rival to new president carranza) tried to provoke war with the us → attacks on us property + americans killed
president wilson sent general john j pershing to mexico to capture villa (withdrawn in 1917 - wwi)
the us as a world power
in a matter of a few decades, the united states had found its place among leaders of the world
its influence was felt by many, americans were proud to be so