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Chapter 19

Chapter 19. Norton Media Library. Chapter 19. Safe for Democracy: The United States and World War I, 1916–1920. Eric Foner. I. American “Liberal Internationalism”. II. An Era of Intervention. “I Took the Canal Zone”

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Chapter 19

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  1. Chapter 19 Norton Media Library Chapter 19 Safe for Democracy: The United States and World War I, 1916–1920 Eric Foner

  2. I. American “Liberal Internationalism”

  3. II. An Era of Intervention • “I Took the Canal Zone” • Roosevelt was more active in international diplomacy than most of his predecessors • Roosevelt pursued a policy of intervention in Central America • Panama • The Roosevelt Corollary • The United States had the right to exercise “an international police power” in the Western Hemisphere • Venezuela and the Dominican Republic • Taft emphasized economic investment and loans from American banks, rather than direct military intervention • Dollar Diplomacy

  4. II. An Era of Intervention (con’t) • Moral Imperialism • Wilson repudiated Dollar Diplomacy and promised a new foreign policy that would respect Latin America’s independence • He believed that the export of American manufactured goods and investments went hand in hand with the spread of democratic ideals • Wilson’s “moral imperialism” produced more military interventions in Latin America than any president before or since • Wilson and Mexico • The Mexican Revolution began in 1911 • When civil war broke out in Mexico, Wilson ordered American troops to land at Vera Cruz • Mexicans greeted the marines as invaders rather than liberators

  5. III. America and the Great War • War broke out in Europe in 1914 • The war dealt a severe blow to the optimism and self-confidence of Western civilization • Neutrality and Preparedness • As war engulfed Europe, Americans found themselves sharply divided • Wilson proclaimed American neutrality, but American commerce and shipping were soon swept into the conflict • Lusitania • By the end of 1915 Wilson embarked on a policy of “preparedness”

  6. III. America and the Great War (con’t) • The Road to War • Wilson won reelection in 1916 on the slogan “He Kept Us Out of War” • Wilson called for a “peace without victory,” but Germany resumed submarine warfare • Zimmerman Note was intercepted in 1917

  7. III. America and the Great War (con’t) • The Fourteen Points • Russia pulled out of the war after the Lenin Revolution in 1917 • Wilson issued the Fourteen Points in January 1918 • They established the agenda for the peace conference that followed the war • When American troops finally arrived in Europe, they turned the tide of battle

  8. IV. The War at Home • The Progressives’ War • Some Progressives viewed the war as an opportunity to disseminate Progressive values around the globe • The war created a national state with unprecedented powers and a sharply increased presence in Americans’ everyday lives • Selective Service Act • War Industries Board • War Labor Board

  9. IV. The War at Home (con’t) • The Propaganda War • The Wilson administration decided that patriotism was too important to leave to the private sector • The Committee on Public Information (CPI) was created • The CPI’s activities set a precedent for active governmental efforts to shape public opinion in later international conflicts • The Great Cause of Freedom • The CPI couched its appeal in the Progressive language of social cooperation and expanded democracy • Freedom took on new significance

  10. IV. The War at Home (con’t) • The Coming of Women’s Suffrage • America’s entry into the war threatened to tear apart the suffrage movement • Jeannette Rankin opposed war • The National Woman’s Party was militantly fighting for suffrage • Alice Paul • The combined efforts of women during the war won them suffrage • Nineteenth Amendment

  11. IV. The War at Home (con’t) • Prohibition • Numerous impulses flowed into the renewed campaign to ban intoxicating liquor • Like the suffrage movement, prohibitionists came to see national legislation as their best strategy • War gave them added ammunition • Eighteenth Amendment

  12. IV. The War at Home (con’t) • Liberty in Wartime • Randolph Bourne predicted that the war would empower not reformers but the “least democratic forces in American life” • The Espionage Act of 1917 prohibited not only spying and interfering with the draft but also “false statements” that might impede military success • Eugene V. Debs was convicted in 1918 under the Espionage Act for delivering an antiwar speech • Debs ran for president while still in prison in 1920

  13. IV. The War at Home (con’t) • Coercive Patriotism • Attitudes toward the American flag became a test of patriotism • Patriotism now meant support for the government, the war, and the American economic system • The American Protective League (APL) helped the Justice department identify radicals and critics of the war • IWW • Bisbee, Arizona copper miners

  14. V. Who Is an American? • The “Race Problem” • The “race problem” had become a major subject of public concern • Eugenics, which studied the alleged mental characteristics of different races, gave anti-immigrant sentiment an air of professional expertise

  15. V. Who Is an American? (con’t) • Americanization and Pluralism • “Americanization” meant the creation of a more homogenous national culture • Israel Zangwill’s The Melting Pot • Ford Motor Company’s Sociological department • A minority of Progressives questioned Americanization efforts and insisted on respect for immigrant subcultures • Jane Addams’s Hull House • Randolph Bourne

  16. V. Who Is an American? (con’t) • Wartime Americanization • Until the United States entered World War I, efforts at assimilation were largely conducted by private organizations • 100 percent Americanism • The Committee on Public Information renamed the Fourth of July, 1918, Loyalty Day • The Anti-German Crusade • German-Americans bore the brunt of forced Americanization • The use of German and expressions of German culture became a target of pro-war organizations

  17. V. Who Is an American? (con’t) • Toward Immigration Restriction • The war strengthened the conviction that certain kinds of undesirable persons ought to be excluded altogether • IQ test introduced in 1916 • In 1917, Congress required that immigrants be literate in English or another language

  18. V. Who Is an American? (con’t) • Groups Apart • The war led to further growth of the Southwest’s Mexican population • On the eve of American entry into World War I, Congress terminated the status “citizen of Puerto Rico” and conferred American citizenship on residents of the island • Even more restrictive were policies toward Asian-Americans • Gentlemen’s Agreement of 1907

  19. V. Who Is an American? (con’t) • The Color Line • Progressive Era freedoms did not apply to blacks • Progressive intellectuals, social scientists, labor reformers, and suffrage advocates displayed a remarkable indifference to the black condition • Roosevelt, Wilson, and Race • Although Roosevelt had invited Booker T. Washington to dine with him at the White House, he still felt blacks were “wholly unfit for the suffrage” • Wilson’s administration imposed racial segregation in federal departments in Washington, D.C., and numerous black federal employees • Birth of a Nation

  20. V. Who Is an American? (con’t) • W. E. B. Du Bois and the Revival of Black Protest • Du Bois tried to reconcile the contradiction between what he called “American freedom for whites and the continuing subjection of Negroes” • The Souls of Black Folk (1903) • In some ways, Du Bois was a typical Progressive who believed that investigation, exposure, and education would lead to solutions for social problems • The Niagara movement sought to reinvigorate the abolitionist tradition • The Declaration of Principles

  21. V. Who Is an American? (con’t) • Du Bois was a cofounder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) • Bailey v. Alabama • Closing Ranks • Most black leaders saw American participation in the war as an opportunity to make real the promise of freedom • During World War I, closing ranks did not bring significant gains

  22. V. Who Is an American? (con’t) • The Great Migration • The war opened thousands of industrial jobs to black laborers for the first time, inspiring a large-scale migration from South to North • 500,000 migrated north • Many motives sustained the Great Migration • In the Promised Land • Dozens of blacks were killed during a 1917 riot in East St. Louis, Missouri • Violence was not confined to the North

  23. V. Who Is an American? (con’t) • The Rise of Garveyism • Marcus Garvey launched a separatist movement • Freedom for Garveyites meant national self-determination

  24. VI. 1919 • There was a worldwide revolutionary upsurge in 1919 • Upheaval in America • In the United States, 1919 also witnessed unprecedented turmoil • By the war’s end, many Americans believed that the country stood on the verge of what Herbert Hoover called “a new industrial order” • The strike wave began in January 1919 in Seattle

  25. VI. 1919 (con’t) • The Great Steel Strike • The wartime rhetoric of economic democracy and freedom helped to inspire the era’s greatest labor uprising • Striked for union recognition, higher wages, and an eight-hour day • Steel magnates launched a concerted counterattack • Associated the strikers with the IWW

  26. VI. 1919 (con’t) • The Red Scare • This was a short-lived but intense period of political intolerance inspired by the postwar strike wave and the social tensions and fears generated by the Russian Revolution • Attorney General Palmer in November 1919 and January 1920 dispatched federal agents to raid the offices of radical and labor organizations throughout the country • J. Edgar Hoover • Secretary of Labor Louis Post began releasing imprisoned immigrants and the Red Scare collapsed

  27. VI. 1919 (con’t) • Wilson at Versailles • The Versailles Treaty did accomplish some of Wilson’s goals • The Versailles Treaty was a harsh document that all but guaranteed future conflict in Europe • Impossible Demands • Wilson’s language of “self-determination” raised false hopes for many peoples • The British and French had no intention of applying this principle to their own empires • Ottoman Empire and the League of Nations “mandates”

  28. VI. 1919 (con’t) • Du Bois concluded that Wilson had “never at any single moment meant to include in his democracy” black Americans or the colonial peoples of the world • The Treaty Debate • Wilson viewed the new League of Nations as the war’s finest legacy • Opponents viewed the League as a threat to deprive the country of its freedom of action • On its own terms, the war to make the world safe for democracy failed

  29. The United States in the Caribbean, 1898–1934 The United States in the Caribbean, 1898–1934 • pg. 722

  30. The Panama Canal Zone The Panama Canal Zone • pg. 723

  31. Colonial Possessions, 1900 Colonial Possessions, 1900 • pg. 726

  32. Colonial Possessions, 1900 Colonial Possessions, 1900 • pg. 727

  33. World War I: The Western Front • pg. 732 World War I:The Western Front

  34. Prohibition, 1915: Counties and States That Banned Liquor before the Eighteenth Amendment Prohibition, 1915: Counties and States That Banned Liquor before the Eighteenth Amendment (Ratified 1919; Repealed 1933) • pg. 738

  35. Europe in 1914 Europe in 1914 • pg. 758

  36. Europe in 1919 Europe in 1919 • pg. 759

  37. Table 19.1 • pg. 752

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