1 / 21

Reasons for American Imperialism

Reasons for American Imperialism. The Roots of American Imperialism. Imperialism  stronger nations extend their economic, political, or military power over weaker nations. Social Darwinism.

jvan
Télécharger la présentation

Reasons for American Imperialism

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. Reasons for American Imperialism

  2. The Roots of American Imperialism • Imperialism stronger nations extend their economic, political, or military power over weaker nations

  3. Social Darwinism • Political, economic, and military competition between nations leads to the failure of the weak and the “survival of the fittest” • Small, “inferior” states will be overpowered by “superior” states

  4. Anglo-Saxonism • Belief that English speaking nations were destined to rule due to superior character, ideas, and systems of government • Popular in Britain and the US • Fit well with American idea of “Manifest Destiny”

  5. John Fiske • 1842 – 1901 • Writer / Historian • Argued that physical evolution of man had ended due to social developments • As a result, the society which is superior will be the dominant force in social evolution

  6. Josiah Strong • 1847 – 1916 • Protestant minister • Americans should support imperialism because it spreads Christianity • The Anglo-Saxon race have a responsibility to “civilize and Christianize” the rest of the world • Identified 7 “perils” for American society: Catholicism, Mormonism, Socialism, intemperance, wealth, urbanization, & immigration

  7. Capt. Alfred T. Mahan • 1840 – 1914 • 1890: Wrote The Influence of Sea Power Upon History • Argued that powerful nations have powerful navies • Powerful navies require naval bases worldwide • His ideas won widespread political support in both Congress and the White House

  8. The Great White Fleet • Fleet of 16 US battleships sent out on a world tour to demonstrate American naval might between 1907 and 1909 on orders of President Theodore Roosevelt • Greatly enhanced American prestige

  9. US Expansion

  10. Purchase of Alaska • “Seward’s Folly” • Purchased from Russia by Sec. of State William Seward for $7.2 million in 1867 • US wanted Russian competition out of North America • Turned out, Alaska was loaded with gold & oil!

  11. Timeline-U.S. Imperialism in Hawaii Sanford B. Dole Business groups organized a revolution, overthrew Liliuokalani, and put Dole in charge of the new government Queen Liliuokalani “Hawaii for Hawaiians!”

  12. Americans in Hawaii • First Americans arrived in 1819 (Christian missionaries) • Thousands of Americans soon flooded the islands to create sugar plantations, coming to dominate the islands’ economy and present a threat to the native monarchy • Americans forced the “Bayonet Constitution” on Hawaiian king in 1887 which gave whites the vote & limited the monarch’s power

  13. Queen Liliuokalani • 1838 – 1917 • Queen 1891 – 1893 • Lydia Kamaka’eha Kaola Mali’i Lili’uokalani • Attempted to throw out the Bayonet Constitution and extend suffrage to native Hawaiians and Asians • This angered Americans in Hawaii, and they began to plot an overthrow of the queen

  14. Economic Pressure • American sugar planters in Hawaii were also upset that the McKinley Tariff had placed a high tariff on Hawaiian sugar; if they could convince US to annex Hawaii, they would be part of the US and not subject to the tariff

  15. Overthrow of the Queen • 1893: Americans staged a coup, then reported to the American consulate that American lives and property were in danger due to the coup! • US consulate called Marines ashore from the US naval base at Pearl Harbor • Hawaiians interpreted this as US support for the coup and surrendered

  16. Annexation of Hawaii • American sugar planters established a temporary government, believing that the US would annex Hawaii immediately • Pres. Cleveland was furious with the way the sugar planters had manipulated the coup to look like it was US backed and blocked attempts to annex Hawaii • The independent Republic of Hawaii existed from 1893 - 1898 • US finally annexed Hawaii in 1898 under Pres. McKinley

  17. Acquiring New Lands Activity Instructions In your assigned groups, you will: • Read about two lands US acquired and fill in your chart. • Discuss and explain why the US acquired and what were the benefits and drawbacks from inhabitants. • Lastly, write a short essay answering the question: “To what extent was US imperialism justified?”. Support your answer with documents (Academic-2) ( Honors-4)

  18. Acquiring New Lands

  19. Acquiring New Lands

  20. John Hay’s Open Door Notes

More Related