1 / 25

America & World War I

America & World War I. Wilson, Mexico & US Foreign Policy. Woodrow Wilson Southern Democrat History professor & intellectual Mind for grand ideas- role of US in postwar world Believed American economic expansion + democratic principles = civilizing force in the world

ita
Télécharger la présentation

America & World War I

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. America & World War I

  2. Wilson, Mexico & US Foreign Policy • Woodrow Wilson • Southern Democrat • History professor & intellectual • Mind for grand ideas- role of US in postwar world • Believed American economic expansion + democratic principles = civilizing force in the world • Emphasized foreign investments and industrial exports • Open Door principles of John Hay • Strong diplomatic and military measure to achieve economic supremacy • 1913 Wilson became president • Continued progressive activism of TR • Greater federal role in economic and business regulation • 16th Amendment- Federal income tax • Federal Reserve Act- created 12 reserve banks regulated by Washington • Clayton Antitrust Act- recognition of union legality, check big businesses • Federal Trade Commission- regulatory control of corporations

  3. Wilson’s problems in Mexico • 1911 Revolution in Mexico overthrows corrupt dictator (PorfirioDíaz) • Francisco Madero- new democratic government in Mexico promised land reform (this made U.S. with $11 billion invested very nervous) • Madero murdered by his own chief lieutenant, Victoriano Huerta • Wilson refused to recognize Huerta’s gov. because he was unlawful (viewed him as murderer) • Wilson used a minor insult to attack & occupy Veracruz attempting to oust Huerta • Carranza, leader of opposition to Huerta, ousts Huerta (w/ US arms), then denounces Wilson • Poncho Villa, former ally turned enemy of Carranza & U.S., tries to draw U.S. into war – raids and kills Americans • Villa evades 1,500 US troops for over a year • Wilson’s involvement leads to Mexican distrust of US • Wilson didn’t go to war with Mexico because he didn’t want to weaken US position with Germany • Wilson believed capitalist development, democracy and free trade were wave of future • Wilson believed in Moral Values  WWI

  4. The Great War • Europe: • Triple Alliance (aka The Central Powers) • Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy • Triple Entente (aka The Allies) • Great Britain, France, Russia • Competition of Great Britain and Germany • GB: long-standing dominant power • Germany: aspirations of empire • Alliances kept countries from going to war over small conflicts from 19th-20th century • Inclusiveness was its weakness • Could draw others into war that did erupt • 1914 archduke of Austro-Hungary assassinated in Bosnia by a Serbian nationalist • He thought Bosnia should be annexed by Serbia • Germany backed retaliation by Austro-Hungary • Serbia asked for Russian help • War declared by both sides • Stalemate in northern France • New weapons: machine guns, tanks, trench warfare = 5 million killed in 2.5 years

  5. Run-up to War • Wilson urged Americans to be “impartial in thought and action” • Germany declares waters around British Isle a war zone • May 7, 1915 German U-boat sinks Lusitania killing 1200, 128 Americans • Americans demand strong stance against Germany but don’t want war • March 1916 German U-boat torpedoes French Sussex injuring 4 Americans • Wilson threatens to cut off diplomatic relations w/ Germany • June 1916 National Defense Act doubles the size of US army and increases spending of new battleships, cruisers and destroyers • Anti-war feelings still very strong in US • Wilson wins 2nd term w/ “He kept us out of war” campaign 1916 • Germany declares unlimited submarine warfare gambling to destroy Allies before America can arrive • March 1, 1917 Zimmerman Note intercepted • Germany encouraging Mexico to take back New Mexico, Texas and Arizona • US merchant ships are armed and allowed to shoot • Germans sink 7 US merchant ships killing many • April 2, 1917 Wilson asks congress for war • Wilson’s case based on America’s special mission as mankind’s most enlightened and advanced nation to make the world safe for democracy

  6. Selling the War • Committee on Public Information – CPI agency for war promotion led by George Creel • Enlisted 150,000 people to work on CPI committees • Produced more than 100 million pieces of literature- pamphlets, articles, books- explaining causes and meaning of war • Created posters, slides, newspaper ads and films • Used movie stars to help sell war bonds • 75,000 “Four Minute Men” gave patriotic speeches before stage and movie shows • Aggressively negative campaign against Germans • Huns = bestial monsters/ uncivilized • German music, language and books banned

  7. War Propaganda

  8. The Draft • Lack of volunteers for service • Selective Service Act- registration of all men ages 21-35 • Different from Civil War draft- couldn’t buy your way out of service by paying for a substitute • June 5, 1917 10 million register • Aug. 1918 extended age limits to 18-45 • Illiteracy rates among troops as high as 25% • Low test scores of immigrants and African Americans reflect biases of tests

  9. African Americans in the Military • Organized in segregated units • Barred from Marines and Coast Guard • Worked as cooks, laundrymen, stevedores • Endured humiliating and violent treatment form southern white officers • Faced hostility from white civilians • 200,000 served in France • 1 in 5 saw combat compared to 1 in 3 white soldiers • Black combat units served with distinction in some French divisions • The all black 369th US infantry served in trenches for 191 days, longest of any American regiment • French government awarded entire regiment the Croix de Guerre • Enjoyed better treatment in military and by civilians in France than in US

  10. America’s Effect on the War • AEF- American Expeditionary Forces = US troops • Led by General John J. Pershing, independent of European command • 70,000 AEF soldiers arrived in early 1918, helped the French stop the Germans from reaching Paris in June 1918 • AEF troop numbers grew to 1 million by Sept. • September 1918 AEF troops took over southern part of a 200 mile front in the Meuse-Argonne offensive  German surrender • November 11, 1918 war ends • Massive influx of American troops hastened the end of the war by ending the stalemate • 52,000+ Americans died in battle, 60,000 died from influenza and pneumonia

  11. WWI Part 2:Domestic Effects of the War

  12. The Economy • Economic boom began with exports to allies (between 1914-1916) • War = government-business cooperation (organization, regulation, subsidization) • War Industries Board (WIB)- mobilized national industry to support war effort • Led by Wall Street speculator Bernard M. Baruch • Regulation of production & prices • Maximization of productivity & efficiency • = BIG government • “voluntary cooperation” enforced w/ threats of military takeover (Ford, US Steel • Government saved $$, gained control of production, got what it needed for the war • Businesses expanded, saw high profits

  13. The Economy (continued) • 1917 Food and Fuel Act- • Gave President authority to regulate commodities (food & fuel) needed for the war effort • Hoover, millionaire engineer, leads FA (Food Admin) • Uses price controls on agricultural commodities (pork, sugar, wheat) to regulate consumption • Gov. buys products, distributes to licensed dealers who sell to public at high prices • Urged conservation ie. limit consumption, grow your own veggies, reuse/recycle

  14. Cost of War • $33 billion dollars • Paid for with increased income & profit taxes • Min. income for taxation $1000 • Highest brackets rates up to 70% • Liberty Bonds- $23 billion • government borrowed money from American public • Federal debt jumps from $1billion to $20 billion

  15. Labor & Labor Unions • Economic expansion + army mobilization + decline in immigration = labor shortage • Despite overcrowding & inflation workers enjoy higher wages and standard of living • AFL pledged support for the war, saw sharp rise in membership (1mil) & increased influence, power • National War Labor Board- led by Samuel Gompers- avoid strikes & interruptions in production • NWLB: ensured right to organize, higher wages, less hours, over-time pay, equal pay for women • IWW- denounced “capitalist war,” attacked by gov. agents-> Espionage Act

  16. Women & The War • 8 million women already working gained higher pay and access to new jobs • Another million joined workforce • Manufacturing jobs, munitions plants, train engineers, drill press operators, etc. • Women in Industry Service (WIS)- created standards, not legally enforced • ½ pay of men on average • End of war = end of women in “men’s” positions

  17. The Great Migration • Mass movement of African Americans from rural south to urban north • Labor shortage = job opportunities & higher wages • 1914-1920, 300,000-500,000 migrated north • Single women often found best opportunities • Men worked on railroads, meatpacking plants, shipyards, steel mills…..lower paying jobs, unskilled • Violence and rioting against blacks in Northern cities • NAACP membership grows to 60,000- provide legal defense, influence legislation

  18. Suppressing the Antiwar Movement • Espionage Act (1917) • Replaced previous, expired law addressing seditious expression • Used to crush dissent and criticism • Severe penalties, up to 20yrs prison, $10,000 fine • Aiding the enemy, obstruction recruitment, causing insubordination in the armed forces • Allowed postmaster gen. to censor mail • Police & surveillance machinery increase • Leads to creation of Bureau of Investigation (FBI) • Sedition Act (1918) • Amendment to Espionage Act • Outlawed “any disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language intended to cause contempt, scorn, contumely, or disrepute” to the government, Constitution, or flag (Freedom of Speech??) • Used to strike out against socialists, pacifists, labor radicals • Eugene Debs (4 times presidential candidate) imprisoned for 2.5 yrs, defending antiwar protestors

  19. Women & The Vote • Before WWI: • State battle rather than nation • Led by western states (UT & WY 1st) • In east suffrage linked to prohibition • During WWI: • National campaign for constitutional amendment • Linked to patriotism • 2 opposing tactics: • NAWSA- more conservative, linked vote to war effort, moderate lobbying & orderly demonstrations • NWP- more aggressive, picketed White House, condemned the Pres. & Congress, dramatic demonstrations • 19th Amendment: “war measure” passed Aug. 1920 after 2 years gaining states for ratification

  20. Part III:Post-WWI

  21. Labor and Unions After the War • Wartime wage gains wiped out by inflation, high prices for food, fuel, housing • Government ended controls on industry, employers withdrew union recognition • 4 million Americans workers involved in 3,600 strikes in 1919 alone (most ever) • Strikes stir fear, question social order • Seattle General Strike: 60,000 workers, city shut down for 3 days -> federal troops occupy the city • Boston Police Strike: National Guard called in, entire force fired • Steel Strike: 350,00 workers, 4 months, state & federal troops used to break it • Public opinion turns against organized labor, propaganda calls strikers revolutionaries • Russian Revolution… fear it could happen here, Red Scare

  22. Wilson’s Post-War Ambitions • Fourteen Points & Versailles Treaty • Postwar European boundaries, division of empires • Principles for governing international conduct • Freedom of the seas • Free trade • Open covenants instead of secret treaties • Reduce armaments • Mediation for competing colonial claims

  23. League of Nations (14th point) • Based in Geneva, Switzerland (neutral) • Implement 1st 13 points • Collective security to keep world peace • Downfalls: • Allies resist the call for independence of colonies & carve up former German and Ottoman empires • No military to enforce peace • Similar to previous alliances? • US, German, Russia don’t join Germany & the Treaty: • Germans need to be made to hate war • Territories divided (WWII- trying to get it back) • Wilson disagrees with Britain and France over reparations ($33 billion) • German resentment & rise of Nazis

  24. Defeat of the League in US • Party politics (Democratic President v Republican controlled Congress) • Oppose collective security & restraints on F.P. (isolationism) • Proposal of weakened version in Senate fails • Wilson’s refusal to compromise • Entire point for going to war wasted in Wilson’s eyes • US doesn’t sign Versailles Treaty or join League of Nations

  25. Ultimate Effects of WWI • 112,000 Americans died (battle & illness), 200,000+ wounded • 9 million Russians died • 6 million Germans died • 5 million French died • 2 million British died • 2 million Italians died • Same nations fight again 20 years later • Major European economies stifled • US becomes dominant world economic power

More Related