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What do the images on this slide and the previous slide imply about imperialism?

This slide explores the images and dates associated with imperialism as it shaped US foreign policy. From the dawning of the "Age of Empire" to the departure from self-determination and anti-colonial traditions, this presentation highlights the different interests that drove American expansion. Commercial/business interests, military/strategic interests, social Darwinist thinking, religious/missionary interests, and the closing of the American frontier all played a role in the US quest for global influence. The video "America Becomes a World Power" provides further insight into this era of imperialism.

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What do the images on this slide and the previous slide imply about imperialism?

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  1. What do the images on this slide and the previous slide imply about imperialism? • Explain the beginning and ending dates on this slide

  2. Big shift in U.S. foreign policy • “an apart nation” • the “amateurish and awkward age” of diplomacy • Dawning of “Age of Empire” • Origins of the “Large Policy” • Departure from self-determination and anti-colonial traditions

  3. 1. Commercial/Business Interests • Expand or explode • Safety valve of labor violence American Foreign Trade:1870-1914

  4. 2. Military/Strategic Interests Create new title for this map

  5. 3. Social Darwinist Thinking The White Man’sBurden The Hierarchyof Race

  6. 4. Religious/Missionary Interests Josiah Strong’s Our Country: Its Possible Future and Its Present Crisis New souls to harvest American Missionariesin China, 1905

  7. 5. Closing the American Frontier

  8. Frederick Jackson Turner: The Frontier in American History Which of the five “interests” carries the most weight? Explain

  9. Rush of colonial conquest • Partitioning of Africa, 1880s • Penetrating China, 1890s • U.S. “must not fall out of the line” • Henry Cabot Lodge • Leftovers for U.S. • Alfred Thayer Mahan • Influence of Sea Power Upon History, 1660-1783

  10. Berlin Conference, 1885

  11. Which of the three previous cartoons best illustrates the concept of imperialism?

  12. “Sun never sets …”

  13. New International Interest • James Blaine’s “Big Sister” policy • 1889 Pan-American Conference • Series of inter-American assemblages • Diplomatic crises / near wars • Samoan Islands • Chile • Canada • Mexico

  14. “Well, I hardly know which to take first!”

  15. Japan, Alaska, Hawaii • America Becomes a World Power [1/3] • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OgYdlFI1NM8 4:15 – 10:05

  16. “Seward’s Icebox”: 1867 Find another cartoon that pokes fun at Seward’s Purchase

  17. Hawaii“Crossroads of the Pacific”

  18. U. S. View of Hawaiians commercial treaty in 1858 Pearl Harbor rights in 1887

  19. Hawaiian Queen Liliuokalani Hawaii for the Hawaiians!

  20. How did the queen try to rebuff the Americans?

  21. U. S. Business Interests In Hawaii • 1890 – McKinley Tariff • 1893 – Americanbusinessmen backed anuprising against Queen Liliuokalani • Sanford Ballard Dole proclaims the Republic of Hawaii in 1894

  22. Hawaiian Annexation Ceremony, 1898 “The Hawaiian pear is now fully ripe and this is the golden hour for the U.S. to pluck it”

  23. Create a caption for this photograph

  24. Why is this amazing movie a strong example of imperialism?

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