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Panama Canal

Panama Canal. Roosevelt’s foreign policy Venezuelan Affair The need for a canal Panama revolution Building the canal. President Theodore Roosevelt’s Foreign Policy.

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Panama Canal

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  1. Panama Canal • Roosevelt’s foreign policy • Venezuelan Affair • The need for a canal • Panama revolution • Building the canal

  2. President Theodore Roosevelt’s Foreign Policy • “Speak softly and carry a big stick; you will go far” is a West African proverb that Roosevelt used while vice president and came to represent his ideological approach to foreign policy. • He viewed the U.S. as the regional superpower that would keep Europeans out and keep peace throughout the Americas.

  3. What international role did Roosevelt envision for the United States? • Major elements in the cartoon: • Oyster Bay, New York is where Roosevelt lived • Three figures circling the tree stump represent El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras

  4. Venezuelan Affair, 1902 • During a civil war in Venezuela from 1898-1902, the property of British, German, and Italian citizens living in the region was damaged. • After the European nations demanded retribution and received none, they sent military ships to impose a blockade on the major ports along Venezuela’s coastline. • Roosevelt opposed European intrusion into the Western Hemisphere and acted a mediator in the dispute. • This strengthened the U.S.’s role in the region. The Monroe Doctrine issued in 1823 forbade any new colonies in the Americas.

  5. As a result of the Venezuela Crisis, Roosevelt added the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, stating that the U.S. could intervene when the stability of any Latin American nation was in question.

  6. During the Spanish American War in 1898, the U.S. desired a quicker way of moving ships between the east and west coast of North America. The voyage around South America could take months. Cuba 15,000 MILES

  7. The search for a shortcut across the Central American isthmus dates back to early Spanish exploration in the 1500s. • Surveys of the region in the 19th century by the Spanish and French suggested two viable routes, one through Colombia the other Nicaragua. 8,000 miles

  8. The French began construction on a canal in Panama, a province of Colombiain 1882. • Thousands of construction workers died of yellow fever. • President Roosevelt negotiated a buyout from the French and permission from the Colombians, but felt the price was too high.

  9. Two political cartoons on Colombia's refusal to accept the U.S. purchase offer price of $40 million. In 2007, $40 million would be $995 million

  10. Roosevelt’s solution was to support a Panamanian revolution in 1903 so the U.S. could build the canal at a cheaper price. In 1921 the U.S. paid Colombia $25 million ($192 million in 2007)as a way of apologizing.

  11. Yellow fever was a devastating disease throughout the 19th century. William Gorgas, an American doctor, was the chief sanitary officer at the Panama Canal, controlled the mosquito population, allowing completion. Walter Reed, a U.S. army surgeon, proved Finlay’s theory while in Cuba in 1900. Carlos Finlay, a Cuban doctor, identified the mosquito as the carrier of the disease to humans in the 1870s.

  12. 1905 fumigation car eradicatingmosquitoes in Panama. 1905 Yellow Fever Quarantine Station

  13. Construction of the canal • Begun by the French in 1880, disease halted construction after over 20,000 workers died. • The U.S. took over the project in 1904 using workers from the West Indies. • The Panama Railway made it possible to transport the excavated dirt. • The 48 mile canal was completed in 1914.

  14. President Roosevelt visits the canal construction site in 1906.

  15. Miraflores is one of three locks on the Panama Canal.

  16. The Panama Canal opened August 15, 1914.

  17. The Panama Canal Zone • The U.S. controlled the 553 square mile area inside Panama from 1903-1979. • The Canal Zone Government controlled the area, including all stores, housing, police, courts, and judges. • Considered a part of the U.S., in 1953 persons born there with one American parent were U.S. citizens. • The Torrijos-Carter Treaty signed in 1977 returned the zone to Panama December 31, 1999. U.S. President Jimmy Carter and Panamanian leader Omar Torrijos

  18. Panama canal today

  19. NASA shaded relief map

  20. U.S. History PowerPoint presentations Colonization to Reconstruction: Early U.S. Review Colonial Era American Revolution The New Nation: Washington to J.Q. Adams First Industrial Revolution in America: 1790-1860 Slavery Westward Movement Expansion and Reform: 1820-1860 Causes of the Civil War Civil War Reconstruction Miners, Ranchers, Farmers, and Native Americans: 1865-1900 Rise of Industrial America Response to Industrialism Immigration and Urbanization America becomes a world power: Imperialism The Progressive Era The U.S. and World War One 1920’s Great Depression and New Deal: 1930’s Causes of World War Two World War Two 1950’s 1960’s Civil Rights Movement Cold War: Truman to Kennedy Cold War: Johnson to the fall of the Berlin Wall Vietnam Late History Overview: 1970s, 1980s, 1990s Please visit our website which contains sample slides from all of our PowerPoint presentations: www.multimedialearning.org We send out monthly newsletters containing free downloads to subscribers. If you are connected to the internet simply click on the on the following link: Sign up to receive our email newsletter containing specials and free downloadsIf you are not on the internet, please visit our homepage at www.multimedialearning.org and sign up.

  21. French Revolution European Imperialism 1800-1914 Nationalism in Europe 1830-1914 World War I Europe Between the Wars World War II World History PowerPoint presentations: Kingdoms and Empires in the Fertile Crescent: Sumer to Persia Ancient Egypt: Neolithic to Roman Conquest Aegean Civilizations Ancient Rome Medieval Europe Black Death and other great pandemics India, and Southeast Asia History of Africa Mesoamerican and Andean Civilizations Islamic Civilization China: Ancient Civilization to the Communist Revolution The Conquest of Mexico The Renaissance The Enlightenment The Industrial Revolution Please visit our website which contains sample slides from all of our PowerPoint presentations: www.multimedialearning.org We send out monthly newsletters containing free downloads to subscribers. If you are connected to the internet simply click on the on the following link: Sign up to receive our email newsletter containing specials and free downloadsIf you are not on the internet, please visit our homepage at www.multimedialearning.org and sign up. HMS Historical Media, a division of Multimedia Learning, LLC, has 28 classroom ready historical simulation games available on various topics.

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