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American Imperialism

American Imperialism. 1890-1930. Causes of US Imperialism. End of the frontier: 1890 report from the Superintendent of the Census Foreign trade becoming increasingly important to American economy in late 19th c. Desire to compete with Europe for overseas empires Proponents of US expansion

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American Imperialism

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  1. American Imperialism 1890-1930

  2. Causes of US Imperialism • End of the frontier: 1890 report from the Superintendent of the Census • Foreign trade becoming increasingly important to American economy in late 19th c. • Desire to compete with Europe for overseas empires • Proponents of US expansion • Pan-Americanism; James G. Blaine • Samoan Crisis at Pago Pago

  3. End of the frontier • Many Americans believed U.S. had to expand or explode • Increase in population, wealth, and industrial production demanded more resources • Some feared existing resources in US might eventually dry up • Panic of 1893 convinced some businessmen industry had over expanded resulting in overproduction and underconsumption • The experience of subjugating the Plains Indian tribes after the Civil War had established a precedent for exerting colonial control over dependent peoples

  4. Foreign trade becoming increasingly important • Americans considered acquiring new colonies to expand markets further

  5. Desire to compete with Europe for overseas empires • The influential minority sought international status for the US like the Great European Powers • Between 1870-1900, Europeans had taken over ⅕ of the land and 1/10 of the population of the world • Germany became America’s biggest imperialist foe and largely spurred the US into imperialism • Germany sought colonies in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean

  6. Proponents of US expansion • Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan: The Influence of Sea Power upon History (1890) • Thesis: Control of the seas was key to world dominance and empire • US should build a large navy and build defensive bases and refueling stations strategically placed on the world’s oceans • Take Hawaii and other Pacific islands • Advocated the US build a canal across the isthmus of Central America to link the Atlantic and Pacific oceans • Helped stimulate a naval race among the great powers • Persuaded “yellow journalist” to push for modern navy of steel ships • By 1898, the US had the 5th most powerful navy and by 1900 the 3rd

  7. Proponents of US expansion • Josiah Strong: Our Country (1885) • Advocated superiority of the Anglo-Saxon civilization • Urged Americans to spread religion and democratic values to “Backward” peoples • The White Man’s Burden • Theodore Roosevelt and Henry Cabot Lodge • Social Darwinism meant earth belonged to the strong and fit- the US • Stronger nations dominating weak ones was part of natural law • If the US was to survive in competition of modern states, it too would have to become an imperial power • Senator Albert Beveridge: The American Republic is part of the movement of a superior race, ordained by God • The “Yellow Journalism” of Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst stimulated American’s interest abroad

  8. Pan-Americanism; James G. Blaine • Secretary of State under Presidents Garfield and B. Harrison • His “Big Sister” policy aimed to gain Latin American support of US leadership and to open Latin American markets to US products • Essentially guaranteed the US hegemony in Latin America in the 1880’s • First Pan-American Conference in Washington, DC held in 1889 • US proposals rejected by Latin American countries • Inter-American customs union not appealing because European goods were cheaper for Latin Americans • Hemispheric arbitration organization rejected due to fears of US dominance • Opened door for future hemispheric conferences

  9. Samoan Crisis at Pago Pago • The US and German navies nearly engaged each other in 1889 over the Samoan Islands • Germany did not wish to provoke the US and agreed to a settlement • The Issue was resolved in 1900 via a treaty with Germany and Britain • The US gained 76 square miles - American Samoa including Pago Pago • Germany received the two largest islands • Britain was compensated with other territories in the Pacific

  10. II. Venezuela Boundary Dispute, 1895-1896 • Boundary between British Guiana and Venezuela in dispute for over half a century • Issue became moot when gold was discovered in the border region • President Cleveland warned Britain not to take Venezuelan territory • Violated Monroe Doctrine; US stated it now called shots in Western Hemisphere • London should submit the dispute to arbitration • Britain denied legality of Monroe Doctrine and refused arbitration • Cleveland urged appropriation from Congress for commission of experts who would create an equitable border between Venezuela and British Guiana • If Britain refused to accept it, the US would go to war

  11. II. Venezuela Boundary Dispute, 1895-1896 • Britain had no real urge to fight (despite a naval superiority of 32­ to 5 in battleship class warships) • Biggest reason for British concern: Boer War in South Africa • Canada still vulnerable • British merchant marine vulnerable to American commerce raiders • The British were preoccupied with a German naval threat and Russian & French unfriendliness • London consented to arbitration • Results • Prestige Monroe Doctrine enhanced • Latin American republics pleased by US determination to protect them • Britain courted the US for friendship in the face of the continental threat • Left US able to pursue aggressive foreign policy without British reprisals

  12. III. Hawaii • Since early 19th century, America gradually came to regard Hawaiian Islands as an extension of the Pacific Coast • 1890, McKinley Tariff raised barriers against Hawaiian sugar • American sugar planters sought annexation as it would eliminate tariffs • Queen Liliuokalani, a nationalist, insisted Hawaiians should control Hawaii • White planters, mostly Americans, alarmed at the Queens policies and American tariff • Tiny minority of white planters led by Sanford B. Dole organized successful revolt in 1893 • Openly assisted by American troops who landed under unauthorized orders of US minister in Honolulu, John C. Stevens • Stevens: “The Hawaiian pear is now fully ripe and this is the golden hour for the US to pluck it” • Treaty for annexation rushed to Washington

  13. III. Hawaii • Before the treaty could be passed through the Senate, Cleveland assumed office and refused to sign any annexation bill and sent a special investigator to Hawaii • Findings indicated majority of Hawaiians did not favor annexation • The Provisional government had been established by force • Cleveland ordered troops to be removed • Results • Cleveland was unsuccessful in reinstating the queen • US public opinion would not have tolerated force to unseat white planters • Revolutionaries proclaimed a Hawaiian Republic on July 4, 1894 with Dole as president • Annexation abandoned until 1898; Dole served as territorial governor from 1900­-1903 • First full fledged imperialistic debate in US history • Cleveland savagely criticized for trying to stem the new Manifest Destiny • Clevelands motives honorable in the face of international imperialism

  14. IV. Cuba • Atrocities in Cuba were sensationalized (and even made up) by the yellow press • Spanish misrule as well as the devastating Wilson-Gorman Tariff of 1894 damaged Cuba’s sugar­-based economy (many plantations owned by Americans) ­­ • A new Cuban rebellion in the 1890s resulted in American property losses as well as Cuban and Spanish • Reconcentration- Spanish military concentrated masses of Cuban civilians in areas under their control • About 100,000 died between 1896 and 1898 • Spain’s leader in Cuba, Valeriano Weyler, portrayed in the US as Butcher Weyler • President Cleveland refused to intervene and issued neutrality proclamation • US mediation was offered in the conflict but Spain refused

  15. IV. Cuba • Pulitzer and Hearst attempted to out do each other; lesser competitors also involved • Hearst sent artist Frederic Remington to Cuba to draw sketches • When Remington reported conditions not bad enough to warrant hostilities, Randolph allegedly replied, “You furnish the pictures & I’ll furnish the war” • Remington depicted Spanish customs officials as brutally disrobing and searching an American woman. (In reality, female attendants did the duty) • McKinley’s ascension to presidency began stronger rhetoric toward Spain • In autumn of 1897, McKinley came close to delivering an ultimatum to Spain that would have resulted in war • Spain ended reconcentration in 1897, removed Weyler, & gave some autonomy to Cubans • It appeared war might be avoided

  16. IV. Cuba • Cuban Revolt • Spanish in Cuba rioted to protest Spain’s talk of granting a Cuban based self­ government • US sent Battleship Maine to Cuba in 1898 • Aimed to protect and evacuate Americans if danger occurred while also giving voice to popular distaste for Spain’s reconcentration policies • Sent ostensibly as a friendly visit • de Lome letter • Feb. 9, 1898, Hearst sensationally headlined a stolen private letter written by Spanish minister in Washington, Dupuy de Lome that portrayed McKinley as corrupt and indicated Spain lacked good faith in instituting reforms in Cuba • US uproar forced Dupuy de Lome to resign before US called for his recall

  17. IV. Cuba • Explosion of Maine, Feb. 15, 1898; immediate cause of Spanish American War • 266 officers and men dead • Spanish investigation announced explosion as internal, presumably accidental • American version reported the blast was caused by a submarine mine • 1976 US Navy report showed the blast came from inside the ship and was accidental • Americans accepted the submarine mine view and leapt to conclusion that the Spanish government was responsible • Yellow press helped to fuel the public fire • Americans now cried for war: “Remember the Maine! To hell with Spain!”

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