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Chapter 29 Wilsonian Progressivism at Home and Abroad

Chapter 29 Wilsonian Progressivism at Home and Abroad. Election of 1912 Woodrow Wilson Democrats. Background: Progressive Governor of New Jersey President of Princeton University Reformer , Idealist , Elitist? , stubborn when believed was correct. Election of 1912: Democrats.

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Chapter 29 Wilsonian Progressivism at Home and Abroad

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  1. Chapter 29 Wilsonian Progressivism at Home and Abroad

  2. Election of 1912 Woodrow WilsonDemocrats • Background: • Progressive Governor of New Jersey • President of Princeton University • Reformer , Idealist , Elitist? , stubborn when believed was correct

  3. Election of 1912: Democrats • Woodrow Wilson • Platform: “New Freedom” • Anti-Trust Legislation • Banking reform • Tariff reductions • Shunned social-welfare proposals

  4. Election of 1912: Progressives or “Bull Moosers” • Theodore Roosevelt • Platform: “New Nationalism” • Trusts and Labor unions controlled by regulatory agencies • Program of social welfare • Women’s suffrage • Minimum wage • Social insurance

  5. Election of 1912: Republicans • William H. Taft • Platform: • To continue moderate Progressivism

  6. Election of 1912: Results • Winner: Woodrow Wilson • Wilson was a “minority” President…no “mandate” from the people • Why? • Taft and Roosevelt split the vote • Taft became Chief Justice of the Supreme Court • Socialist Debs got almost a million votes

  7. “Triple Wall of Privilege” • “Triple Wall” Wilson wanted to attack: • The Tariff • The Banks • The Trusts • Underwood Tariff • Substantially reduced the tariff rates • The 16th Amendment • Graduated Income Tax

  8. Researching Banking Reform • The nation’s financial structure, as created under the Civil War National Banking Act had proven to be glaringly ineffective, asshown by the Panic of 1907, so Wilson had Congress authorize aninvestigation to fix this. • The investigation, headed by Senator Aldrich, in effect recommended a third Bank of the United States. • Democrats heeded the findings of a House committee chaired byCongressman ArsenePujo, which traced the tentacles of the “money monster” into the hidden vaults of American banking and business. • Louis D Brandeis’s Other People’s Money and How theBankers Use It (1914) furthermore showed the problems of Americanfinances at the time.

  9. The Federal Reserve Act • Created Federal Reserve Board • 12 regional banks that issued Federal Reserve notes • Allowed for flexible money system

  10. The Federal Trade Commission Act • Presidential Commission examined interstate commerce laws • Root out unfair trade practices , such as false advertising and bribery • Root out unlawful competition

  11. Clayton Anti-Trust Act of 1914 • Outlawed interlocking directories and pure discrimination , • “Magna Carta” of the labor movement • Exempted labor unions from Anti-Trust laws (as had been called by Supreme Court’s interpretation of Sherman Act) • Legalized strikes and peaceful picketing

  12. Wilsonian Progressive Acts • Federal Farm Loan Act • Federal Government credit for farmers at low interest rates • Warehouse Act of 1916 • Government loans on the security of staple crops • La Follette Seaman’s Act of 1915 • Living wage for merchant ships • Workingman’s Compensation Act of 1916 • Disability insurance for civil service employees • Adamson Act • 8 hour work day for federal employees

  13. “Black Progressivism”/ Louis Brandeis • Wilson did not do well with “Black Progressivism” • Louis Brandeis • First Jewish Supreme Court Justice

  14. New Directions in Foreign Policy • Wilson did not embrace the “Dollar Diplomacy” and “Big Stick” • Jones Act • Made Philippines a territory, promoted independence as soon as Philippines had stable government , July 4th 1946

  15. Wilson did act as an “aggressor” a couple of times • When California banned Japanese ownership of land, Wilson sent Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan to plead with legislators and tensions cooled. • When disorder broke out in Haiti in 1915, Wilson sent American Marines, and in 1916, he sent Marines to quell violence in theDominican Republic. • In 1917, Wilson bought the Virgin Islands from Denmark.

  16. Moralistic Diplomacy in Mexico In 1913 Mexican rebels overthrew a government friendly to the United States and placed Victoriano Huerta and Carranza and Pancho Villain positions of power in Mexico. President Wilson refused to recognize the new Mexican government.

  17. Moralistic Diplomacy in Mexico Wilson ordered Marines to take Vera Cruz because Mexicans affronted Americans. Carranza and Huerto protested bitterly. It was finally mediated by the A.B.C. Powers. Shortly after Huerto collapsed and was replaced by Carranza whom President Wilson reluctantly supported.

  18. Moralistic Diplomacy in Mexico • Meanwhile, “Pancho” Villa, combination bandit/freedomfighter, murdered 16 Americans in January of 1916 in Mexico and thenkilled 19 more a month later in New Mexico. • Wilson sent General John J. Pershing to capture Villa, and hepenetrated deep into Mexico, clashed with Carranza’s andVilla’s different forces, but didn’t take Villa. • World War I was starting in Europe

  19. World War IThe War To End All Wars

  20. Nationalism • Devotion to interests, culture of one’s nation • Nationalism leads to competition, antagonism between nations • Many fear Germany’s growing power in Europe • Various Ethnic groups resent domination, want independence • Russia sees self as protector of all Slavic peoples

  21. Imperialism Militarism • Germany industrializes, competes with France, Britain for colonies • Development of armed forces, their use in diplomacy • Cost of building, defending empires leads to more military spending • Great Britain traditionally had the most powerful navy in Europe. Germany began to expand her navy, which created tension between the two nations

  22. INTRICATE AND SOMETIMES SECRET ALLIANCES IN EUROPE LED TO OBLIGATIONS BUT ALSO DIVIDED LOYALTIES IF ATTACKED AUSTRIA-HUNGARY HAD AN AGREEMENT WITH GERMANY WHO HAD AN AGREEMENT WITH ITALY. OTTOMAN EMPIRE WAS ALLIED WITH GERMANY AGAINST RUSSIA. SERBIA HAD AN AGREEMENT WITH RUSSIA WHO HAD AN AGREEMENT WITH FRANCE WHO HAD AN AGREEMENT WITH GREAT BRITAIN WHO HAD AN AGREEMENT PROTECT BELGIUM’S NEUTRALITY

  23. Alliance System • To protect themselves from each other, countries formed alliances • These alliances held that if one nation was attacked, the other nations would defend it • Triple Entente or ALLIES – France, Britain, Russia • Germany, Austria-Hungary, Ottoman Empire are CENTRAL POWERS • Alliances give security; nations unwilling to tip balance of power

  24. European Alliances, WWI

  25. An Assassination Leads to War • June 28, 1914, Franz Ferdinand the heir to the Austria-Hungarian throne travels to Serbia. He was assassinated by Gavrilo Princip, a member of an organization called Black Hand, who wanted independence for the region from Austria-Hungary. • This assassination touches off a war as it helped lead countries to avenge the murder and fulfill their alliance obligations.

  26. Alliances Bring Many Countries into War • Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia, expects a short war • Alliance system pulls one nation after another into war • Russia came to the aid of Serbia • Germany then declared war on Russia • France declared war on Germany • Germany attacked Belgium (ally of France) • Britain entered the war to help Belgium & France

  27. ALLIES FRANCE UNITED KINGDOM (AND ALL OF HER COLONIES) ITALY RUSSIA JAPAN ROMANIA SERBIA GREECE PORTUGAL THE WAR BEGAN WITH THE ALLIES VERSUS THE CENTRAL POWERS AND SIX NEUTRAL NATIONS NEUTRAL NATIONS SPAIN SWITZERLAND NORWAY SWEDEN BELGIUM DENMARK CENTRAL POWERS AUSTRIA-HUNGARY GERMANY BULGARIA TURKEY

  28. The Fighting Starts • Germany’s Schlieffen Plan: Hook movement through Belgium, defeat France before Russia mobilizes; then defeat Russia • Fight one front • Belgium held off Germany for three weeks – France and Britain mobilize to Belgium border • Britain and France on the defensive; forced to retreat to Marne River • Allies halt the German advance and both sides dig in for a long siege

  29. Trench Warfare • By Spring 1915, 2 parallel systems of trenches cross France • 400 miles from North Sea to Switzerland • “No man’s land” barren expanse of mud between opposing trenches • Scale of killing horrific, fighting inconclusive • 1.2 million casualties • Armies fight to gain only yards of ground • Only 7 miles of ground will change hands

  30. “NO MAN’S LAND” THE AREA BETWEEN THE TRENCHES WAS THE MOST DANGEROUS PLACE TO BE

  31. A Precarious Neutrality • Wilson, whose wife had recently died, issued a neutrality proclamation and was promptly wooed by both the Allies and the German and Austro-Hungarian powers. • The Germans and Austro-Hungarians counted on their relatives inAmerica for support, but the U.S. was mostly anti-German from theoutset, as Kaiser Wilhem II made for a perfect autocrat to hate. • German and Austro-Hungarian agents in America further tarnished the Central Powers’ image when they resorted to violence in Americanfactories and ports, and when one such agent left his briefcase in aNew York elevator, the contents of which were found to contain plansfor sabotage.

  32. HOW DID MOST AMERICANS FEEL ABOUT JOINING THE WAR IN EUROPE? • MOST PEOPLE WANTED TO REMAIN NEUTRAL BECAUSE: • THEY FELT THAT IT WAS NOT OUR FIGHT • EUROPE WAS TOO FAR AWAY • WAR WAS EXPENSIVE • DIVIDED LOYALTIES SINCE WE TRADED WITH BOTH GERMANY AND GREAT BRITAIN (AND FRANCE) AND DID NOT WANT TO SEVER TIES WITH EITHER ONE BY FIGHTING AGAINST THEM

  33. I Didn't Raise My Boy to Be a Soldier This popular song of 1915 conveys the antiwar sentiment that swept America after the European war began in 1914.

  34. Americans Question Neutrality • Socialists, pacifists, many ordinary people against U.S. in war • Naturalized citizens concerned about effect on country of birth • Many feel ties to British ancestry, language, democracy, legal system • U.S. has stronger economic ties with Allies than with Central Powers • Allies are depicted as victims of German aggression • Many join French & British militaries

  35. Really Neutral??? • President Wilson declares America should be “neutral in fact as well as in name and impartial in thought as well as in action”. • Americans trade 23 billion with Allies and only 29 billion with Central Powers. Largely this occurred because of close socio-cultural connection with allies and easier trade routes to England. (Morgan Loans) • Lafayette Escadrille

  36. The History of The Lafayette Escadrille • The Lafayette Escadrille was a French unit comprised mainly of American soldiers who volunteered to fight before the United States entered World War I.  The group was originally known as the American Escadrille , but changed name to maintain neutrality.

  37. Really Neutral??? • Moral Diplomacy • Wilson believed in freedom of the seas, open trade, self determination for ethnic groups, no secret alliances, arms reductions and Constitutionalism. • Because Wilson pressed freedom of the seas his Secretary of State, William J. Bryan resigned.

  38. Really Neutral ??? • Wilson’s acts towards war before election: • Council on National Defense Act • Federal board to prepare for war • National Defense Act of 1916 • Increased army size • 1916 Navy Act • Expanded Navy • 1916 Revenue Act • Surtax on high incomes/ tax on corporate profits for war 1916 Navy Act: authorized 50 destroyers built over a three year period.

  39. German Submarine warfare • To break England’s control of the Atlantic, Germany depended on their new weapon: the Submarine (U-Boat in German).

  40. Warnings issued to Travelers • “Neutral Seas” may Not Be Safe

  41. War on The High Seas Left: The Luistania Right: The Sussex • On May 7, 1915 the Germans sank the Lustiana with 128 Americans on board. This outraged many Americans. Wilson, who believed in freedom of the seas, did not want war. Instead, after the Germans sank the British liner The Arabic he got the Germans to agree to the Arabic pledge which stated not to sink ships without warning. After the French ship The Sussex was sunk, Germany agreed to the Sussex pledge which said the same thing as long as England did the same. England would not agree or stop their naval blockade of Europe.

  42. Tough Times For Central Powers • Central powers feeling impact of England’s naval blockade • Russia ready to leave war ( Bolshevik Revolution ) • Germany public is getting war weary • Perhaps Central Powers need one last devastating blow…especially if neutral America joins cause of Allies

  43. 1916 Presidential Election • Democrats: Woodrow Wilson • Campaign Slogan: “He Kept us Out of War” • Republicans: Charles E. “Evasive” Hughes

  44. Wilson wins because of Solid South and Midwest areas voting for him

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