1 / 19

American Imperialism

American Imperialism. Alaska. Purchased by Secretary of State William H. Seward from Russia for $7.2 million Seward’s Folly Opinions later changed when gold and oil were discovered. Hawaii . Established a trade relationship w/ HI

archie
Download Presentation

American Imperialism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. American Imperialism

  2. Alaska • Purchased by Secretary of State William H. Seward from Russia for $7.2 million • Seward’s Folly • Opinions later changed when gold and oil were discovered.

  3. Hawaii • Established a trade relationship w/ HI • Intro’d sugarcane and many Americans invested in sugarcane plantations • Eventually Ams took control of most land and businesses • Pressured King Kalakaua to allow US to estb military base at Pearl Harbor • New queen, Queen Liliuokalani wanted to regain control • American planters overthrew her and estb a temporary govt, which the US recognized • Eventually the US annexed HI under President McKinley in 1898

  4. Motivations to annex • Military: • Strategic location • Economic: • Resources and markets for American goods • Became a state in 1959, 59 years after becoming a territory

  5. Cuba • Under control of the Spanish • Jose Marti led rebellion which US supported • Pres McKinley under pressure to get involved • Sent USS Maine to protect citizens • Maine blown up, blamed Spain

  6. Yellow Journalism • American press followed the Cuba drama closely • Wrote sensational, biased, often false reports • Tried to outdo each other • Joseph Pulitzer of World and William Randolph Hearst of Journal Political cartoon on page 641 in textbook

  7. Rough Riders • Led by Theodore Roosevelt • Group of volunteers that fought in Cuba • Cowhands and college students

  8. Spanish-American War • After the Maine incident, US declares war • Also leads to war in the Philippines under command of U.S. Commodore George Dewey • Seized control of the islands • Short war- led war to be called “Splendid little war”

  9. Outcome of War • Treaty of Paris: • Cuba became American protectorate, US acquired Puerto Rico and Guam, and Spain surrendered the Philippines for $20 million • Teller Amendment- US promised to allow Cuba to be an independent country • Platt Amendment- part of the Cuban constitution • Gave US 2 naval bases- Guantanamo Bay • Said US could intervene if necessary

  10. China • Open Door Policy- foreign nations in China could trade freely with other nations’ spheres of influence • US feared European nations would try to gain control over Chinese markets and the US would be cut out of profitable trade

  11. Russo-Japanese War and the Great White Fleet • Russia and Japan fighting over interests in China • T. Roosevelt helped negotiate treaty, hoping it would preserve balance of power in Asia • Japan still emerged most powerful and challenged the US for influence in the region. • Roosevelt sent out the Great White Fleet, a show of American naval strength

  12. Panama Canal • Ams and Euros dreamed of a way to connect Atlantic and Pacific Oceans • Panama seemed like a perfect place • French attempt to build canal failed • Roosevelt felt that canal was essential to US national security

  13. Panama Canal • Colombia, who controlled Panama at the time, rejected a treaty to lease land to US for low price • To get around that, Roosevelt supported Panama’s rebellion • -Nov 6, 1903, US recognized Panama’s independence • -Panama sold US 10-mile strip of land to build canal • -Roosevelt’s actions upset some: “I took the canal and let Congress debate, and while the debate goes on, the canal does also.”

  14. Building and Completion • Terrible working conditions for men building the dam • Swarms of mosquitos caused many deadly diseases- yellow fever and malaria • Great engineering feat • Opened August 15, 1014 • Reduced shipping costs • Increased American naval power • Guaranteed America’s presence in Latin America

  15. President’s Foreign Policy • Teddy Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson all had different ideas on how to deal with other nations and the world. • Roosevelt- Roosevelt’s Corollary • Taft- Dollar Diplomacy • Wilson- Moral Diplomacy

  16. T. Roosevelt Roosevelt’s Corollary: • “Speak softly and carry a big stick” • Use force instead of negotiation • Keep Europe out of the Western hemisphere • Would intervene in Latin American and Caribbean countries that were unstable

  17. Teddy Roosevelt- Big Stick Policy

  18. Taft’s Dollar Diplomacy • “Substitute dollars for bullets” • Taft willing to intervene when American business interests were threatened • Am investments in Latin America grew • Am business interests controlled politics of some nations • Threat to Am businesses led to military intervention • Led to increased anti-American sentiment in Latin America • Weakness of policy seen in Mexico when Madero overthrew Diaz in a revolution

  19. Wilson’s Moral Diplomacy • When Huerta overthrew Madero in Mexico, Wilson refused to recognize Huerta’s “government of butchers” • Wilson believed in democracy and that the US should “teach S. American republics to elect good men” • US supported Carranza to overthrow Huerta • US seized port of Veracruz, Huerta resigned • Not over: Francisco “Pancho” Villa led uprising against Carranza • General Pershing sent to Mexico • Villa escaped • Eventually Wilson withdrew troops

More Related