Becoming a World Power Review

Terms:

1.  Imperialism – Under this policy stronger nations attempt to create empires by dominating weaker nations.

2.  Nationalism – devotion to one’s country

3.  Annex – addition of new territory to an existing country

4.  Arbitration – settlement of a dispute by a person chosen to listen to both sides

5.  Jingoism – National pride combined with a desire for an aggressive foreign policy

6.  Concession – a grant of land in exchange for a promise to use it for a specific purpose

7.  Dollar diplomacy – President Taft’s policy for advancing the U.S. economy, using financial power to increase international influence

8.  Compulsory – required

9.  Militarism – a strong military helped imperial powers protect their global interests

Identification:

10.  Panama Canal importance, opponents: linked the Pacific and Atlantic ocean, made trade and travel faster, reduced the trip by 8,000 nautical miles, William Hearst was the main opponent

11.  Connections to American Frontier – Imperialism offered Americans a new frontier, due to Manifest Destiny we believed we had the right to own these other lands, superintendent of the census announced the closing of the Frontier resulted in an urge to look outside our border

12.  Foreign Markets - followed policy of expansionism in the late 1800s because the nation sought more markets for its goods, allowed us to trade with China and Japan; wanted overseas territories to gain customers who would buy U.S. products

13.  Anti-imperialist views – rejection of “liberty for all” which the U.S. was founded on, result in possible compulsory military service, should focus on internal affairs, too expensive

14.  Imperialist views – we needed the markets to sell our goods, duty to spread our superior culture and government to others, we needed bases to supply our navy

15.  Open Door Policy – gave countries equal access to trading rights in China, gave the United States access to millions of consumers in China; unlike Britain, France, and Russia the US wanted to keep trade in China open

16.  Monroe Doctrine reaffirmed – The United States insisted that Great Britain submit a boundary dispute with Venezuela to arbitration which demonstrated the enforcement of the Monroe Doctrine

17.  Spanish American War causes, main goal, results - 1898, Cubans rebelled against Spanish rule leading to the war which occurred in Cuba, the main goal was to free Cuba from Spanish rule, results included Cuba being freed and the United States wins, Puerto Rico and Guam were made unincorporated U.S. territories

18.  Roosevelt Corollary – the central message was that the United States would use force to prevent intervention in the affairs of neighboring countries

19.  President Taft’s Foreign Policy – see “dollar diplomacy”, using dollars instead of bullets

20.  Yellow Journalism – Sensational headliners, exaggerated stories used to sway public opinion

21.  U.S.S. Maine – ship sent to Havana Harbor; exploded, killing 260 American soldiers; the incident was blamed on the Spanish; helped inarticulate Spanish-American War

22.  Rough Riders – volunteer cavalry during the Spanish American War; the most famous group of Americans who fought in the Spanish American War

23.  San Juan Hill – Battle outside Santiago, Cuba; American victory, Spanish soon surrendered

24.  Platt Amendment – Amendment to Cuba’s Constitution, allowed the U.S. to intervene in Cuban affairs; gave the US the right to preserve order as needed in Cuba

25.  Teller Amendment – stated that the US could not annex Cuba

People:

26.  Theodore Roosevelt – 26th President, often remembered for expanding Presidential Power, led the “rough riders” up San Juan Hill, said the U.S. should “speak softly and carry a big stick”…he meant the U.S. Navy, won the 1906 Nobel Peace Prize negotiating an end to the war between Russia and Japan

27.  William R. Hearst – Newspaper owner, told the artist Frederic Remington, “You furnish the pictures and I’ll furnish the war”, used his newspaper to increase public sympathy for Cuban rebels, used Yellow Journalistic technique

28.  Joseph Pulitzer – newspaper owner, used his newspaper to increase public sympathy for Cuban rebels, Pulitzer prize, publisher of New York World, used Yellow Journalistic techniques

29.  Alfred T. Mahan – argued that to protect its trade, the United States must build up its Navy

30.  Matthew Perry – United States Navy Commodore that negotiated a treaty that opened trade to Japan

31.  Emilio Aguinaldo – was a Filipino freedom fighter

Other Topics to Consider:

32.  Boxer Rebellion – occurred in China, upset with foreign intervention in their country, glorious and harmonious fisks

33.  Factors that helped stimulate U.S. Imperialism

  1. Thirst for new economic markets
  2. Desire for military strength
  3. A belief in the cultural superiority of the Anglo – Saxon cultural

34.  De Lome Letter – included criticisms of President McKinley during the Spanish American War

35.  General Valeriano Weyler – “the butcher”, this Spanish general forced Cubans to relocate to concentration camps, where thousands of them died

36.  Sphere of influence – an area outside a nation’s borders where it exercises economic and political control

37.  Puerto Rico – residents became citizens of the United States in 1917; became a US territory through the 1898 Treaty of Paris

38.  Hawaii – was annexed in 1898, marines took by force during the Spanish American War

39.  San Juan Hill – site of the most famous incident…charge by the rough riders

40.  George Dewey – admiral that led the attack on Spanish ships in the Manila Bay in the Philippines; Manila Bay was ruled by Spain, and the ships belonged to the Spanish

41.  Panama – Roosevelt’s opponents disapproved of his actions in Panama because of this involvement in the Panamanian revolt, the United States acquired control of the Canal Zone by organizing a revolt in Panama to gain their independence from Columbia, the building of the canal was important because it facilitated movement between the Atlantic and Pacific ports

42.  Philippines – Were granted their independence from the United States in 1946 when the islands were liberated from the Japanese during WWII; the US paid $20 million to gain full control through the Treaty of Paris 1898

43.  Extractive Economy – based on mining or producing raw materials to be used in foreign industries

44.  Alaska – Journalists called this purchase of 1867 “Seward’s Folly” because they wondered why we would want a vast tundra of snow and ice far from the continental borders

45.  Social Darwinism – is the theory that states life consists of competitive struggles in which only the strong survive